Sequence/Chronological Order, Cause/Effect, and Problem/Solution

Description

LSAT Elem Ed Quiz on Sequence/Chronological Order, Cause/Effect, and Problem/Solution, created by Tracy Rains on 17/11/2017.
Tracy Rains
Quiz by Tracy Rains, updated more than 1 year ago
Tracy Rains
Created by Tracy Rains almost 7 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Ice-cream is a delicious frozen treat that comes in a many different colors and flavors. Two of my favorite flavors are strawberry and chocolate. Though both of these flavors are delicious, strawberry may contain pieces of fruit while chocolate usually will not. Even though more chocolate ice-cream is sold across the country annually than strawberry, each flavor tastes great inside of a milk shake.
Answer
  • cause and effect
  • compare and contrast
  • chronological
  • sequence / process

Question 2

Question
The ice-cream shop around the corner from my house has the best ice-cream in the city. When you first walk inside, there is a long chrome counter with matching stools extending to alongside the far wall. Right where the counter stops, the booth seating begins. There are lots of old-timey knickknacks on the walls and chrome napkin holders on all the tables. My favorite part of the shop is behind the counter glass, where they keep all of the ice-cream flavors. A rainbow of delicious sugary flavors is kept cool and delicious behind the counter glass.
Answer
  • problem and solution
  • compare and contrast
  • spatial / descriptive
  • sequence / process

Question 3

Question
Have you ever had an ice-cream headache? That’s when a painful sensation resonates in your head after eating something cold (usually ice-cream) on a hot day. This pain is produced by the dilation of a nerve center in the roof of your mouth. The nerve center is overreacting to the cold by trying to heat your brain. Ice-cream headaches have turned many smiles to frowns.
Answer
  • problem and solution
  • cause and effect
  • chronological
  • compare and contrast

Question 4

Question
Freezer burn may have wasted more ice-cream than sidewalks. If you don’t know, freezer burn is when ice crystals form on the surface of ice-cream. These ice crystals can ruin the texture and flavor of the ice cream. But you can prevent freezer burn. Since freezer burn is caused when melted ice-cream is refrozen, rather than eating your ice-cream from the container as it melts, scoop your ice-cream into a bowl and put the container back in the fridge immediately. Doing this ought to help you solve your issues with freezer burn.
Answer
  • problem and solution
  • compare and contrast
  • chronological
  • spatial / descriptive

Question 5

Question
No one knows the true origin of ice-cream, but the first published ice-cream recipe appears in “Mrs. Mary Eales's Receipts,” a cook book that was printed in London in 1718. Sometime around 1832, an African American confectioner named Augustus Jackson created multiple ice cream recipes and invented a superior technique to manufacture ice cream. Ice cream soda was invented around 1874, but the real breakthrough may have been at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis, Missouri, when the American ice-cream cone was unveiled!
Answer
  • problem and solution
  • cause and effect
  • chronological
  • sequence / process

Question 6

Question
An action and its results are discussed as [blank_start]cause and effect[blank_end]
Answer
  • cause and effect

Question 7

Question
Information organized in order of time is in [blank_start]chronological[blank_end] order.
Answer
  • chronological

Question 8

Question
Differences and similarities of two or more things are discussed as [blank_start]compare and contrast[blank_end].
Answer
  • compare and contrast

Question 9

Question
[blank_start]Sequence / Process[blank_end] - Explains how something happens or is done, step-by-step
Answer
  • Sequence / Process

Question 10

Question
[blank_start]Problem[blank_end] and [blank_start]Solution[blank_end] - a difficulty is described and an answer is offered
Answer
  • Solution
  • Problem
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