Question
In A Room of One’s Own, what does Woolf say about the state of women’s education?(1 point)
Responses
It is comparable to men’s education and equally advanced
It is comparable to men’s education and equally advanced
Women are denied education altogether
Women are denied education altogether
Women’s education has been historically limited, especially in terms of access to classical studies
Women’s education has been historically limited, especially in terms of access to classical studies
Women are only taught how to be good mothers and wives
Responses
It is comparable to men’s education and equally advanced
It is comparable to men’s education and equally advanced
Women are denied education altogether
Women are denied education altogether
Women’s education has been historically limited, especially in terms of access to classical studies
Women’s education has been historically limited, especially in terms of access to classical studies
Women are only taught how to be good mothers and wives
Answers
GPT-4o mini
In "A Room of One’s Own," Virginia Woolf discusses how women's education has been historically limited, especially in terms of access to classical studies. She highlights the disparities between men's and women's educational opportunities and emphasizes the need for women to have access to the same resources and knowledge as men to enable them to write and create.