- Sat Oct 21, 2023 11:07 am
#103727
Hi TootyFrooty,
The key to answering this type of question is to find the answer that has direct support for it in the passage. We need to be able to infer the correct answer from the passage. In other words, the passage won't usually directly state the information in the correct answer, but will provide information that let's us conclude the correct answer.
For Answer E, there is no direct support in the passage that the Mexican American political activists did not fully achieve their goals. While it's likely true that they didn't fully achieve their goals since that is probably true for most political parties and activists (for example, I think it's probably safe to say that we haven't achieved complete equality in this country and eliminated all forms of discrimination), there is no mention of this in the passage.
One thing to careful of in this answer is to not confuse "goals" with strategies. The words "goals" is only mentioned once in the passage in line 28. The only thing that we know about the goals of these groups is that, according to Garcia, they centered on liberal reform, not revolution (lines 29-30). We don't know from the passage how successful they were at achieving these goals.
Finally, one might incorrectly assume that the Mexican American political activists didn't fully achieve their goals from the fact that some of the later reforms from the Militant Chicanos came out of similar concerns of the earlier Mexican American Generation, but this is not necessarily true. For example, the earlier group may have achieved the goals that they had set, but the later group set new goals that went beyond the goals of the earlier group. We just don't know based on the passage.