During most of the nineteenth century, many French women continued to be educated according to models long established by custom and religious tradition. ███
Intro topic ·Education of French women during 1800s
Not supported. If anything, the author suggests the two proposals were quite radical for the standards of the day, which is why they didn’t end up passing.
b
They were fundamentally █████████ ███ ██ █████ ██████████ ████ ██ █████████
There’s no evidence the author considers the two proposals unethical.
c
They were well-meaning ████████ ██ ██ ██ ████ ██ ███ ████████ ██ ███ █████
This is the best supported answer. Both proposals attempted to tap into the egalitarian ideals of the French Revolution and sought a more egalitarian structure of education for men and women. Although they failed to pass, they both represent attempts to implement egalitarian education. Society wasn’t ready for such education at the time.
d
They were reasonable, ███ ██ ██ █████████ ██ ██████████ ███ ████ ███████
The author doesn’t indicate that it’s “difficult to understand why they failed.” In fact, the author suggests a potential reason they failed.
e
They were not ███████ ███████ █████ ████ ████ ███ █████ ██████████████
Not supported, because the author never suggests the reason they failed was their lack of comprehensive scope. In fact, the second proposal did have a “more comprehensive approach.”
Difficulty
77% of people who answer get this correct
This is a moderately difficult question.
It is somewhat easier than other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%139
152
75%164
Analysis
Author’s perspective
Implied
Law
Single position
Spotlight
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
6%
163
b
7%
160
c
77%
166
d
5%
158
e
5%
160
Question history
You don't have any history with this question.. yet!
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