Here is what the passage simplified says to us
Quote:
In a recent study, David Cressy examines two central questions concerning English immigration to New England in the 1630s:
OK. Cassidy studied the case of immigrants to NE and the reasons are twoQuote:
what kinds of people immigrated and why?
our reasons
Quote:
Using contemporary literary evidence, shipping lists, and customs records, Cressy finds that most adult immigrants were skilled in farming or crafts, were literate, and were organized in families. Each of these characteristics sharply distinguishes the 21,000 people who left for New England in the 1630s from most of the approximately 377,000 English people who had immigrated to America by 1700.
Cassidy made his researchers of the stuff using historical data and other resources to find the characteristics highlighted in the second sentence in red. Basically, the first trance of immigrants was skilled more than the big chuck came later in NEQuote:
With respect to their reasons for immigrating, Cressy does not deny the frequently noted fact that some of the immigrants of the 1630s, most notably the organizers and clergy, advanced religious explanations for departure, but he finds that such explanations usually assumed primacy only in retrospect.
of the first chunk, some of those people gave a religious explanation to immigrate to NE BUT we assume this and arguing those from the study AFTER. We do really do not know at the time if those motivations were true or not. We were not there in NE in 1630 We assume thisQuote:
When he moves beyond the principal actors, he finds that religious explanations were less frequently offered, and he concludes that most people immigrated because they were recruited by promises of material improvement.
The second chunk of people showed us they had other reasons to immigrateNow, based on the analysis above we can explain question 25 and 27
25)
25. According to the passage, Cressy would agree with which of the following statements about the organizers among the English immigrants to New England in the 1630's?
I.
Most of them were clergy.
We know they were some. Wrong
II. Some of them offered a religious explanation for their immigration.
True
III. They did not offer any reasons for their immigration until some time after they had immigrated.
No we assume this. Not they did at the time. WE think this. wrong
IV. They were more likely than the average immigrant to be motivated by material considerations.
Some of them were clergy. Most were literate. We do not know so much if they were motivated by material reasons. Maybe. We do not know for sure. What we do know for sure from the records is answer choice II. Also notice the wording "
more likely than the average immigrant " absolutely we CANNOT infer this from the passage.
As you can see if you break down the passage, the question becomes manageable and easy
27)
27. The passage suggests that the majority of those English people who had immigrated to America by the late seventeenth century were
(A) clergy
(B) young children
(C) organized in families
(D) skilled in crafts
(E) illiterate
Easy E once we do know the passage
The first chunk was - quote " were skilled in farming or crafts, were literate, and were organized in families. "
The second
"most people immigrated because they were recruited by promises of material improvement."
Easy E.
Ask if you do need else.
Regards