Option 1:
Measuring the heights of every fiftieth person on the school roster to determine the average heights of the boys in the school
Comment: this might not be a good idea for fairness as we only wish to determine average height of the boys. Taking a group of 50 people randomly, might not give us the same number of boys every time.
Option 2:
Calling every third person on the soccer team’s roster to determine how many of the team members have completed their fundraising assignment
Comment: The context doesn't seem to need a sampling. The number of players in a soccer team is considerably small. We can find exact data by asking in person.
Option 3:
Observing every person walking down Main Street at 5 p.m. one evening to determine the percentage of people who wear glasses
Comment: To get a more accurate result and fairer sampling, the period of observing could have been longer, for example, observing for 12 hours on that day, or an alternative is to observe at 5 pm for 7 days in a row. It could happen that no one walking down the Main street precisely at 5 pm wears glasses, or it could happen the other way around.
Option 4:
Sending a confidential e-mail survey to every one-hundredth parent in the school district to determine the overall satisfaction of the residents of the town taking a poll in the lunch room (where all students currently have to eat lunch) to determine the number of students who want to be able to leave campus during lunch.
Comment: This sampling does fairly represent the population, although it might be an idea to scale down the sample population, i.e. every fiftieth parent.
Answer: Option 4
Answer:
Explanation:
the options are "is" and "are"
The pilot or flight attendant is usually alert during the flight.
it's talking about either one noun or the other, not two or more nouns, it cannot be are instead it should be is
I believe this is the correct answer:
<span><em>So before a battle begins, the horses paw the ground; toss their heads; the light shines on their flanks; their necks curve. So Peter Walsh and Clarissa, sitting side by side on the blue sofa, challenged each other.
</em>I would choose that particular paragraphs because the metaphor is slightly unusual there - two kids, Clarissa and Peter Walsh (when they were young) are being compared to horses, which is not really a common occurrence. <em>
</em></span>
Answer:
Steve joins Mr. Sawicki’s film club.
A robbery and murder are committed at the drug store.
Steve is arrested for murder.
Mr. Sawicki testifies at Steve’s trial.
Explanation:
Walter Dean Myers' "Monster" is about an African American teenager accused of murder. It is written interspersed with diary entries, screenplays and recollections. And though Steve is not found guilty, his innocence is still doubted by even his lawyer just because of his black race.
The protagonist of the story is Steve Harmon who happened to listen to a plan by two men, Richard Evans and James King. In the end, he was acquitted of the murder charge but not without any doubts about his involvement. Arranging the four sentences given in the questions in sequence of the events, the first sentence will be Steve joins Mr. Sawicki’s film club. Then followed by A robbery and murder are committed at the drug store. Steve is arrested for murder.Mr. Sawicki testifies at Steve’s trial.
Answer: But to me, my mother's English is perfectly clear, perfectly natural. It's my mother tongue. Her language, as I hear it, is vivid, direct, full of observation and imagery. That was the language that helped shape the way I saw things, expressed things, made sense of the world.
In this passage, Tan is giving us information about her mother's speech. She uses various examples to convey what the mother's English sounds like and the kind of things she can accomplish with it. However, it is at the very end where Tan explains where her own views of the world come from. She argues that her perspective, her views on the world and her beliefs all come from her "mother tongue," which is the way her mother speaks English.