contestada

Create an interpretive question that can be answered by this excerpt from Little Brother:

He slammed his hand down on the desk and then pointed his finger at me. "The *problem*, Mr. Yallow, is that you've been engaged in criminal conspiracy (a secret plan) to subvert (ruin, break) this school's security system, and you have supplied security countermeasures (ways around the system) to your fellow students. You know that we expelled Graciella Uriarte last week for using one of your devices." Uriarte had gotten a bad rap. She'd bought a radio-jammer from a head-shop near the 16th Street BART station and it had set off the countermeasures in the school hallway. Not my doing, but I felt for her.

Respuesta :

Interpretive question: An interpretive question does not have just one correct answer. For interpretive questions, “correct answers” are any answers that you can support with evidence from the text. The best interpretive questions, ones that generate the most engaging discussions, are those with several different “correct answers.” 


examples:How is “success” defined in this story? 

Is Jack a good person? 

Hoped this helped. Ask me if you need anything else (:

Answer:

Why does Mr. Yallow want to break the sys.?

Explanation: