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Model Response Evaluation

Student Assessment

Enter your full name to begin. You will have one attempt only — your score will be sent to your teacher automatically.

0113 multiple-choice questions on AI response quality
02Read both source passages before answering
03One attempt only — your score is submitted to your teacher
04Answer all 13 questions, then click Submit
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Model Response Evaluation
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Instructions

01
Read FirstRead both Response A and Response B carefully before answering any questions. All questions refer to these two passages.
02
Answer All QuestionsThere are 13 multiple-choice questions. Select the best answer for each. You must answer every question before submitting.
03
Instant FeedbackAfter selecting an answer, you will immediately see whether you were correct and a brief explanation. You cannot change an answer once selected.
04
Submit When DoneOnce all 13 questions are answered, the Submit Test button at the bottom will activate. Click it to send your score to your teacher.
05
Grading ScaleDistinction ≥ 92% · Proficient ≥ 77% · Developing ≥ 62% · Needs Review below 62%.
06
Academic IntegrityThis is an individual assessment. Complete it independently and honestly without assistance from others.
Assessment Prompt
Explain how important Catherine the Great's personal participation in Russia's smallpox vaccine launch was to convincing her people to be vaccinated.
ONE ATTEMPT ONLY — your name and score are recorded automatically upon submission. You cannot retake this test.

Response A

Catherine the Great's personal participation in Russia's smallpox inoculation campaign was decisive because it demonstrated confidence in a dangerous and controversial medical procedure. In 1768, she underwent variolation herself and made sure the public knew about it. By risking her own life, she reduced fear, encouraged the nobility to follow her example, and helped normalize inoculation across Russian society. Her recovery became powerful public evidence that the procedure could work safely. She also used the event strategically by promoting inoculation through propaganda, public ceremonies, and the establishment of inoculation clinics. In a highly autocratic society like Russia, the empress's actions carried enormous influence, making her participation central to the campaign's success.

Response B

Catherine the Great's decision to personally undergo smallpox inoculation was one of the most important factors in convincing Russians to accept the practice. At the time, inoculation was feared because it involved deliberately infecting a healthy person with a mild form of smallpox. By allowing herself and later her son Paul to be inoculated, Catherine showed confidence in the procedure and reduced public fear. Her actions also influenced the Russian nobility, who quickly followed her example in order to demonstrate loyalty and modernity. Catherine further strengthened public acceptance by promoting the success of the procedure through state-sponsored clinics, pamphlets, and symbolic propaganda. In an era before widespread scientific literacy, her willingness to take the risk herself gave the campaign credibility and encouraged broader adoption.

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Model Response Evaluation · Live Results
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