Sifting through the nonsense - finding information W.7.8 Grade 7 AASA Practice Test Questions TOC | Lumos Learning

Sifting through the nonsense - finding information W.7.8 Question & Answer Key Resources Grade 7 English Language and Arts - Skill Builder + AASA Practice

Grade 7 English Language and Arts - Skill Builder + AASA Practice Sifting through the nonsense - finding information

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Article Harper's for Young People magazine--Anonymous author

The boys of the Cambridge Manual Training School have a new lesson which has become very popular with them.
This is a fire drill.
The pupils are taught to go through the whole process of fighting a fire in the same way that the firemen do.
Before the boys are allowed to join the fire battalion, they have to be drilled, taught to march, and are obliged to attend lectures on surgery, and how to help injured people until the doctor comes.
After the boys have gone through this first course of study, they begin their real fireman's training. They attend more lectures in which they learn how to handle the various ladders and machines which firemen use. They have to learn how a fire engine is put together, what are the uses of every wheel and valve, and how to clean and care for each separate part of the engine; and when they are quite familiar with the various things used by firemen they pass on to the last stage of training.
This begins on March 1st, and from this time on the work is done out of doors.
A wooden building forty feet high, and provided with doors and windows exactly like a three-story house, is put up in the schoolyard, and it is with this building that the lessons are given.
Every Thursday afternoon an imaginary fire takes place in it. The hose is run out, the ladders are raised, and the lads go to work with a will, saving imaginary lives, and fighting imaginary flames.
Each week some new complication is supposed to take place, and some extra machine has to be brought into use until by the end of the school term they can handle every machine and ladder with the greatest ease.
When first the fire drill was introduced into the school, the boys were not obliged to take the study unless they wanted to; but it has become so popular that they are eager and anxious to take it, and now is part of the regular course of the school for all boys who are strong enough to stand the hard work it necessitates.

If you were writing an essay on interesting new programs in schools that keep kids excited about going to school, which detail from this selection would you NOT want to include in your research notes?