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24 votes
24 votes
Candy, as eight-year-old Bindi named her newly acquired companion, was a rat. "I got him two weeks after my dad died . . . He helps me feel lots better!" . . . A sense of security is critical for any grieving child, and Bindi, naturally, had found it in an animal -- one who'd sit on her shoulder as she'd rollerblade and on her lap during interviews. As she prepared to take on life without Dad, a small friend provided big comfort.

—Steve and Bindi Irwin,
Amy Breguet

How might a sixth-grader connect this text to his or her own life?

A sixth-grader can appreciate that a pet can be a great comfort to a kid who is sad.
A sixth-grader knows what it is like to have a career.
A sixth-grader understands how to train rats.
A sixth-grader knows a lot about nature and animal habitats.

User Swathi Anupuram
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2 Answers

17 votes
17 votes

The answer is A sixth-grader can appreciate that a pet can be a great comfort to a kid who is sad. or just A

User Douglasrcjames
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2.8k points
15 votes
15 votes

Answer:

its a

Step-by-step explanation:

User Daniel Lane
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3.2k points