=> ANSWER: NO
1. Before and after the National Literacy Crusade, the child mortality rate for the illiterate women stayed at about 110 deaths for each thousand live births.
Keywords: before and after, child mortality rate, illiterate, 110
In paragraph 5, it is written that “the infant mortality rate for the children of illiterate mothers was around 110 deaths per 1000 live births”, and in paragraph 6, it is written that “after the…Crusade had ended, the infant mortality figures for those who remained illiterate… remained more or less unchanged”. So the rate remained at 110 per thousand.
=> ANSWER: YES
1. The women who had learnt to read through the National Literacy Crusade showed the greatest change in infant mortality levels
Keywords: learnt to read, National Literacy Crusade, greatest change
In the 6th paragraph, it is written that “For those women who learnt to read through the campaign, the infant mortality rate was 84 per thousand, an impressive 21 points lower than those women who were still illiterate”, whereas the rates for “those who remained illiterate and for those educated in primary school remained more or less unchanged”. So it is clear that women who had learnt through the campaign showed the greatest change.
=> ANSWER: YES
1. The women who had learnt to read through the National Literacy Crusade had the lowest rates of child mortality
Keywords: learnt to read through the National Literacy Crusade, lowest rate
“For those women who learnt to read through the campaign, the infant mortality rate was 84 per thousand” (6th paragraph). For women educated in primary school, the rate before the Crusade was “80 per thousand” (5 paragraph) and it “remained more or less unchanged” (6th paragraph). So the women educated in primary school had the lowest rates of child mortality, not
women who had learnt to read through the National Literacy Crusade.
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