Sample ACT Reading Test Passage with Questions and Answer Explanations

Similar documents
Preptests 63 Answers and Explanations (By Ivy Global) Section 4 Reading Comprehension

EXPRESSIONS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATE

Valuable Particulars

Publishing a Journal Article

ABELARD: THEOLOGIA CHRISTIANA

Plato s. Analogy of the Divided Line. From the Republic Book 6

THE THRIVING ARTIST MANIFESTO

Name: Date: Baker ELA 9

15. PRECIS WRITING AND SUMMARIZING

Study 4 Controlling the Tongue James 3:1 12 Review Relationship of Jesus Sermon on the Mt and James Faith without Good Deeds Is Dead Matt 7:15 20

Essay Analysis. English 621. Purpose. Audience. Subject Matter. The purpose is what the essay tries to accomplish.

Anna Maria's. READTHEORY.ORG Name Date

On Living the Artist s Way Robert S. Griffin

THOMAS-KILMANN CONFLICT MODE QUESTIONNAIRE

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International Advanced Subsidiary and Advanced Level. Published

Isaac Julien on the Changing Nature of Creative Work By Cole Rachel June 23, 2017

Japan Library Association

History of Creativity. Why Study History? Important Considerations 8/29/11. Provide context Thoughts about creativity in flux

TASTE. Appreciation, Culture, Refinement, Subtlety and Style 1. ESSENCE Style is the dress of thoughts. Chesterfield ( )

Beautiful Evidence: A Journey through the Mind of Edward Tufte Stephen Few August 8, 2006

1 P a g e N a m e : P e r i o d : Names:. Period:. Lord of the Flies Chapters 2 & 3 - Small Group Questions

ener How N AICE: G OT t (8004) o Argue Paper

from Self-Reliance by Ralph Waldo Emerson

Secrets of Communication and Self Development

John Locke. The Casual Theory of Perception

This is a template or graphic organizer that explains the process of writing a timed analysis essay for the AP Language and Composition exam.

PHL 317K 1 Fall 2017 Overview of Weeks 1 5

International Journal of Advancements in Research & Technology, Volume 4, Issue 11, November ISSN

Human Progress, Past and Future. By ALFRED RUSSEL WAL-


Test at a Glance. Number of Questions 40 Multiple-choice questions based on reading passages and statements

Do Universals Exist? Realism

Here to stay by Gary Boyle.

Graff, Gerald. Taking Cover in Coverage. The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism. Ed.

Anansi Tries to Steal All the Wisdom in the World

CONTINGENCY AND TIME. Gal YEHEZKEL

Art and Morality. Sebastian Nye LECTURE 2. Autonomism and Ethicism

-This is the first grade of the marking period. Be sure to do your very best work and answer all parts of the assignment completely and thoroughly.

WHO ARE YOU? Visual Literacy: John Henry s Hand. The Symbolism of Me

Ten Important Attributes of Beautiful Pianoforte Playing

How to write a Thesis Statement. AP Literature and Composition

The Ultimate Oldie But Goodie: William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Law of England

CHAPTER 1. Accuracy versus expression

5Module 9. English. Using Antonyms. A DepEd-BEAM Distance Learning Program supported by the Australian Agency for International Development

The Senses at first let in particular Ideas. (Essay Concerning Human Understanding I.II.15)

5. The JPS Solo Piano Arranging System

1. The guide pointed out to us the magnificent carvings above the windows. DREW The guide the magnificent..

Thinking Well and Writing Well:

MRHS English Presents: A Shakespearean Historical Tragedy Written in Performed First in Macbeth. By William Shakespeare

11+ TEST English Paper

UNDERGRADUATE II YEAR. SUBJECT: English Language & Poetry TOPIC: Song john Donne LESSON MAP: 2.6.C.1 Duration: 28:23 min

A STEP-BY-STEP PROCESS FOR READING AND WRITING CRITICALLY. James Bartell

ARCHITECTURE AND EDUCATION: THE QUESTION OF EXPERTISE AND THE CHALLENGE OF ART

Test 1- Level 4 TAL Test 2019 (1 hour 15 minutes) Part A. USE OF ENGLISH: Multiple Choice (10 questions) Choose the correct option (A,B or C ) for

Works Cited at the end of the essay. Adequate development in a paragraph

AN ESSAY ON NEO-TONAL HARMONY

How to write an introduction

Aristotle. By Sarah, Lina, & Sufana

A Happy Ending: Happiness in the Nicomachean Ethics and Consolation of Philosophy. Wesley Spears

Laudation on the Occasion of the Vernissage "In the Land of Colours" paintings by JAN MICHAŁ STUCHLY. A few words on the works of Jan Michał Stuchly

Prestwick House. Activity Pack. Click here. to learn more about this Activity Pack! Click here. to find more Classroom Resources for this title!

amorphous facile proffer sanguine ascetic doggerel guile protégé seraphic decorum

How to grab attention:

Name Class If I Won the Lottery Before we begin reading The Peal by John Steinbeck, please complete the following journal prompts.

Rational Agency and Normative Concepts by Geoffrey Sayre-McCord UNC/Chapel Hill [for discussion at the Research Triangle Ethics Circle] Introduction

Part 1: A Summary of the Land Ethic

Dethier, Brock. 21 Genres and How to Write Them. Logan: Utah State UP pages. $ Print.

Unit 2: Puritan, Native American and Colonial

RONDALL REYNOSO.

Intention and Interpretation

ENGLISH FILE. 5 Grammar, Vocabulary, and Pronunciation B. 3 Underline the correct word(s). 1 Order the words to make sentences.

Reading Assessment Vocabulary Grades 6-HS

69 QUOTATIONS. Josh Billings ( )

Public Forum Debate ( Crossfire )

Prestwick House. Activity Pack. Click here. to learn more about this Activity Pack! Click here. to find more Classroom Resources for this title!

Taking a Second Look. Before We Begin. Taking Second Looks! 9/29/2017

Janice Lee. Recitation 2. TA: Milo Phillips-Brown

Literary Terms and the FCAT Reading Test: A Review

David Ethics Bites is a series of interviews on applied ethics, produced in association with The Open University.

Sign the following statement and return this sheet to me on the due date, stapled to the back of your completed work.

Nicomachean Ethics. p. 1. Aristotle. Translated by W. D. Ross. Book II. Moral Virtue (excerpts)

Logical Fallacies Appeal to/from Authority Fallacy

Life Areas Test & Bagua Map

Study Guide to THE MERCHANT OF VENICE

MATERIALS AND ARCHITECTURE What is the relation between the honest use of materials, and beauty in architecture?

E N G L I S H S T U D E N T S A L M A N A C P A R T E - L A NG U A G E A N A L Y S I S E S S A Y : P E R S U A S I VE L A N G U A G E

Glencoe/McGraw-Hill Podcast Script

Censoring Huck Finn. Mackenzie Spicer. It s a classic or better yet, a masterpiece. It appears on academic reading lists year after

The Style, Main Argument, and Basic Ideas of the Republic

Paper 2-Peer Review. Terry Eagleton s essay entitled What is Literature? examines how and if literature can be

As a prereading activity, have students complete an anticipation guide structured in the following manner: Before Reading

Audio Metering Measurements, Standards, and Practice (2 nd Edition) Eddy Bøgh Brixen

Strategies for Writing about Literature (from A Short Guide to Writing about Literature, Barnett and Cain)

Colonnade Program Course Proposal: Explorations Category

Content. Learning Outcomes

Give me liberty or give me death! These are the times that try men s souls

Philosophy of Art. Plato

Literature Analysis. stories of merit to the masses. Two periods that produced literature with differing styles are the

Intro to Logic. Lisa Duffy. November Week 1. (Suggested use: November 1-9) Monday

Structure of a cover letter >>>CLICK HERE<<<

Transcription:

Sample ACT Reading Test Passage with Questions and Answer Explanations This sample ACT Reading Test passage is followed by several questions. Read the passage and then choose the best answer to each question that follows the passage. Refer to the passage as often as necessary to answer the questions. Humanities: This passage (published in 1893) is adapted from Modern Painters by John Ruskin, a nineteenth-century art critic. (5) (10) (15) (20) (25) (30) Is it useful to compare the works of the greatest artists? Should an art student be encouraged to paint like Leonardo and Goya, though one is Italian and the other Spanish, and they lived in different centuries? It is, indeed, true that there is a relative merit, that a peach is nobler than a hawthorn berry. But in each rank of fruits, as in each rank of masters, one is endowed with one virtue, and another with another; their glory is their dissimilarity, and they who propose in the training of an artist that he should unite the coloring of Tintoretto, the finish of Durer, and the tenderness of Correggio are no wiser than a horticulturist would be who made it the object of his labor to produce a fruit which should unite in itself the lusciousness of the grape, the crispness of the nut, and the fragrance of the pine. And from these considerations one most important practical corollary is to be deduced, namely, that the greatness or smallness of a man is, in the most conclusive sense, determined for him at his birth, as strictly as it is determined for a fruit whether it is to be a currant or an apricot. Education, favorable circumstances, resolution, and industry can do much; in a certain sense they do everything; that is to say, they determine whether the apricot shall fall blighted by (35) (40) (45) (50) (55) (60) (65) the wind, or whether it shall reach maturity. But apricot out of currant great man out of small did never yet art or effort make; and, in a general way, men have their excellence nearly fixed for them when they are born; a little cramped and frostbitten on one side, a little sun-burned and fortune-spotted on the other, they reach between good and evil chances, such size and taste as generally belong to the men of their caliber. Therefore it is, that every system of teaching is false which holds forth great art as in any wise to be taught to students or even to be aimed at by them. Great art is precisely that which never was, nor will be, taught. It is preeminently and finally the expression of the spirits of great men; so that the only wholesome teaching is that which simply endeavors to fix those characters of nobleness in the pupil s mind, without holding out to him, as a possible or even probable result, that he should ever paint like Titian or carve like Michelangelo. Such teaching enforces upon him the assured duty of endeavoring to draw in a manner at least honest and intelligible and cultivates in him those general charities of heart, sincerities of thought, and graces of habit which are likely to lead him, throughout life, to prefer openness to affectation, realities to shadows, and beauty to corruption. 1 www.theallpapers.com

1. Which of the following is the best title for this passage? A. The Comparison of Great Artists B. The Uniqueness of Artistic Genius C. How to Train an Artist D. Artists Are Made, Not Born 2. According to the first paragraph (lines 1 21), the great artists are: F. alike G. dissimilar H. poor models for student artists J. no wiser than horticulturists 3. The development of the first paragraph (lines 1 21) depends chiefly upon: A. the posing of a question and the offering of a series of answers B. an extended analogy C. a series of rhetorical questions D. a contrast of the specific and the general 4. In the second paragraph (lines 22 44), the author compares men to fruits to stress: F. the importance of inborn ability G. the importance of good luck H. the importance of determination and hard work J. humans ability to control their destiny 5. The comparison of artists to fruits is employed in: A. the second paragraph (lines 22 44) only B. the first and second paragraphs (lines 1 21 and 22 44) only C. the first and third paragraphs (lines 1 21 and 45 67) only D. all three paragraphs 6. The author of the passage would probably believe that a great dancer achieved success chiefly because of: F. hard work G. an intense will to succeed H. inborn ability J. excellent coaching 7. As it is used in line 14, the word finish most nearly means: A. completeness B. polish C. reticenc D. perspective 8. The author would probably disagree with all of the following EXCEPT: F. all artists are equally valuable G. contemporary artists should be taught to imitate the works of the great artists of the past H. greatness in art is unteachable J. birth alone will determine artistic success GO ON TO THE NEXT PAGE 2 www.theallpapers.com

9. The author would be likely to condemn a work of art for all of the following reasons EXCEPT: A. dishonesty B. simplicity C. unreality D. affectation 10. What the last paragraph (lines 45 67) suggests should be taught to prospective artists implies that the author believes: F. there is no significant connection between the character of the artists and the work of art G. an evil artist might produce noble art H. there is a relation between the character of the artist and the work of art J. a virtuous artist may produce corrupt art 3 www.theallpapers.com

Answer Explanations 1. B. Choice A. is only a minor concern; the main thrust of the passage isn t to compare great artists. Choice D., according to the passage, is untrue, as made clear in, for example, greatness or smallness... determined for him at his birth (lines 24 27). The passage asserts that choice C., training an artist, can t be done (lines 45 48). 2. G. The passage calls their dissimilarity the glory of artists (lines 11 12). Choice F. is therefore obviously incorrect. Choice H. is also not a good choice. The passage indicates that artists shouldn t imitate the masters or be told they can learn to be as good, but it doesn t call great artists poor models. Choice J. is irrelevant to the question; it s a reference to a poor method of training. 3. B. The extended comparison in the first paragraph of the passage likens the unique qualities of certain paintings to qualities of fruit. The passage opens with two questions, but the questions aren t the chief method used to develop the paragraph (choices A. and C.); the extended analogy is much more significant. Choice D. is simply incorrect; there is no contrast of specific and general. 4. F. Although the passage grants education some importance, its chief point is that the artist s talent is inborn. See lines 22 52. Choices H. and J. are conventional ideas, but they have nothing to do with the fruit analogy or with the author s central point. See lines 35 39. Similarly, choice G. is irrelevant. 5. B. The comparison is introduced in the first paragraph and further developed in the second (lines 27 44). This eliminates choice A. It doesn t appear in the third paragraph, eliminating choices C. and D.. 6. H. Although the other elements are important, inborn ability, according to this writer, is the most important factor. See lines 35 44. A commonly held idea is that hard work (choice F.) and an intense will to succeed (choice G.) are the keys to artistic success, but remember to answer the question according to the points made in the passage itself. Choice J. also isn t relevant to the central idea of the passage. 7. B. The artist refers to the virtue possessed by each master. In this context, finish means polish. Choice A. may seem reasonable, but polish is more appropriate. Choices C. and D. are definitions that have nothing to do with the word finish, nor does C. fit the context. Reticence means a disinclination to speak. 8. H. Notice the word EXCEPT in the question. The idea that greatness in art can t be taught is central to the passage, and therefore choice H. is the only statement that the author would be likely to agree with. Choice F. is incorrect; although the author recognizes the merits of different artists, he states in lines 6 7 that there is a relative merit. He would also disagree with choice G. (lines 52 58) and with choice J.; lines 29 35 indicate that factors other than birth play a role. 4 www.theallpapers.com

9. B. In the last paragraph, the author specifically objects to dishonesty (choice A.), unreality (choice C.), and affectation (choice D.). The approval of honesty and intelligibility suggests that the author wouldn t object to simplicity. See lines 59 67. 10. H. The last paragraph suggests teaching artists about the nobility of other artists and virtues including charity, sincerity, and honesty. The implication is that the better a person the artist is, the more likely (though not certain) it is that the artist s work will be good. Lines 49 58 make a connection between character and artistic achievement, and therefore F. is a poor choice, as are G. and H.. The author sees great art as the expression of the spirits of great men. 5 www.theallpapers.com