Evaluating Text-to-World Connections

No one would have blamed Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks if they had decided to keep quiet about civil rights following the bombing of their friend's home. But Audrey's parents weren't intimidated. The very next day, her father and about fifteen other blacks sat down in the front section of a bus, where only whites were permitted. When the driver demanded they move to the back, Audrey's father politely refused, saying "We [are] comfortable where we are sitting." As a result, Mr. Hendricks was arrested and spent six nights in jail. When he was released, he volunteered to guard the Shuttlesworths' home.

—We’ve Got a Job,
Cynthia Levinson

What can connecting the passage and the story of Rosa Parks help readers understand? Select the three best answers.
Rosa Parks was an inspiration to others.
Many people protested on buses.
The Hendricks family members were the only people with the courage to stand up to racism.
Rosa Parks is to blame for the bombing.
Racism affected many people in the South.