| Question |
Answer |
| 1 |
B. Text A is informational with research; Text B is a personal narrative with emotions |
| 2 |
Text A's author views technology with concern - emphasizing risks like "decreased face-to-face interaction" and children who "struggle with basic conversation skills." Text B's author views technology positively - it's a "lifeline" that keeps friendships alive. The informational text focuses on problems; the narrative highlights benefits. |
| 3 |
Text B views technology more positively. Evidence from Text B: "my phone became a lifeline," "keeping our friendship alive," "friends laughing together, supporting each other." Evidence from Text A (showing the contrast): technology causes "decreased face-to-face interaction," "sleep disruption," and "increased anxiety." |
| 4 |
A. Both acknowledge that technology affects relationships |
| 5 |
An informational article uses facts and expert quotes, which might seem more credible and objective. A personal narrative uses emotions and personal experience, which might be more relatable and moving. The article might convince someone logically; the narrative might connect emotionally. Different readers respond differently to each format. |
| 6 |
B. Small acts of kindness can help someone feel less alone |
| 7 |
SIMILAR: Both feel isolated and alone at their new schools, both feel like outsiders looking in, and both experience a turning point when one person reaches out to them. DIFFERENT: Marcus moved within the US (Detroit to new school) while Aisha moved internationally (Beirut to Boston). Aisha faces additional challenges with language and culture. |
| 8 |
In Text A, Destiny approaches Marcus and mentions something positive about him (his science answer), leading to "something loosened in his chest." In Text B, Aisha takes the first step by complimenting Tyler's drawing, and Tyler responds with understanding ("It gets easier, I promise"). Both moments involve recognition and shared interests that break down barriers. |
| 9 |
B. They signal hope and the possibility of belonging |
| 10 |
Possible elements: (1) The experience of being the new kid / feeling isolated, (2) The turning point moment when someone shows kindness, (3) The theme of belonging and hope, (4) How each main character responds to their situation, (5) The role of shared interests in making connections, (6) The difference in their backgrounds/challenges. |
| 11 |
B. One supports required PE for all; the other wants student choice |
| 12 |
Both authors agree that physical activity/health is important for students. They just disagree on HOW it should be delivered (required class vs. student choice). |
| 13 |
Text A: Uses research ("Studies show," "CDC reports"), statistics ("obesity rates have tripled"), and logical arguments about health benefits.
Text B: Uses emotional appeals (students with asthma, social anxiety, humiliation), appeals to values (autonomy, respect), and proposes alternatives. |
| 14 |
Text A has a formal, authoritative tone - using words like "responsibility," "necessary," and citing research. It sounds confident and prescriptive. Text B has a more empathetic, critical tone - using phrases like "one-size-fits-all," "forced," "humiliation," and "respect." It appeals to individual needs and emotions. |