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Re: Comparative historian Marc Ferro claims that the largest discrepancy i [#permalink]
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QUESTION 2


Choice (B) is supported by the final lines of the passage, which indicate that textbook publishers are first and foremost seeking to maximize profit. Thus, textbooks are not just teaching instruments, but money makers. Choice (A) is not supported by the passage. The theorists use Marx’s term, but that doesn’t mean he was a member of the school. Choice (C) is wrong; the passage simply says the literature is more comprehensive. That’s not the same as saying it is no longer biased. Choice (D) is not supported by the passage. Although the author rejects the idea that the power elites are in control of textbooks, it may still be true that publishers take their views into account. Choice (E) is put forth by the critical theorists, but it is not necessarily true.
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Re: Comparative historian Marc Ferro claims that the largest discrepancy i [#permalink]
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QUESTION 4

Whereas in the past, American historians… After introducing the main idea, most of the first paragraph is spent dismissing possible causes for the discrepancy that Ferro claims. The third sentence absolves the secondary literature as a suspect; if you selected this sentence, you may have failed to clarify that the problem asked for the sentence that explains why. The fourth sentence gives the desired reason: The secondary literature became more comprehensive after the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 60s. If you chose the fifth sentence, note that the passage doesn’t state whether space constraints were ever a problem.
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Re: Comparative historian Marc Ferro claims that the largest discrepancy i [#permalink]
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