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Read the following passage:People always tell me how much I look like my mother, and I take that as a compliment. But in our new home, I was realizing that her hair was so . . . different. It didn't look as beautiful to me anymore, and I didn't want the kids at school to think I was strange. I tried to wake up early and do my hair and then rush out of the house before she would notice the change.What is one plot development that would make the cultural conflict worse in this story?A.The narrator tries to help her mother update her hairstyle to fit in the new culture.B.The narrator attends a sleepover at which the girls give one another funny hairdos.C.The narrator's father announces that the family is moving back to their home country.D.The narrator's mother comes to school, and some of the kids mock her hairstyle.

Question

Read the following passage:People always tell me how much I look like my mother, and I take that as a compliment. But in our new home, I was realizing that her hair was so . . . different. It didn't look as beautiful to me anymore, and I didn't want the kids at school to think I was strange. I tried to wake up early and do my hair and then rush out of the house before she would notice the change.What is one plot development that would make the cultural conflict worse in this story?A.The narrator tries to help her mother update her hairstyle to fit in the new culture.B.The narrator attends a sleepover at which the girls give one another funny hairdos.C.The narrator's father announces that the family is moving back to their home country.D.The narrator's mother comes to school, and some of the kids mock her hairstyle.

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Solution

One plot development that would make the cultural conflict worse in this story is D. The narrator's mother comes to school, and some of the kids mock her hairstyle. This would intensify the narrator's feelings of embarrassment and cultural conflict, as her peers are directly ridiculing her mother's hairstyle, which is a representation of their cultural background.

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