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During World War I, women served as radio operators. They worked as nurses and typists, too. In World War II, women were elevated to roles as pilots and drivers. They also filled thousands of domestic jobs left vacant by male soldiers. This solved a major problem at home. Women have served in every American war effort. But for many years, they were assigned mostly to what people thought of as "women's jobs." Some women were killed in their military roles. Yet, women were not allowed to fight on the front lines.
2Then, in 2003, the United States went to war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Religious custom prevented Iraqi and Afghan women from talking to men. So questioning local women was a problem in these countries. Thus, the military recruited female soldiers to address this issue. The soldiers' official job was to engage with local women. But Female Engagement Teams were also armed and ready to fight.
3By 2013, about 280,000 American women had served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Fifteen percent of American soldiers were women. They had proven their capabilities on the front lines. Yet, the ban on female soldiers in combat made it difficult for women to advance in military careers. The US government solved that problem in 2013. The government lifted the ban on women in combat.
Which text has the same information as the Anchor Text?
Text 1
Text 2
Text 3
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don’t see the three candidate texts (Text 1, Text 2, Text 3) — only the Anchor Text. Please paste Text 1–3 and I’ll pick which one matches.
If helpful, here’s what I’ll check when comparing each candidate to the Anchor Text:
- Key facts/dates: World War I and II roles; 2003 wars in Iraq/Afghanistan; 2013 lifting of combat ban; “about 280,000” women served and “15%” by 2013 (if those numbers are included).
- Specific details: Female Engagement Teams recruited because local custom prevented Iraqi/Afghan women from talking to men; those teams were armed and could fight.
- General claims: women served in every American war effort; historically restricted to “women’s jobs”; some were killed but long barred from front-line combat until 2013.
- No major additions or contradictions: candidates should not introduce new events/years or change meaning (e.g., saying women were never allowed to die, or changing when ban was lifted).
Paste the three candidate texts and I’ll identify which matches.
If helpful, here’s what I’ll check when comparing each candidate to the Anchor Text:
- Key facts/dates: World War I and II roles; 2003 wars in Iraq/Afghanistan; 2013 lifting of combat ban; “about 280,000” women served and “15%” by 2013 (if those numbers are included).
- Specific details: Female Engagement Teams recruited because local custom prevented Iraqi/Afghan women from talking to men; those teams were armed and could fight.
- General claims: women served in every American war effort; historically restricted to “women’s jobs”; some were killed but long barred from front-line combat until 2013.
- No major additions or contradictions: candidates should not introduce new events/years or change meaning (e.g., saying women were never allowed to die, or changing when ban was lifted).
Paste the three candidate texts and I’ll identify which matches.
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