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History/Social Studies Passage Videos 43 videos

SAT Reading: Classifying the Relationship Between Two Passages
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How was the Beanie Baby era parallel to the Tulip Bubble? Similar events, only the TulipMania almost bankrupted Holland. Bean Babies only bankrupte...

SAT Reading: Describing President Obama's Reasoning for Referencing the Founding Principles
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We need to find solutions for modern problems. The founding fathers of the country had no idea we'd have fake news. We have to adjust to modern lif...

SAT Reading: Describing President Obama's Point of View in the Conclusion of His Speech
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Obama's stance on the nation: We need to reform our economic opportunities. More resources need to be allocated to those at the bottom of the socia...

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SAT Reading: Defining the Word "Disparate" in Context 4 Views


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Description:

TulipMania is not a wrestling octagon. The emotional connection with greed behind TulipMania drove more than intrinsic values attibuted to tulips. Tulips of the era were the most expensive collectibles in history.


Transcript

00:03

all right Shmoopers have we moved on from tulipmania at least a little bit here

00:08

hopefully okay so let's go to the questions use a passage of disparate [text on screen]

00:11

spawn 158 they're mostly needs what so let's go zoom back to line 58

00:16

all right market a perpetual we have and flowed around such disparate stuff as

00:19

people cards all those boxes in action figures okay so what's the right answer

00:22

well let's see what do baseball cards old lunch boxes and action figures have

00:28

in common nothing or rather they're for the people who clearly need to get [action figures]

00:32

another hobby well they have nothing in common except being awesome yeah no we

00:36

love all that crap all that fine collectible stuff it's not one of the [Darth Vadar action figure]

00:41

answer choices though the clue that disparate means dissimilar is held in [text on screen]

00:46

the previous line there where we're told that all kinds of items have become

00:50

collectible the paragraph does say that the collectibles in question have little

00:55

inherent value but we're told later on that the prices of some of these things

00:58

are high so inexpensive a is a bad choice because a contradicts central

01:02

idea of the text are these items ridiculous B or trivial D well that's a

01:07

judgment call but there's nothing in the text to suggest that they are you got to

01:11

go with the text here not your personal biases lunch boxes are at least useful [trash can]

01:15

sort of via we had a Charlie Brown one with a thermos in it the fact that ours [picture of a lunchbox]

01:19

now has Wonder Woman on it it's a bonus though we swear it makes our peanut [wonder woman lunchbox]

01:24

butter and jellies taste more heroic we like that this seafood yet though [sandwich on a plate]

01:29

the restroom

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