Entry Exam Category: College Admission Exams
Course: Accuplacer
Exam: Accuplacer Reading Full-Length Practice Test

Practice Question

Extract

Passage 1: In a recent survey concerning plagiarism among scholars, two University of Alabarma economists asked 1,200 of their colleagues if they believed their work had ever been stolen. A startling 40 percent answered yes. While not a random sample, the responses still represent hundreds of cases of alleged plagiarism. Very few of them will ever be dragged into the sunlight. That's because academia often discourages victims from seeking justice, and when they do, tends to ignore their complaints. 'It's like cockroaches,' says the author of a recent book about academic fraud. 'For every one you see on the floor, there are a hundred behind the stove.' Passage 2: Words belong to the person who wrote them. There are few simpler ethical notions than this, particularly as society directs more and more energy toward the creation of intellectual property. In the past 30 years, copyright laws have been strengthened, fighting piracy has become an obsession with w Hollywood, and, in the worlds of academia and publishing, plagiarism has gone from being bad literary manners to something close to a felony. When a noted historian was recently found to have lifted passages from other historians, she was asked to resign from the board of the Pulitzer Prize committee. And why not? If she had robbed a bank, she would have been fired the next day.
The author quoted in Passage 1 would likely argue that the historian’s having 'lifted passages from other historians' (sentence 4, Passage 2) is:

Answer Choices

  • A: an example of academic collaboration
  • B: deserving of harsh punishment
  • C: far from an isolated incident
  • D: a comparatively recent problem

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: In Passage 1, the quoted author compares plagiarism to cockroaches, stating: 'For every one you see on the floor, there are a hundred behind the stove.' This metaphor clearly suggests that instances of plagiarism are far more common than the few reported ones—indicating it's not an isolated issue. Therefore, the historian mentioned in Passage 2 would be seen as just one of many who have committed similar acts.

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