Name: ____________________________ Date: ____________________________

“Ban the Ban!”; “Soda’s a Problem but …” (with “Three Cheers for the Nanny State”)
SidneyAnne Stone; Karin Klein; Sarah Conly
FIRST READ: Comprehension
Identify the choice that best answers the question.
Why is Michael Bloomberg mentioned in both “Ban the Ban!” and “Soda’s a Problem but …”?
According to “Soda’s a Problem but …,” how does the proposed law regulating soda size differ from the smoking ban that was implemented? Choose two options.
According to “Soda’s a Problem but…,” which is a main reason the ban on large sodas failed to be approved?
FIRST READ: Concept Vocabulary
Identify the choice that best answers the question.
If a plan is implemented, which of the following must be true?
CLOSE READ: Analyze the Text
Identify the choice that best answers the question.
Part A Which is the best evaluation of the support given for the claim in “Ban the Ban!”?
Part A The author of “Soda’s a Problem but …” comments on the argument that “people are helpless in the face of sugar.” Which best describes her perspective of this argument?
Part B Which of these quotations from the text is the most relevant evidence in support of her perspective?
CLOSE READ: Analyze Craft and Structure
Identify the choice that best answers the question.
Which of these overgeneralizations is the basis for the argument in “Ban the Ban!”?
Part A Which of the following states the most important claim on which the argument in “Soda’s a Problem but …” is based?
Part B Which of these excerpts from “Soda’s a Problem but …” best supports the answer to Part A?
Which of the following quotations from “Ban the Ban!” are the best examples of the logical fallacy of over-reliance on emotion? Choose two options.
The author of “Ban the Ban!” claims that implementing the ban on large sodas is the beginning of “a very slippery slope.” According to the author, where will this slippery slope lead?
LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT: Word Study
Identify the choice that best answers the question.
Based on your knowledge of the Latin prefix ex-, choose the option that provides an example of something that would be described as exterior.
LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT: Conventions
Identify the choice that best answers the question.
Which of the following is a simple sentence?
Comparing Texts
Identify the choice that best answers the question.
Read the following quotation from “Three Cheers for the Nanny State.”
John Stuart Mill wrote in 1859 that the only justifiable reason for interfering in someone’s freedom of action was to prevent harm to others.
Which idea from “Ban the Ban!” and “Soda’s a Problem but …” provides the best example of an action that Mill would find acceptable?
Which of the following ideas are suggested in both “Ban the Ban!” and “Soda’s a Problem but …”? Choose two options.
Which word means the same as intentions in this sentence?
Paul has good intentions, but in spite of being well-meaning, he rarely completes a project.
Which of the following most clearly presents a reason for someone to intervene? Base your answer on the meaning of intervene.
Part B Which of the following quotations from the text provide the best example of the answer to Part A?
Part A Which best describes how the author of “Soda’s a Problem but …” feels about the soda ban?
Part B Which of these quotations from the text most clearly supports her perspective?
The word extract comes from the Latin root meaning “to pull or draw.” Use this information, along with your knowledge of the prefix ex-, to choose the correct definition of extract.
Which of the following sentences includes only one dependent and only one independent clause?
Read the following sentence. Which term correctly identifies its structure?
Dana is against adopting a new school policy, which requires students to wear uniforms, but Sam calls it a great idea.
Which features of the following sentence make it a compound sentence?
Shana’s class raises funds to save the rainforest; Emmett’s class volunteers to clean up the local park.
Read the following quotation from “Three Cheers for the Nanny State.”
It’s fair to stop us, Mill argued, when we are acting out of ignorance and doing something we’ll pretty definitely regret.
According to the author of “Soda’s a Problem but …” how should the government go about “stopping us” from consuming too much soda?
Which idea does the author of “Three Cheers for the Nanny State” promote that is unacceptable to the authors of “Ban the Ban!” and “Soda’s a Problem but …”?