A Teen and A Trolley
Quiz by Shannon McFarland
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- Q1
Which of the following best describes the central idea of the article?
Society places value on people based on how well they can make tough choices for the greater good.
Biases affect how people value others, but awareness can help reduce unequal treatment.
The trolley problem does not accurately reflect human nature because there is no right answer to the problem.
Humans are evil by nature and must actively do good in order to resist their evil impulses.
30s - Q2
Which of the following quotes best supports the answer to Part A?
"54 percent of people would throw the switch to sacrifice a standing woman, the number jumped to 74 percent if she was described as sitting in a wheelchair."(Paragraph 8)
"What do you do? Throw the switch and doom one person? Or do nothing and watch five die?" (Paragraph 1)
"Tiffany came across it in a class on ethics... It immediately fascinated her. 'There was genuinely no correct answer,' she says." (Paragraph 4)
"Understanding these hidden biases can be very important. With this information, she explains, 'we can target those biases and create a more equal society.'" (Paragraph 10)
30s - Q3
How does paragraph 1 contribute to the author's explanation of "the trolley problem"?
It describes a situation and asks questions similar to what can be found in the trolley problem.
It is designed to spark a classroom discussion about what the trolley problem represents.
It asks the reader to consider how they value others' lives and what biases affect this.
It shows that the trolley problem is just an exercise and doesn't determine how someone would actually react.
30s - Q4
Which statement best describes the relationship between ethics and the trolley problem, as shown in the article?
The trolley problem proves that ethics is not an unbiased study but one that changes from person to person.
The trolley problem is an experiment that teaches people how to accept scenarios no one can win.
The trolley problem forces people to confront their own biases both in daily life and regarding larger moral principles.
The trolley problem is an experiment that tests one's moral principles by posing a difficult decision.
30s