Reading comp PrepTest 117 · Section 1 · Question 11

Passage

Questions 8-14  .        In the field of historiography—the writing of  . history based on a critical examination of authentic Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Social Science


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Background of field; Traditional approach
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Background of Historiography - Recently started focusing on explorers/settlers to get insight into changing landscapes
    • Traditional approach - Writings of 19th c European American explorers (kept logs as part of government jobs) to study history of Pacific Coast

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • New approach
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • New consideration - Include experience of Asian settlers in region
    • Problem - Didn’t leave a written record for the most part (unlike commissioned European agents)
    • Solution/New Approach - Focus on other kinds of evidence, such as the actions of Asian settlers

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Example - Agricultural expansion/Chinese settlers
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Chinese settlers forced to consider agricultural potential of substandard land
    • Example 1 - Willows/Swamp - Chinese settlers saw water, soil, and irrigation potential
    • Example 2 - Wild mustard - Valuable spice/raw material

Paragraph 4

  • Paragraph note
    • New dimension added by study of Chinese settler action
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Specialized skills - Swamp reclamation and irrigation systems
    • 80% of cropland is irrigated; top producer of specialty crops
    • Understanding actions of Chinese settlers necessary to understand history of region

Main Point: Understanding the history of the Pacific Coast requires considering the impact that Asian settlers had on agriculture in the region, which has required historiographers to consider other kinds of evidence such as the actions of these settlers.

Key Lines?

Lines 10-12 - Traditional approach

Lines 19-22 - Omitted info and why

Lines 29-32 - New approach

Lines 33-35 - Example of new approach

Lines 54-60 - Summary of argument/thesis

Meta-Structure?

Old Approach/New Approach - When a passage describes a “traditional[]” approach (Line 10), there’s a good chance that the passage is going to fall into the Old Approach/New Approach Meta-Structure. Here, the Author pivots from Paragraph 1’s discussion of the traditional approach to studying the history of the Pacific Coast - using the writings of European American explorers commissioned by the US government - to Paragraph 2’s discussion of what this approach missed (the experience of Asian settlers) and how historiographers have used a new approach to incorporate that information (“recogniz[ing] the value of other kinds of evidence,” such as the actions of Asian settlers - Lines 30-32). From there, she explores information learned by using the new method, concluding that this information is necessary to understanding the history of the Pacific Coast (“cannot be fully understood...without” - Lines 57-58). When this Old Approach/New Approach Meta-Structure is present, the Author’s opinion on the new approach constitutes the main point, reflected in our summary above.

Examples - The passage has some layers of examples that back up the point. There’s the main example - looking at the experiences of Asian settlers to understand the history of the Pacific Coast. Within that example, the passage looks at the role of Chinese settlers in Pacific Coast agriculture (Line 33), and that example focuses on two specific examples - willows/swamps (Lines 39-42) and weeds/wild mustard (Lines 43-47). Since there are myriad examples, we should expect some questions about them.

Last Thoughts?

There’s not too much that stands out about this passage, so let’s head straight to the questions!

Question prompt

The author would most Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: E

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Social Science

Strategy Overview

Remind ourselves of the main point of the passage, then head to the answers, focusing on those that don’t line up with the main point and then using our notes/the passage to identify which answer is correct

Answer Anticipation

This question stem provides no indication as to the topic of the correct answer or where it’ll show up in the passage. As such, we’ll need to rely on our big-picture understanding of the passage to answer this question to find an answer that’s likely to be contradicted by information in the passage.We should start by reminding ourselves of the main point (either by reviewing what we said after reading the passage or by rereading our answer to the main point question). From there, we can head to the answers, deferring on those that line up with the main point. For those that don’t, we’ll use our notes and the passage to see if we can find information contradicting it, marking it as the correct answer.

Answer choices

  1. A
    Examining the actions not Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) (Line 31) While the Author did focus on the actions of Asian settlers, she did so to show the type of new evidence that historiographers have had to consider to get a full picture of history (“such as the actions…”). As such, this answer lines up with the main point - examining the actions of all relevant groups is necessary to getting the full picture of the Pacific Coast’s history.

  2. B
    The significance of certain Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) This is one of those answers that, regardless of the passage, is unlikely to be correct. For it to be correct, the Author would have to believe that every group of historiographers has to agree on the significance of every action throughout history. That’s just very unlikely to be true, and there’s no language in the passage suggesting that the Author believes it, so this answer isn’t something the Author would disagree with.

  3. C
    Recognizing the actions of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) (Line 31) This answer is functionally equivalent to (A), in that they both say the actions of Asian settlers is a part of history but not the entirety of it, and it’s wrong for the same reason - that lines up with the Author’s overall argument.

  4. D
    By recognizing as evidence Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) (Lines 15-17) This answer aligns with the Author’s main point - that a new approach is necessary to get a full picture of the Pacific Coast’s history - and it reflects what the Author says at the beginning of Paragraph 2, so it’s incorrect.

  5. E
    The expanded definition of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E matches the stem

    (E) (Lines 21-27) First, this answer doesn’t line up with the Author’s main point since she used Asian settlers as an example of the type of evidence that historiographers have traditionally overlooked. Second, she specifically notes that historiographers have overlooked this evidence because they’ve focused on written records, not records from European settlers/immigrants. As such, the Author likely believes that the expanded definition will be relevant in any area where a group hasn’t left substantial written records, thus contradicting this answer and making it correct.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 5%
  2. B 3%
  3. C 5%
  4. D 8%
  5. E Credited 78%

Deeper help

Ask follow-ups on any step

Optional AI tutor mode will let you interrogate assumptions, compare answers, and drill weak patterns without leaving the page.

Human-written explanations stay primary; AI is an add-on when you want it.

Discussion

  • please help 3 replies

    Started by Ro13