Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

5. this question asks about what you read in the text from \george wash…

Question

  1. this question asks about what you read in the text from \george washington and the weaving of american history\ and the text from \it’s a worldly thing: the ancient multi - hued art of weaving baskets.\

how do the texts use evidence differently to support the idea of weaving’s significance?
a
\george washington\ analyzes a historical document, while \it’s a worldly thing\ draws on personal experiences.
b
\george washington\ incorporates interviews with experts, while \it’s a worldly thing\ conveys public opinion on the craft.
c
\george washington\ highlights different political theories, while \it’s a worldly thing\ focuses on tools of the craft.
d
\george washington\ includes fictional retellings of historical events, while \it’s a worldly thing\ uses traditional stories from different cultures.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The question asks how two texts use evidence differently to support weaving's significance. Option A incorrectly frames the "George Washington" text as analyzing a historical document (it focuses on basket weaving as American history, not a single document). Option C is wrong because neither text centers on political theories or tool focus. Option D is incorrect as the texts do not use fictional retellings vs traditional cultural stories. Option B accurately describes the difference: the "George Washington" text uses expert interviews to convey public opinion on the craft, while the other text focuses on personal experience framing weaving as a worldly, ancient craft.

Answer:

B. "George Washington" incorporates interviews with experts, while "It's a worldly thing" conveys public opinion on the craft.