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PTE AcademicReading

Multiple Choice, Single Answer

Read the text and answer the multiple-choice question by selecting the correct response. Only one response is correct.

Everyday Rituals as Cultural Data

cultural observations
Cultural observation is often imagined as the study of festivals, museums, or dramatic historical events. Yet many of the most reliable clues about a community’s values appear in ordinary routines: how people greet strangers, share space on public transport, or manage silence in conversation. This passage argues that everyday rituals provide a practical, evidence-based way to understand culture without relying on stereotypes. First, small behaviors frequently reveal underlying social priorities. In some cities, passengers avoid eye contact and keep physical distance, suggesting that privacy is treated as a form of respect. In others, brief conversation with strangers is common, indicating that sociability is expected even in temporary encounters. Second, observation should focus on patterns rather than single incidents. One unusually friendly or unfriendly interaction may reflect an individual’s mood, while repeated behaviors across different settings point to shared norms. However, the observer’s position also matters. Visitors may interpret unfamiliar habits as rude or inefficient because they compare them to their own expectations. For this reason, careful observers record context—time, location, relationships, and constraints—before drawing conclusions. They also consider how power and inequality shape public behavior; for example, who is expected to speak first in a meeting may depend on age, job rank, or gender. In conclusion, cultural understanding is strengthened when observation is systematic, humble, and grounded in everyday life. By treating routine interactions as data, researchers and travelers can form more accurate interpretations of social values and reduce the risk of simplistic cultural judgments.

Which of the following best describes what the passage is about?

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