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No one in my family could believe Allegra had any disability, much less one as severe as hers. To them a disability was physical, something you could see. They knew her as a happy, normal child. That's how it is with a learning disability -you don't see obvious physical symptoms.

But as she grew out of preschool, she would pretend to read-I knew she was pretending because the book was upside down. She withdrew into her own world where she could fantasize about being a ballet dancer, a Broadway actress or a figure skater. In the real world, ballet classes and music lessons led only to confusion, frustration and, ultimately, disappointment.

  • As for school, there was no way she could be included ina mainstream classroom. I went through every special school in New York, only to be told over and over: "She doesn't belong here." The last blow came a few months after the diagnosis, when I was
  • I had lived my life as the daughter of Henry Ford II, and for the first time in my life I faced a problem that neither money nor position could solve. I nearly gave up, but I knew I couldn't. Without me, my daughter stood no chance ofmaking it.
  • According to the first paragraph, Allegra's problem was  _ .
  • A.psychological
  • B.obvious
  • C.physical
  • D.invisible
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The phrase "making it" (para 4) probably means _.

  • A.becoming a figure skater
  • B.becoming a ballet dancer
  • C.becoming successful
  • D.getting proper treatment

The expression "a mainstream classroom"(para 3) refers, to _.

  • A.the last blow
  • B.the last school
  • C.special schools
  • D.normal education

Allegra was disabled in that _.

  • A.she was unable to learn like a normal child
  • B.she was always reading with her book upside down
  • C.she isolated herself from other children in her class
  • D.she was living in her dreams in conflict with the real world

It can be inferred from the last paragraph that _.

  • A.the author would ask Henry Ford II for help
  • B.the author would continue to help her daughter
  • C.the author would leave New York for the sake of her daughter
  • D.the author had to use money or position to deal with the problem

No one in my family could believe Allegra had any disability, much less one as severe as hers. To them a disability was physical, something you could see. They knew her as a happy, normal child. That's how it is with a learning disability -you don't see obvious physical symptoms.

But as she grew out of preschool, she would pretend to read-I knew she was pretending because the book was upside down. She withdrew into her own world where she could fantasize about being a ballet dancer, a Broadway actress or a figure skater. In the real world, ballet classes and music lessons led only to confusion, frustration and, ultimately, disappointment.

  • As for school, there was no way she could be included ina mainstream classroom. I went through every special school in New York, only to be told over and over: "She doesn't belong here." The last blow came a few months after the diagnosis, when I was
  • I had lived my life as the daughter of Henry Ford II, and for the first time in my life I faced a problem that neither money nor position could solve. I nearly gave up, but I knew I couldn't. Without me, my daughter stood no chance ofmaking it.
  • According to the first paragraph, Allegra's problem was  _ .
  • A.psychological
  • B.obvious
  • C.physical
  • D.invisible

When you're_____ a crisis, it often helps to talk to someone

  • A.going through
  • B.going in for
  • C.going after
  • D.going over
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