A. Jim didnt want to be sold into slavery
B. Jim wanted to save his family.
C. Mr. SmartyPants does not remember what this was because it doesn't matter.
D. A and B
E. All the above
I was puzzled there, thinking about it for about 5 minutes. I couldn't decide if it were A or D. (I even wrote on my arm so I would remember to look it up) I was pretty sure it was A, so I put down A.
The next day rolls around... and I get it wrong! What..... sillyness! How dare he mark me wrong! I was positive it was A instead of D! Then the idea dawned upon me! I thought it would be a neat idea to type something up and refute his dastardly claims (mwahha)
so I wrote and gave him the following
Ryan Kim
1/11/06
Why I Should Gain One Point and Have Question 17 Marked Correct
During the test on January 10th, 2006 during Period 1, I stumbled upon Question 17. The Question was along the lines of "What was Jim's reason for running away?" The question looked ambiguous to me, but I marked A. And the next day found out that I was incorrect. I believe that I am indeed correct and that I deserve an extra point on my English Test.
Researching the text myself, Chapter 8 of the text: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is where Jim appears to Huck after he ran away from his former master. In the chapter, there is no mention of Jim's family. He only gives one reason for running away: That his former master (Either Widow Douglas or Miss Watson) was going to sell him to a slave trader. He does infact mention his family, however that is in a much later Chapter, after Huck and Jim leave Jackson Island. It is impossible to conclude that Jim initially ran away to free his family because there is no evidence to support that. Notice that the thought of freeing his family is revealed to us at a later chapter, while they are on the run. You can speculate that it was one of Jim's motives, but never revealed it to us, but there is no evidence for that. The fact that he said he ran away because he was going to be sold means he would of ran away wether or not he was planning to save his family.
Consider this scenario: You are driving to Bestbuy to buy a videogame. Now on your way to Bestbuy, at the corner of your eye you see a Starbucks. You think to yourself "Well, I see a Starbucks, it's on the way to Bestbuy, I got a few extras dollars, why don't I stop by and get a Java Chip Frappuchino?" You purchase your frosty drink and drive to Bestbuy, purchase your game, and go back home.
Now is it logical for me to conclude that the reason why you got on the road was to buy a Frappuchino and a videogame? Absolutely Not! The reason why you got on the road was to buy your videogame, not a Frappuchino. The idea of getting a Frappuchino was merely an idea that crossed your path while you were on the road pursuing your goal. If that is illogical, then how is it logical to claim that Jim ran away from his former master to free his family, when a) He never mentioned it in chapter 8, and b) The idea was revealed to us at a much later chapter.
Now today rolls by (I wasn't unable to see him at all since then) and he wanted to discuss it with me. He said that he was amused and liked my initiative (I too did it because it seemed amusing)
He tried to refute my claims, and I was trying to refute his. He tells me the "best answer was D" Because I'm assuming that when Jim says something, thats all thats in his mind. I tell him that you're assuming something unsaid. Therefore The answer has to be ambiguous. He also told me that my Best Buy analogy was irrelevant, which I totally disagree with.
Because of my "initiative" he was willing to give me a point... one percentage point. Not another point of how much the test was out of >_> (He said one percentage point was about an extra half-point, that cheap cheap man! I should of wrote another paper explaining why I should get one TEST point, not one PERCENTAGE point... but I won't)
I told him he was never going to change my view, and that the correct answer should have been A, not D. Although he thinks otherwise, MR. MCMULLEN IS WRONG! AND FOREVER WILL BE WRONG! (according to me anyway, im sure he thinks the same for me )
It was indeed a fun experience though It was good for laughs for the both of us.