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Question 1: My answer is (A).
The answer is in the first sentence: The years that saw the founding of Cornell and Stanford Universities were also the years when many small private colleges were established in the Southern U.S. to serve the educational needs of the newly freed slaves.

Question 2: My answer is (E).
Check this sentence: the “separate but equal” principle, even if it had been faithfully adhered to, could never have created black land-grant institutions in the southern and border states as financially secure as the land-grant institutions that developed with the help of the 1862 act.
It means (1) the “separate but equal” principle, in practice, was not faithfully adhered to.
(2) Even if it had been faithfully adhered to, Black land-grant institutions in those states would not have received as much state financial support as land-grant institutions in the midwestern states received.
(A) is attractive, but (E) is still better, esp. because "these states simply were not generous in their appropriations for state-supported education"
(B) No such distinction made in the sentence. (Also, it is almost impossible to define equality.)
(CD) Not discussed at all.

Question 3: My answer is (E).
The key is: Only in the 20th century did the struggling private Black Institutions begin to receive support in single-gift amounts larger than a few thousand dollars.
It follows that, prior to the 20th century, gifts to private Black institutions were typically given in amounts of no more than a few thousand dollars.

Question 4: My answer is (B).
In the context of “a handful of individuals and bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fund”, both the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fund serve as examples of "a handful of individuals and bodies".
BTW, in GMAT, the use of "like" to introduce examples is incorrect. Change "like" to "such as".

Question 5: My answer is (B).
(A) Too broad. "A history of Black Higher Education" should at least mention some of the important college names, their curricula, famous faculty or graduates, and their impact.
(B) Looks ok. Keep for now.
(C) Cannot leave "Black" in the title.
(D) There is indeed comparison, but between Black and White, not between Black Private Institutions and Black Land-Grant Institutions.
(E) Either not covered or not the focus of the passage.
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1. The author connects the timing of the establishment of many small private Black colleges in the South to which of the following events?

(A) The emancipation of the slaves- It can be inferred from line 1-3, "many small private colleges were established in the Southern U.S. to serve the educational needs of the newly freed slaves"
(B) The passage of the Morrill Act in 1892
(C). The passage of the Morrill Act in 1890
(D) The increase in the number of Black students attending high school.
(E) The establishment of charitable foundations like the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fund.

2. According to the passage, if the southern and border states had adhered faithfully to the principle of “separate but equal,” which of the following would have been true?

(A) Private colleges and universities in those states would have received more generous state appropriations.
(B) Black private institutions in those states would have received state appropriations equal to those given to Black land-grant institutions in those states.
(C) Black private institutions in those states would not have received state appropriations for expansion and renovation.
(D) Black private institutions in those states would not have received donations as large as Black private institutions in other states received.
(E) Black land-grant institutions in those states would not have received as much state financial support as land-grant institutions in the midwestern states received.
It can be inferred from the lines 23-25, "could never have created black land-grant institutions in the southem and border states as financially secure as the land-grant institutions that developed with the help of the 1862 act"

3. It can be inferred from the passage that, in the nineteenth century, gifts to private Black institutions were typically given

(A) by nineteenth-century industrial entrepreneurs such as Leland Stanford
(B) by bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation
(C) to establish institutions that were to be named after the donors.
(D) in an attempt to make private Black institutions competitive with Black land-grant institutions
(E) by benefactors in amounts of no more than a few thousand dollars.- it can be inferred from lines 8- 12, "there were not comparable benefactions for private Black higher educational institutions"

4. The author refers to the Julius Rosernwald Fund primarily in order to.

(A) clarify an ambiguity
(B) provide an example- it is provided as an example to the line mentioned "handful of individuals and bodies like"
(C) emphasise a problem
(D) defend an assertion
(E) introduce an argument

5-Which of the following titles best summarizes the content of the passage?

(A) A history of Black Higher Education
(B) Financial Support for Black Higher Education
(C) A Financial History of Major Private and Land Grant Universities
(D) A comparison of the Financial Support Given to Black Private Institutions and Black Land-Grant Institutions-The passage 1 define financial help received by black private institution, on the other hand passage 2 provides " A similar disparity existed between Black and White state- supported institutions".
(E) The successful Growth of Black Higher Education despite Financial Difficulties
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Competition mode is off now.

OAs are:

AEEBB

zhanbo
ElninoEffect
vijayram2496

Great work. (In the same order above :blushing: )

Everyone (excluding @zhanbo) got the last question incorrect, OA is indeed B not D. I will take on this and will post an explanation.

Thank you
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Sajjad1994
Competition mode is off now.

OAs are:

AEEBB

ElninoEffect
zhanbo
vijayram2496

Great work. (In the same order above :blushing: )

Everyone got the last question incorrect, OA is indeed B instead of D. I will take on this and will post an explanation.

Thank you

AEEBB?
I did get the last question correct, did I?
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zhanbo
Sajjad1994
Competition mode is off now.

OAs are:

AEEBB

ElninoEffect
zhanbo
vijayram2496

Great work. (In the same order above :blushing: )

Everyone got the last question incorrect, OA is indeed B instead of D. I will take on this and will post an explanation.

Thank you

AEEBB?
I did get the last question correct, did I?

Yes it is B, and sorry you have got it correct, That's great.
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Word: 339
Read Time: 4 mins 30 sec
Paraphrasing:
Para 1: Unlike Cornel and Stanford universities, which got well-funded and well-developed, Black institutions education system, for newly freed slaves, started receiving funds for development post 20th century onwards in good amount.
Para 2: Disparity existed between Black and White state-supported higher education institutions.
The Morrill act of 1980 was better than earlier one, the Morrill Act of 1962, for Black land-grant institutions. With equal principles and faithfully adhered, southern and border Black land-grant institutions would have financially secure as the land-grant institutions that developed with the help of the 1862 act.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. The author connects the timing of the establishment of many small private Black colleges in the South to which of the following events?

As mentioned in the passage, “The years that saw the founding of Cornell and Stanford Universities were also the years when many small private colleges were established in the Southern U.S. to serve the educational needs of the newly freed slaves
Correct option: (A) The emancipation of the slaves

(B) The passage of the Morrill Act in 1892 – Out of scope
(C). The passage of the Morrill Act in 1890 – related to land-grant institutions

Eliminate D, and E –Only in the 20th century, ‘and then mostly through the donations of a handful of individuals and bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fuhd, did the struggling private Black Institutions begin to receive support in single-gift amounts larger than a few thousand dollars
(D) The increase in the number of Black students attending high school
(E) The establishment of charitable foundations like the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fund.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. According to the passage, if the southern and border states had adhered faithfully to the principle of “separate but equal,” which of the following would have been true?

As mentioned in the passage,
The “separate but equal” principle, even if it had been faithfully adhered to,
could never have created black land-grant institutions in the southern and border states as financially secure as the land-grant institutions that developed with the help of the 1862 act: these states simply were not generous in their appropriations for state-supported education


Support comparison between southern and border to mid-western institution

Correct option (E)
Black land-grant institutions in those states
would not have received as much state financial support as
land-grant institutions in the midwestern states received


Eliminate rest all are having wrong comparison
(A) [Private colleges and universities] in those states
would have received more generous state appropriations

(B) [Black private institutions in those states]
would have received state appropriations equal to those given to
[Black land-grant institutions in those states]

(C) [Black private institutions in those states]
would not have received state appropriations
[for expansion and renovation]

(D) [Black private institutions in those states]
would not have received donations as large as
[Black private institutions in other states received]

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. It can be inferred from the passage that, in the nineteenth century, gifts to private Black institutions were typically given
As mentioned in the 1st para, “there were not comparable benefactions for private Black higher educational institutions
Correct option: (E) by benefactors in amounts of no more than a few thousand dollars.

(A) by nineteenth-century industrial entrepreneurs such as Leland Stanford – Supported white institute
(B) by bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation – Supported in 20th century
(C) to establish institutions that were to be named after the donors – Out of scope
(D) in an attempt to make private Black institutions competitive with Black land-grant institutions – Out of scope

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

4. The author refers to the Julius Rosernwald Fund primarily in order to.

As mentioned in the passage,
Only in the 20th century, ‘and then mostly through the donations of a
handful of individuals and bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fuhd,
did the struggling private Black Institutions begin to receive support in single-gift amounts larger than a few thousand dollars

Correct option: (B) provide an example

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. Which of the following titles best summarizes the content of the passage?
Para 1: Support by funds
Para 2: Support by land-grant state appropriations
Correct Option: (B) Financial Support for Black Higher Education

(A) A history of Black Higher Education – Wrong, passage highlights only about financial support
(C) A Financial History of Major Private and Land Grant Universities – Wrong, comparison
(D) A comparison of the Financial Support Given to Black Private Institutions and Black Land-Grant Institutions – Wrong, Trap! this was about bias support based Act of 1962 and Act of 1980
(E) The successful Growth of Black Higher Education despite Financial Difficulties – Wrong, no growth discussed
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Added the third paragraph and four new questions
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Sajjad1994
Added the third paragraph and four new questions

Hi Sajjad1994

I understand that for Q4 B is correct answer, but how are we removing C ? I was confused b/w the two and opted C.
Julius fund (& Rockfeller) were taken as example of 20th Century donors with 1000+ donation amount. Which was an emphasis on the funding problem in the context of passage.

Please help.
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Quote:
Hi Sajjad1994

I understand that for Q4 B is correct answer, but how are we removing C ? I was confused b/w the two and opted C.
Julius fund (& Rockfeller) were taken as example of 20th Century donors with 1000+ donation amount. Which was an emphasis on the funding problem in the context of passage.

Please help.

Answer option (C) is incorrect because while the author does mention a problem regarding the lack of financial support for Black higher educational institutions, the specific reference to the Julius Rosenwald Fund is not used to emphasize this problem. Rather, the fund is mentioned as one of the bodies that provided support to struggling private Black institutions in the 20th century. The author uses this reference as an example to demonstrate the lack of significant benefactions for Black higher education institutions compared to White institutions. Therefore, answer option (B) "provide an example" is more accurate.
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6. The passage suggests that if a high school education had been an occupational requirement in 1910, which of the following would have been true?

(A) The low number of students who received vocational education in high school would have become apparent. ---> No mention of this in passage
(B) The differences among states in their appropriations for high school education would have become apparent. ---> Again, out of scope
(C) The proportion of teen-agers between fourteen and seventeen years old enrolled in high school would have been greater than fifteen percent. ---> Let's keep this
(D) The financial discrimination against Black high schools and Black land-grant institutions in the southern and border states would have been even greater. ---> This as well we need to keep for now
(E) The state appropriations for White and Black high schools in the midwestern, border, and southern states would have been more equitable. ---> In fact, the otherwise has been stated in what happens after WWII. It wasn't equitable, but rather discrimination clearer. So this is out as well.

Even if this is added now and not sure if it's official, I found this to be a really great question. The question clearly says would have been true We know for certain from the passage:

Quote:
so long as even high school education was not an occupational requirement (note that only about fifteen percent of the age group fourteen to seventeen was enrolled in high school even as late as 1910)

Clearly the reason the reason why enrollment is so less: it wasn't an occupational requirement. If it was, certainly at least one more child would have gone to the high school right, thereby making the figure more than fifteen percent.

As for eliminating D, which I didn't on my first try: financial discrimination against Black high schools was never mentioned anywhere in the passage to conclude this. We are talking about discrimination in higher educational institutions here. High schools were just mentioned to emphasize the growing popularity/importance given to education after WWII.
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Hi Sajjad1994,

Can you please post the OE for Question #9?

Thanks in advance!
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Hi Sajjad1994,

Can you please post the OE for Question #9?

Thanks in advance!

Explanation

9. According to the passage, large private donations to higher education in the nineteenth century were given for which of the following purposes?

Difficulty Level: 550

Explanation

(I) The passage does not mention large private donations being given in the nineteenth century to promote more egalitarian ideals. Instead, it focuses on the disparity in funding and support for different types of institutions, particularly between Black and White institutions.

(II) The passage discusses how large private donations were given to assist certain established colleges, including both expanding and refurbishing modest college establishments that had already taken root. This aligns with option (II).

(III) The passage states that great 19th century industrial entrepreneurs like Ezra Cornell and Leland Stanford gave amounts ranging from half a million to tens of millions of dollars to found great private teaching and research universities where none had previously existed. This supports option (III).

Therefore, the correct answer is (D) "II and III only," as these options accurately reflect the purposes for which large private donations were given to higher education in the nineteenth century, according to the passage.

Answer: D
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Sajjad1994. please, can you post answers to questions 5 and 7.
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Sajjad1994. please, can you post answers to questions 5 and 7.
­Posted here
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Can you please post the OE for Q.7 i refer to [https://gmatclub.com/forum/the-years-that-saw-the-founding-of-cornell-and-stanford-universities-384119.html#p2978324] but it is just Q.5

Thanks Sajjad1994
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Sajjad1994

The years that saw the founding of Cornell and Stanford Universities were also the years when many small private colleges were established in the Southern U.S. to serve the educational needs of the newly freed slaves. While great 19th century industrial entrepreneurs like Ezra Cornell and Leland Stanford gave amounts ranging from half a million to tens of millions of dollars to found great private teaching and research universities where none had previously existed, and while many others, less famous, gave impressive sums to expand and refurbish modest college establishments that had already taken root, there were not comparable benefactions for private Black higher educational institutions. Only in the 20th century, ‘and then mostly through the donations of a handful of individuals and bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fuhd, did the struggling private Black Institutions begin to receive support in single-gift amounts larger than a few thousand dollars.

A similar disparity existed between Black and White state- supported institutions. The Morrill Act of 1862 is considered by some to be the most important piece of federal legislation affecting state-supported higher education in the 19th century. It created the basis on which states established land-grant institutions throughout the country, most successfully perhaps in the midwestem States. Less has been written about the Morrill Act of 1890, which made possible the establishment of separate Black landgrant institutions in the southern and border states, where the majority of Black people lived before the 1st World War. Though it is called the “2nd Morrill Act”, no one would seriously contend that it achieved monetarily for Black land-grant institutions anything comparable to what the 1862 legislation accomplished for other land-grant institutions. The “separate but equal” principle, even if it had been faithfully adhered to, could never have created black land-grant institutions in the southem and border states as financially secure as the land-grant institutions that developed with the help of the 1862 act: these states simply were not generous in their appropriations for state-supported education.

So long as college education was uncommon (which it was until well into the twentieth century) and so long as even high school education was not an occupational requirement (note that only about fifteen percent of the age group fourteen to seventeen was enrolled in high school even as late as 1910), it was possible to ignore the very substantial differences that existed between the educational opportunities available to White people and those available to Black people. After the Second World War, high school and college education became common among White Youth while the overwhelming majority of Black youth were still excluded from the college option. It was then that the full extent of the financial discrimination against Black higher educational institutions became apparent.

1. The author connects the timing of the establishment of many small private Black colleges in the South to which of the following events?

(A) The emancipation of the slaves
(B) The passage of the Morrill Act in 1892
(C). The passage of the Morrill Act in 1890
(D) The increase in the number of Black students attending high school.
(E) The establishment of charitable foundations like the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fund.


2. According to the passage, if the southern and border states had adhered faithfully to the principle of “separate but equal,” which of the following would have been true?

(A) Private colleges and universities in those states would have received more generous state appropriations.
(B) Black private institutions in those states would have received state appropriations equal to those given to Black land-grant institutions in those states.
(C) Black private institutions in those states would not have received state appropriations for expansion and renovation.
(D) Black private institutions in those states would not have received donations as large as Black private institutions in other states received.
(E) Black land-grant institutions in those states would not have received as much state financial support as land-grant institutions in the midwestern states received.


3. It can be inferred from the passage that, in the nineteenth century, gifts to private Black institutions were typically given

(A) by nineteenth-century industrial entrepreneurs such as Leland Stanford
(B) by bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation
(C) to establish institutions that were to be named after the donors.
(D) in an attempt to make private Black institutions competitive with Black land-grant institutions
(E) by benefactors in amounts of no more than a few thousand dollars.


4. The author refers to the Julius Rosernwald Fund primarily in order to.

(A) clarify an ambiguity
(B) provide an example
(C) emphasise a problem
(D) defend an assertion
(E) introduce an argument


5. Which of the following titles best summarizes the content of the passage?

(A) A history of Black Higher Education
(B) Financial Support for Black Higher Education
(C) A Financial History of Major Private and Land Grant Universities
(D) A comparison of the Financial Support Given to Black Private Institutions and Black Land-Grant Institutions
(E) The successful Growth of Black Higher Education despite Financial Difficulties


6. The passage suggests that if a high school education had been an occupational requirement in 1910, which of the following would have been true?

(A) The low number of students who received vocational education in high school would have become apparent.
(B) The differences among states in their appropriations for high school education would have become apparent.
(C) The proportion of teen-agers between fourteen and seventeen years old enrolled in high school would have been greater than fifteen percent.
(D) The financial discrimination against Black high schools and Black land-grant institutions in the southern and border states would have been even greater.
(E) The state appropriations for White and Black high schools in the midwestern, border, and southern states would have been more equitable.


7. Which of the situations described in the following statements is most analogous to the situation described in the sentence in lines 44-52 (Text in Red) of the passage?

(A) Until recently, so few students obtained experience with computers in high school and so few jobs required even minimal computer experience that inequity of access to computers in different high schools went un-noticed.
(B) As long as few people completed high school and pursued college degrees, extensive progams of financial aid for college students were unnecessary.
(C) So long as most people believe that equality of opportunity has been achieved for members of minority groups, women, and people who have disabilities, and so long as equality of results is not a goal in this country, little progress will be made toward a truly just society.
(D) Colleges provide such different amounts of financial support for their athletic teams and the importance of sports activities in obtaining jobs is so variable that it is hard for a coliege applicant to assess the significance of a college's athletics program.
(E) Since a doctoral degree is not usually required for teaching high school and since many high school systems do not even require that their faculty have masters' degrees, II is easy for education students to ignore the benefits of pursuing graduate studies.


8. The author implies that after the changes in college education following the Second World War, which of the following occurred?

(A) A college degree became a requirement for a large number of occupations.
(B) Enrollment in high school of the age group fourteen to seventeen increased by fifteen percent.
(C) The relatively low number of Black and White college graduates in the southern and horde= states became apparent.
(D) The relatively low number of Black people who obtained college degrees became obvious.
(E) The number of graduates of Black higher educational institutions increased rapidly.


9. According to the passage, large private donations to higher education in the nineteenth century were given for which of the following purposes?

I. To promote more egalitarian ideals
II. To assist certain established colleges
III. To found major teaching and research universities

(A) II only
(B) III only
(C) I and II only
(D) II and III only
(E) I, II, and III


GMAT Club's Reading Comprehension Challenge 2022
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Passage # 11 | Date: 07 March 2022
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­Hi HarshR9
Can you help me solidify why B is better than D in qs 5? 
And in qs 5, I was stuck between A and C. Logocally, when I look from a macro perspective, C is stronger. But I am not clearly able to eliminate A. Can you help me out to more logically strong A and eliminate my confusion?
 ­
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RenB

Sajjad1994

The years that saw the founding of Cornell and Stanford Universities were also the years when many small private colleges were established in the Southern U.S. to serve the educational needs of the newly freed slaves. While great 19th century industrial entrepreneurs like Ezra Cornell and Leland Stanford gave amounts ranging from half a million to tens of millions of dollars to found great private teaching and research universities where none had previously existed, and while many others, less famous, gave impressive sums to expand and refurbish modest college establishments that had already taken root, there were not comparable benefactions for private Black higher educational institutions. Only in the 20th century, ‘and then mostly through the donations of a handful of individuals and bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fuhd, did the struggling private Black Institutions begin to receive support in single-gift amounts larger than a few thousand dollars.

A similar disparity existed between Black and White state- supported institutions. The Morrill Act of 1862 is considered by some to be the most important piece of federal legislation affecting state-supported higher education in the 19th century. It created the basis on which states established land-grant institutions throughout the country, most successfully perhaps in the midwestem States. Less has been written about the Morrill Act of 1890, which made possible the establishment of separate Black landgrant institutions in the southern and border states, where the majority of Black people lived before the 1st World War. Though it is called the “2nd Morrill Act”, no one would seriously contend that it achieved monetarily for Black land-grant institutions anything comparable to what the 1862 legislation accomplished for other land-grant institutions. The “separate but equal” principle, even if it had been faithfully adhered to, could never have created black land-grant institutions in the southem and border states as financially secure as the land-grant institutions that developed with the help of the 1862 act: these states simply were not generous in their appropriations for state-supported education.

So long as college education was uncommon (which it was until well into the twentieth century) and so long as even high school education was not an occupational requirement (note that only about fifteen percent of the age group fourteen to seventeen was enrolled in high school even as late as 1910), it was possible to ignore the very substantial differences that existed between the educational opportunities available to White people and those available to Black people. After the Second World War, high school and college education became common among White Youth while the overwhelming majority of Black youth were still excluded from the college option. It was then that the full extent of the financial discrimination against Black higher educational institutions became apparent.

1. The author connects the timing of the establishment of many small private Black colleges in the South to which of the following events?

(A) The emancipation of the slaves
(B) The passage of the Morrill Act in 1892
(C). The passage of the Morrill Act in 1890
(D) The increase in the number of Black students attending high school.
(E) The establishment of charitable foundations like the Rockefeller Foundation and the Julius Rosenwald Fund.


2. According to the passage, if the southern and border states had adhered faithfully to the principle of “separate but equal,” which of the following would have been true?

(A) Private colleges and universities in those states would have received more generous state appropriations.
(B) Black private institutions in those states would have received state appropriations equal to those given to Black land-grant institutions in those states.
(C) Black private institutions in those states would not have received state appropriations for expansion and renovation.
(D) Black private institutions in those states would not have received donations as large as Black private institutions in other states received.
(E) Black land-grant institutions in those states would not have received as much state financial support as land-grant institutions in the midwestern states received.


3. It can be inferred from the passage that, in the nineteenth century, gifts to private Black institutions were typically given

(A) by nineteenth-century industrial entrepreneurs such as Leland Stanford
(B) by bodies like the General Education Board of the Rockefeller Foundation
(C) to establish institutions that were to be named after the donors.
(D) in an attempt to make private Black institutions competitive with Black land-grant institutions
(E) by benefactors in amounts of no more than a few thousand dollars.


4. The author refers to the Julius Rosernwald Fund primarily in order to.

(A) clarify an ambiguity
(B) provide an example
(C) emphasise a problem
(D) defend an assertion
(E) introduce an argument


5. Which of the following titles best summarizes the content of the passage?

(A) A history of Black Higher Education
(B) Financial Support for Black Higher Education
(C) A Financial History of Major Private and Land Grant Universities
(D) A comparison of the Financial Support Given to Black Private Institutions and Black Land-Grant Institutions
(E) The successful Growth of Black Higher Education despite Financial Difficulties


6. The passage suggests that if a high school education had been an occupational requirement in 1910, which of the following would have been true?

(A) The low number of students who received vocational education in high school would have become apparent.
(B) The differences among states in their appropriations for high school education would have become apparent.
(C) The proportion of teen-agers between fourteen and seventeen years old enrolled in high school would have been greater than fifteen percent.
(D) The financial discrimination against Black high schools and Black land-grant institutions in the southern and border states would have been even greater.
(E) The state appropriations for White and Black high schools in the midwestern, border, and southern states would have been more equitable.


7. Which of the situations described in the following statements is most analogous to the situation described in the sentence in lines 44-52 (Text in Red) of the passage?

(A) Until recently, so few students obtained experience with computers in high school and so few jobs required even minimal computer experience that inequity of access to computers in different high schools went un-noticed.
(B) As long as few people completed high school and pursued college degrees, extensive progams of financial aid for college students were unnecessary.
(C) So long as most people believe that equality of opportunity has been achieved for members of minority groups, women, and people who have disabilities, and so long as equality of results is not a goal in this country, little progress will be made toward a truly just society.
(D) Colleges provide such different amounts of financial support for their athletic teams and the importance of sports activities in obtaining jobs is so variable that it is hard for a coliege applicant to assess the significance of a college's athletics program.
(E) Since a doctoral degree is not usually required for teaching high school and since many high school systems do not even require that their faculty have masters' degrees, II is easy for education students to ignore the benefits of pursuing graduate studies.


8. The author implies that after the changes in college education following the Second World War, which of the following occurred?

(A) A college degree became a requirement for a large number of occupations.
(B) Enrollment in high school of the age group fourteen to seventeen increased by fifteen percent.
(C) The relatively low number of Black and White college graduates in the southern and horde= states became apparent.
(D) The relatively low number of Black people who obtained college degrees became obvious.
(E) The number of graduates of Black higher educational institutions increased rapidly.


9. According to the passage, large private donations to higher education in the nineteenth century were given for which of the following purposes?

I. To promote more egalitarian ideals
II. To assist certain established colleges
III. To found major teaching and research universities

(A) II only
(B) III only
(C) I and II only
(D) II and III only
(E) I, II, and III


GMAT Club's Reading Comprehension Challenge 2022
10 Days | 20 Passages | Win Prizes | Get Better at GMAT
Passage # 11 | Date: 07 March 2022
Click here for more details and master thread
­Hi HarshR9
Can you help me solidify why B is better than D in qs 5? 
And in qs 5, I was stuck between A and C. Logocally, when I look from a macro perspective, C is stronger. But I am not clearly able to eliminate A. Can you help me out to more logically strong A and eliminate my confusion?
 ­
­Hey RenB,

Sure. Let me try to help!

Q5) Which of the following titles best summarizes the content of the passage?

Crux of the passage: 
- In the 19th century, other private institutions (both newly created and already existing) got significant financial support. But not Black private institutions (that came up in that time). Only in the 20th Century did real support come in for these institutions. 
- In fact, this is not just for private institutions. This is also the case for public/state-funded ones. Morril Act 1 did nothing for Black institutions. Morrill Act 2 did something but not really much. Compared to other states, states with black institutions (Southern, border) did not do much to financially support (through land grants..).
- Only in the 20th century, post the 2nd world war, that the extent of discrimination in terms of lack of financial support against Black institutions became apparent.

Overall: It seems to be an exploration of the lack of solid financial support to Black educational institutions till the 20th Century.

(A) A history of Black Higher Education

The passage is not really focused on the overall history of Black Higher Education. Rather, it is focused on the historical lack of financial support for Black Higher Education. A general history of Black Higher Education would presumably focus on other aspects too - important colleges, financial support, enrolment, impact of the education, etc. The passage however is laser-focused on the "support" aspect. 

Choice A is not a good choice.

(B) Financial Support for Black Higher Education

Hold on to this. This is in line with what we understand about the passage.

(C) A Financial History of Major Private and Land Grant Universities

Major red flag -> This does not even mention "Black". Is the passage about the financial history of the major private (say Stanford, Cornell, etc.) and State-funded/Land Grant universities - how they got funded, how they used the money, etc.

Or is the passage about the financial support (or lack of it) for Black colleges? Choice C is a clear reject because it completely misses out on what the passage is really about in my view
.

(D) A comparison of the Financial Support Given to Black Private Institutions and Black Land-Grant Institutions

The passage at best is a comparison of financial support given to Black institutions (Private as well as Land-Grant) vs. financial support given to Non-Black (White?) institutions, done with the objective of highlighting the lack of support for Black institutions. The passage is not about comparing Black Private with Black Land-Grant.

(E) The successful Growth of Black Higher Education despite Financial Difficulties

Successful growth is not something the passage really discusses. This choice should be easy to reject.

___
Harsha
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