ANSWER THIS TO BE MARKED AS BRAINLIEST


Which detail from the text best support the answer to Part A (above)?


(RI.1)


A.

"Even though the flyer advertises this book as dystopian, there's some dissent around that" (Paragraph 5).


B.

"Teenagers are cynical, adds Aaron Yost, 16. And they should be: 'To be fair, they were born into a world that their parents kind of really messed up'" (Paragraph 11).


C.

"Teen readers themselves are characters in a strange land. Rules don't make sense. School doesn't always make sense. And they don't have a ton of power" (Paragraph 13).


D.

"The hallmark of moving from childhood to adulthood is that you start to recognize that things aren't black and white" (Paragraph 17).


THERE WILL BE A SCREENSHOT OF THE ARTICLE

ANSWER THIS TO BE MARKED AS BRAINLIEST Which detail from the text best support the answer to Part A aboveRI1 A Even though the flyer advertises this book as dys class=
ANSWER THIS TO BE MARKED AS BRAINLIEST Which detail from the text best support the answer to Part A aboveRI1 A Even though the flyer advertises this book as dys class=

Respuesta :

Answer:

It would be C : "Teen readers themselves are characters in a strange land. Rules don't make sense. School doesn't always make sense. And they don't have a ton of power" (Paragraph 13).

Step-by-step explanation:

Through the whole paragraph it is talking about how teens love the fact that the world isn't perfect and they like the realness of it. They also realize how they cannot shape their future; their parents are. And that makes them feel powerless. I think through reading dystopian novels it makes them wake up and to see the world. They feel like they can do something about it.

Answer:

3=B

4=B

Part A is A

Part B is E and B

Step-by-step explanation:

NUMBER 3

“There tends to be a common teen-angst thing, like: ‘Oh the whole world is against me, the whole

world is so screwed up,” Will explains. Which lets me know that number 3 is C.

NUMBER 4

"Which makes dystopian fiction perfect for the developing adolescent brain," says Laurence Steinberg,

a psychologist at Temple University.

“Their brains are very responsive to emotionally arousing stimuli,” he explains. During this time, there  are so many new emotions and they are much stronger than those kids experienced when they were  younger..."

This is what gave away the answer to number 4 which is B.

PART A #1

"Think of it like this: Teen readers themselves are characters in a strange land. Rules don’t make sense.  School doesn’t always make sense. And they don’t have a ton of power."

This makes me think "huh, this makes a lot of sense relating to the answer A which makes it the answer".

PART B #2

MULTIPLE CHOICE

b and e there isn't really much explanation for it.

All The Best -DevinChi