Reading Informational Text Unit Test

13 of 1513 of 15 Items

Question
Use the paragraph to answer the question.

Iodine is an important micronutrient, a vitamin or mineral that is necessary for good health. It helps the body to produce hormones, helps babies develop in the womb, and is important to many other body processes. In 1924, iodine was added to salt to make up for a lack of public access to dairy foods and ocean fish, which are natural sources of iodine. The modern American diet, however, includes many processed foods that contain iodine. As a result, many salt manufacturers have stopped adding iodine to their product, a change that did not get much attention in the media. Some nutrition experts are concerned that people who still rely on table salt as a source of iodine will have an increase in disease caused by a diet lacking in the micronutrient. Only time will tell, as America moves into a new era where table salt is no longer a guaranteed source of iodine.

In 1–2 sentences, identify and explain the evidence that the author uses to support the idea that taking iodine out of table salt might cause harm.

(2 points)

Short Answer Rubric (2 points)
Points Awarded Criteria
2
The answer is very clear.

The answer is fully supported by details.

There may be a few errors in grammar, usage, or mechanics. Errors do not interfere with meaning.

1
The answer is somewhat clear.

Details are weak or not related.

There are some errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics. Errors interfere with meaning.

0 The question is not answered.


Skip to navigation

page 1 of 1

The evidence the author uses to support the idea that taking iodine out of table salt might cause harm is that iodine is an important micronutrient that is necessary for good health and the modern American diet includes many processed foods that contain iodine. Additionally, many salt manufacturers have stopped adding iodine to their product, which could lead to a diet lacking in this micronutrient.

The evidence that the author uses to support the idea that taking iodine out of table salt might cause harm is that iodine is an important micronutrient that is necessary for good health. It helps the body to produce hormones and helps babies develop in the womb. The author also mentions that the modern American diet includes many processed foods that contain iodine, so if iodine is removed from table salt, people who rely on it as a source of iodine may have an increase in disease caused by a diet lacking in the micronutrient.