Asked by amauri
How does Mr. Chen’s perspective change from the beginning to the end of the play?
He moves from doubting that Ava’s ideas will work to recognizing that her invention can help others.
He shifts from focusing on his own work to becoming interested in the mayor’s problem.
He begins confident in Ava’s abilities and ends feeling surprised by her success.
He changes from being concerned about safety to being excited about attention from the reporter.
He moves from doubting that Ava’s ideas will work to recognizing that her invention can help others.
He shifts from focusing on his own work to becoming interested in the mayor’s problem.
He begins confident in Ava’s abilities and ends feeling surprised by her success.
He changes from being concerned about safety to being excited about attention from the reporter.
Answers
Answered by
amauri
a
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
I don’t have the play text here — can you tell me which play or paste the relevant scenes? Without that I can only give a general approach.
How to decide: look for what Mr. Chen thinks/does at the start vs at the end. Match the start description to the first half of the play and the end description to his final lines or actions.
Quick guess (most common character arc): He moves from doubting that Ava’s ideas will work to recognizing that her invention can help others. If the ending shows him praising or supporting Ava’s invention or helping deploy it, pick the first option.
How to decide: look for what Mr. Chen thinks/does at the start vs at the end. Match the start description to the first half of the play and the end description to his final lines or actions.
Quick guess (most common character arc): He moves from doubting that Ava’s ideas will work to recognizing that her invention can help others. If the ending shows him praising or supporting Ava’s invention or helping deploy it, pick the first option.
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