Questions 1-11 Are Based On The Following Passage Judithe Hernandez and The Chicana Artistic Voice
Questions 1-11 Are Based On The Following Passage Judithe Hernandez and The Chicana Artistic Voice
Judithe Hernandez’s art career began in Los Angeles B) artists who started
C) members who created and belonged to
during the socially and politically turbulent 1960s. While
D) creators who began
enrolled as a graduate student at the Otis Art Institute
in Los Angeles, Hernandez met fellow student Carlos
2
Almaraz, one of the founding 1 members of the Chicano
A) NO CHANGE
artist collective known as “Los Four.” At Almarez’s request,
B) establishing
Hernandez joined “Los Four” as its fifth, and only female, C) permitting
member. Hernandez became well known for her work with D) approving
this revolutionary group of artists, who are credited with
2 authorizing Chicano art as its own distinctive school of 3
(US) American art. 3 Less known but equally important, Which choice most effectively establishes the central
claim of the passage?
however, is the role Hernandez played in providing a
A) NO CHANGE
female voice within what was at that time a predominantly
B) The Chicano Movement, also known as “El
male Chicano art movement. Movimiento,” began in the 1940s with the explicit
goal of empowering Mexican-Americans.
C) Judithe Hernandez was born to a progressive
Mexican-American family in Los Angeles that
encouraged her involvement in the arts from an
early age.
D) In the 1960s, Chicano art was often displayed as
public murals intended to create a dialogue about
the issues faced by Mexican-Americans.
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Chicano art began as an outgrowth of the more general 4
Chicano Civil Rights 4 Movement; a sociopolitical A) NO CHANGE
initiative that began in the 1960s to promote social progress B) Movement, which was:
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The significance of her contributions to the Chicano 7
art movement 7 were recognized as early as 1981, A) NO CHANGE
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2 2
In it, Hernandez juxtaposes images of male and female 9
farmers with more opulent depictions of modern Los A) NO CHANGE
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Questions 1-11 are based on the following passage. 1
Taking on Gatsby: A Director’s Tall Task At this point, the writer wants to add accurate
information from the chart below to support the claim
Many films have been adapted from literature with made in the previous sentence.
much success. 1 However, adapting a novel as beloved as Acedemy Award NomII'IIItIons Bntekdown, by Rim Type
literary film adaptations should be evaluated on their own Which choice best accomplishes this goal?
A) Though less likely to be nominated for an
merits.
Academy Award than are original scripts, literary
adaptations account for about a quarter of such
nominations.
B) 64 percent of literary adaptations have gone on to
be nominated for an Academy Award.
C) More than half of all Academy Award-nominated
films have been literary adaptations.
D) As much as 26 percent of Academy Award-
nominated films are based on original scripts.
2
A) NO CHANGE
B) were
C) are
D) has been
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The issue of fidelity is the first thing that stands in 3
the way of fairly 3 negotiating a film adaptation. Many A) NO CHANGE
6
At this point, the writer is considering adding the
following sentence. This version starred Robert
Redford, a popular and critically acclaimed actor, in
the title role.
Should the writer make this addition here?
A) Yes, because it adds details that support the
preceding sentence's claim about the movie's
critical reception.
B) Yes, because it provides a logical transition to the
rest of the paragraph's analysis of how the film's
casting disappointed fans of the book.
C) No, because it inserts a loosely related detail that
interrupts the paragraph's discussion of the flaws
of a film that faithfully adapted the book.
D) No, because it introduces an irrelevant fact that
undermines the argument that the best films are
those most faithful to the books on which they're
based.
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7 Because Fitzgerald had unlimited space in The 7
Great Gatsby to create as many characters, plots, and A) NO CHANGE
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2 2
Books are capable of inspiring countless interpretations. 11
Film adaptations deserve the same creative space. 11 The writer wants an emphatic conclusion for the
passage that reiterates a main point of the argument.
Which choice best accomplishes this goal?
A) Whether or not it goes on to win an Academy
Award, a film should be evaluated based primarily
on its direction and cinematography.
B) Filmmakers ultimately have a responsibility not
to deviate from the original plot of a novel, but
beyond that they can take liberties with details
such as setting and characters.
C) If another Great Gatsby film comes out in 25 or
30 years, audiences should judge it based on its
own cinematic merits and not based on its fidelity
to Fitzgerald's book.
D) In the end, books and films are not so different,
and The Great Gatsby has been proving this to
movie audiences for decades.
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1
Questions 1-11 are based on the following passage. A) NO CHANGE
Healthy Outlook for Male Nurses B) BCE, founded a hospital to provide care for the
sick during the Black Plague epidemic;
The presence of men in the nursing field has a long
C) BCE; founded a hospital to provide care for the
history reaching back over two thousand years. Men sick during the Black Plague epidemic,
attended the world’s first nursing school in India in 250 D) BCE, founded a hospital to provide care for the
sick during the Black Plague epidemic,
1 BCE founded a hospital to provide care for the sick
during the Black Plague epidemic and cared for wounded
2
soldiers in countless wars throughout history. Yet despite A) NO CHANGE
the historical role of men in nursing, men currently B) is
comprise less than 10 percent of the nursing population C) was
in the United States. While the reasons behind the dearth D) has been
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2 2
In addition to the influence of the family medical 4
model, the teachings of Florence Nightingale—often hailed A) NO CHANGE
7
At this point, the writer wants to provide a second
example in support of the paragraph’s main point.
Which choice best accomplishes this goal?
A) Those men who were nurses normally worked in
hospitals for the mentally ill.
B) The United States Army also barred men from
nursing until the late 1960s.
C) The early 20th century also saw a rise in the
number of men pursuing careers as psychologists.
D) Florence Nightingale also opened the first secular
nursing school in the world in London, England.
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The tide against men in the nursing field began to 8
change directions in the 1970s and 8 1980s. Due in A) NO CHANGE
part to a United States Supreme Court decision that held B) 1980s. Which was due
C) 1980s, due
that the women-only admissions policy of the Mississippi
D) 1980s, this was due
University for Women violated the Equal Protection Clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment. Since this decision, the
9
percentage of registered nurses who are men in the United
At this point, the writer wants to add accurate and
States has increased 9 from 2.7 percent in 1970 to 7.6 relevant data from the graph. Which choice most
effectively accomplishes this goal?
percent in 2011. This growth is likely to prove beneficial
A) NO CHANGE
for both the nursing community and the patients they
B) by 9.6 percent in 2011.
serve. 10 C) from 2.7 percent in 1970 to 9.6 percent in 2011.
*Rack your brain and you don't know why. D) from 4.1 percent in 1980 to 5.7 percent in 1990.
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10
The writer wants to conclude the paragraph with a
statement that develops the claim introduced in the
preceding sentence. Which choice best accomplishes
this goal?
A) According to a 2010 publication from the
Institute of Medicine, male nurses provide unique
perspectives and skills that are important to the
profession and society at large, particularly in the
area of men’s reproductive health.
B) While the percentage of men in the nursing field
is rising, patients are unlikely to see any tangible
differences in the quality of care that they receive.
C) Although more men are pursuing nursing as a
career, it will probably still take a while before the
public feels as comfortable with the idea of male
nurses as they do with female nurses.
D) A number of research studies suggest that men
are more likely to pursue careers as registered
nurses than licensed vocational nurses due to the
higher average salary associated with the former
group.
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With the demand for nursing services projected to 11
surge over the next decade, the time could not be better for A) NO CHANGE
the equitable inclusion of men into the nursing workforce. B) had meant
C) will mean
For patients, this will mean a larger and more diverse set of
D) is meaning
potential caretakers; and for the nurses themselves, this
r:t----.,____-
4~ __ r--- __~~-------------------
2~-------------------------------
t~--------------------------------
-
......
.~-+-----+----~----~~~--~
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 1970 Decennial Census, 1980, 1990,
and 2000 Equal Employment Tabulation, and 2006 and 2011
American Community Survey
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Questions 1-11 are based on the following passage. 1
The Rise of the Hospitalist Which choice is most consistent with the first sentence
of the passage?
According to a recent article in The New England
A) NO CHANGE
Journal of Medicine, primary care medicine in the United
B) minor
States is “at grave risk” of collapsing. Since primary care C) meager
providers typically serve as a patient’s first point of contact D) limited
in the health care system, their importance cannot be
overstated. However, in 2007, a 1 trivial 5.1 percent of 2
graduating medical students had decided to pursue further Which choice provides the smoothest transition
between the first and second paragraphs?
training in this field.
A) NO CHANGE
2 One of the most promising solutions to our B) Many medical students do not wish to pursue
country’s primary care predicament is the evolution of the primary care because of the unreasonable work
hours.
“hospitalist.” First coined in 1996, the term “hospitalist” C) In the 1980s, the number of primary care
refers to physicians who dedicate most of 3 there physicians in the United States plummeted.
D) DELETE the underlined portion.
career to the care of acutely ill hospitalized patients. They
provide care for patients who require hospital treatment
3
with medicine (rather than surgery). The vast majority
A) NO CHANGE
of hospitalists are trained in internal medicine or family
B) their
medicine, though a small percentage also comes from C) his or her
other specialties including pediatrics, psychiatry, and D) they’re
dermatology.
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4 Because hospitalists generally work twelve-hour 4
shifts for seven days in a row, they provide patients with Which choice most effectively establishes the main
topic of the paragraph?
continuity of care, allowing them to be seen by the same
A) The growth of hospitalist medicine introduces a
physician for much of their hospital stay. Since they are number of benefits for both patients and hospitals
alike.
based in the 5 hospital hospitalists can also check-up on
B) Hospitalists introduce a number of challenges for
each patient multiple times a day, and they can coordinate hospital patients and staff.
care from specialists and ancillary departments such as C) The growth of the hospitalist movement is likely
to accelerate in the coining years.
6 the physical and occupational therapy department, and
D) Patients generally prefer hospitalists to other
the social services department, and the nursing types of doctors due to the fact that hospitalists
provide continuity of care.
care management department. Form the hospital’s
perspective, hospitalists are also generally associated with
5
modest cost savings since hospitalists coordinate among
A) NO CHANGE
multiple departments and, as a result, 7 being well-
B) hospital,
positioned to effectively allocate hospital resources.
C) hospital;
D) hospital:
6
A) NO CHANGE
B) physical and occupational therapy, social services,
and nursing care management.
C) physical and occupational therapy, and social
services, and also nursing cane management.
D) the physical and occupational therapy
department, and the social services department,
and, in addition, the nursing care management
department.
7
A) NO CHANGE
B) which can be
C) are
D) DELETE the underlined portion.
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The rapid growth of hospitalist medicine in recent 8
years suggests that hospitalists are here to stay. 8 While At this point, the writer wants to add accurate and
specific information from the graph to support the
many healthcare providers and recipients laud this growth, claim made in the previous sentence. Which choice
best accomplishes this goal?
there are still a number of outstanding issues that need to
A) Since 2006, the hospitalist movement’s rate of
be addressed. For example, experts still do not know what growth has continued to increase.
long-term impacts the hospitalist movement will have on B) Between 2006 and 2009, the number of
hospitalists increased from nearly 20,000 to about
the general internist and family medicine 9 workforce?
28,000.
If more internists and family medicine doctors decide to C) In 2009, the number of hospitalists in the United
become hospitalists, what will happen to the availability of States leveled off at around 30,000.
D) Between 2006 and 2009, the number of
these doctors for the outpatient population?
hospitalists in the United States more than
doubled.
9
A) NO CHANGE
B) workforce;
C) workforce
D) Workforce.
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10 In addition, if hospitalists are to become full members 10
of academic medical centers, they will likely need to The writer is considering deleting the underlined
sentence. Should the writer make this deletion?
incorporate a number of additional skills into their training,
A) Yes, because the sentence weakens the argument
particularly research skills. in favor of training more hospitalists.
While the precise trajectory of the hospitalist B) Yes, because the sentence restates information
provided earlier in the paragraph about the need
movement is still unclear, this new field of medicine has for additional training for hospitalists.
immense potential to fill many of the current gaps in our C) No, because the sentence provides another
example of a future challenge for the hospitalist
healthcare system. 11 movement.
D) No, because the sentence provides another
example of a benefit to patients for training more
hospitalists.
I 11
I
The writer wants to conclude the passage by proposing
a relevant question for the reader to consider. Which
choice best accomplishes this goal?
'IS
A) The question now is whether it would be worth
126 CONTINUE