A Quilt of a Country

A Quilt of a Country

9th Grade

14 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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Quilt of a Country Quiz

Quilt of a Country Quiz

9th Grade

10 Qs

A Quilt of a Country

A Quilt of a Country

Assessment

Quiz

English

9th Grade

Hard

CCSS
RI.9-10.2, L.9-10.4, RL.9-10.4

+12

Standards-aligned

Created by

Jonathan Pettyjohn

Used 57+ times

FREE Resource

14 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

An antonym is a word that means nearly the opposite of another word. Which word is an antonym for discordant?
harmonious
conflicting
disconnected
incompatible

Tags

CCSS.L.9-10.4

CCSS.L.9-10.5

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Which sentence gives the most accurate description of a pluralistic society?
A pluralistic society contains a mix of religions, cultures, and traditions.
In a pluralistic society, each member has more than one way of doing things.
In a pluralistic society, people share their culture and traditions with others.
A pluralistic society is a group of people who work together to get to know each other.

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Which is the best example of diversity in a town?
The town has residents from Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
The town is run by a mayor and a city council.
The town has gas stations, markets, and office buildings.
The town has elementary schools, middle schools, and high schools.

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

In “A Quilt of a Country,” what point is the author making when she discusses her father’s old neighborhood in Philadelphia, “in which Jewish boys would walk several blocks out of their way to avoid the Irish divide of Chester Avenue”?
Conflicts and divisions between immigrant groups have appeared throughout history.
Living in ethnically divided neighborhoods is the cause of hatred and prejudice.
The people who live in ethnically divided neighborhoods work hard and value education for their children.
Immigrants who live in ethnically divided neighborhoods undermine the unity of the people of the United States.

Tags

CCSS.RI.9-10.2

CCSS.RI.9-10.3

CCSS.RI.9-10.6

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Which quotation from “A Quilt of a Country” best supports the idea that the author is making the point that conflicts and divisions between immigrant groups have appeared throughout history?
Do the Cambodians and the Mexicans in California coexist less easily today than did the Irish and Italians of Massachusetts a century ago? You know the answer.
Historians today bemoan the ascendancy of a kind of prideful apartheid in America, saying that clinging to ethnicity, in background and custom, has undermined the concept of unity.
What is the point of a nation in which Arab cabbies chauffeur Jewish passengers through the streets of New York—and in which Jewish cabbies chauffeur Arab passengers, too, and yet speak in theory of hatred, one for the other?
“The old neighborhood Ma-Pa stores are still around. . . . Ma and Pa are now Korean, Vietnamese, Iraqi, Jordanian, Latin American. They live in the store. They work seven days a week. Their kids are doing well in school. They’re making it.”

Tags

CCSS.RI.9-10.1

CCSS.RI.9-10.2

CCSS.RI.9-10.3

CCSS.RL.9-10.1

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Which quotation from “A Quilt of a Country” best supports the idea that the main message the writer is trying to communicate in "A Quilt of a Country" is that it is amazing that a country made up of such diverse people can be united as one nation?
These [people who died in the World Trade Center destruction] are the representatives of a mongrel nation that somehow, at times like this, has one spirit. Like many improbable ideas, when it actually works, it’s a wonder.
America...is held together by a notion, the notion that all men are created equal, though everyone knows that most men consider themselves better than someone.
“Of all the nations in the world, the United States was built in nobody’s image,” the historian Daniel Boorstin wrote.
What is the point of a nation in which one part seems to be always on the verge of fisticuffs with another . . . ?

Tags

CCSS.RI.9-10.1

CCSS.RI.9-10.2

CCSS.RI.9-10.3

CCSS.RI.9-10.6

CCSS.RL.9-10.1

CCSS.RL.9-10.2

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Which of the following is the effect that Quindlen creates by repeating the word enormous in this sentence from “A Quilt of a Country”? Perhaps they understand it at this moment, when enormous tragedy, as it so often does, demands a time of reflection on enormous blessings.
The effect is to help the reader shift from one idea, tragedy, to its opposite, blessings.
The effect is to make a sarcastic contrast between a tragic reality and the blessings it destroyed.
The effect is to prove that two opposing ideas, tragedy and blessings, are really the same.
The effect is to explain how bad situations always lead to good outcomes.

Tags

CCSS.RL.9-10.4

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