To determine the best placement for the sentence, "This has meant a lot of uncertainty around what a wide-scale return to office might look like in practice," we need to analyze how it relates to the context of the paragraph.
1. The first sentence states that bringing workers back has been difficult for both employers and employees, which sets the stage for the issues being discussed.
2. Following this, the evolution of the pandemic affecting plans suggests a continuous change has caused problems.
The sentence, "This has meant a lot of uncertainty around what a wide-scale return to office might look like in practice," fits logically after discussing the impact of the pandemic, as uncertainty naturally follows disrupted plans. Hence, it fits best after the second sentence.
3. The third sentence indicates that workers' returns are inconsistent, hinting at uncertainty in the process, further supported by the target sentence now placed here.
4. The remaining sentences discuss new policies and clarity beginning to emerge.
Accordingly, the sentence fits well as Option 2, connecting the discussion of disrupted plans to the trickle of returning workers, emphasizing the resulting uncertainty.
The sentences given, when properly sequenced, form a coherent paragraph. Choose the most logical order.
(a) In the New York City public schools, the overemphasis on standardized testing has led to test score inflation and numerous cheating scandals.
(b) Campbell’s Law predicts that any time huge stakes are attached to quantitative data, the data itself will become inherently unreliable and distorted through cheating and gaming the system.
(c) Precious resources are diverted to “for-profit” testing companies, and learning time is lost as students spend weeks preparing for the tests, and teachers are pulled out of the classroom for days at a time to score them.
(d) In New York City, class sizes in the early grades are the largest in 13 years.
(e) Meanwhile school budgets are scraped to the bone and class sizes are rising.
The sentences given, when properly sequenced, form a coherent paragraph. Choose the most logical order.
(a) As the grammar of standard English extends to the grammar of code, our errors find themselves embedded in programmes and replicating further and more widely than previously imaginable.
(b) Even a poorly constructed tweet reflects a poorly constructed thought, while grammatically lacking e-mail messages have become the hallmark of password phishing scams.
(c) Language is no less exacting than mathematics.
(d) As the title of a book “Eats, Shoots and Leaves” demonstrates, a single comma can change a sentence about the diet of a panda to one describing the behaviour of a dine-and-dash killer.
(e) The emergence of digital technology makes precision in language even more important.