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FREE BRAINLIEST AND EXTRA POINTS (article: "From Canes to Closures"?)




Write 6 complete sentences to answer the following question.



Does the article make a good argument for fashion to be more inclusive? (Why or Why not) Use evidence from the text to support your claim.

Sentence 1- Claim (rephrases and answers the question)
Sentence 2- Evidence - (Quote from the text that supports your claim)

Sentence 3- Reasoning (Explains how the evidence supports your claim)

Sentence 4- Evidence - (Quote from the text that supports your claim)

Sentence 5- Reasoning (Explains how the evidence supports your claim)

Sentence 6- Closure (Summarizes your main points)

Respuesta :

Answer:

Think of all the accessibility amenities you've gotten used to seeing since July 26, 1990, the day the Americans with Disabilities Act was signed into law: Wheelchair ramps leading into government buildings; Support rails in restroom stalls; ATM keypads and elevator buttons in Braille.

Despite these improvements, people with disabilities still struggle in many areas, including one you might not think much about: clothing.

Cute Canes, Like Eyeglass Frames

Liz Jackson spends a lot of time thinking about the intersection of fashion and disability. She's a trim, tomboyish 33-year-old with a Jimmy Neutron pompadour, and she limps — sometimes a lot.

Back in 2012, she fell out of bed and ended up in the hospital, emerging three days later with a cane, prescription eyeglasses and a diagnosis of idiopathic neuropathy, an autoimmune condition that weakens the nerves in her arms and legs.

"One of the sensations I have is that run-down feeling [you get] before you get sick," Jackson says. "I have that all the time because my body is continuously fighting something."