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Read this excerpt from We Beat the Street.
"You're right, man," George said. "But I don't want to teach–I want to be a doctor or nurse or something medical."
"I don't even know what you have to do to become something like that," Sampson said honestly.
"I don't either," George said. "But I figure you need big piles of money and about a million years to spend in college."
How do George's career goals at the beginning of the story compare to his goals at the end of the story?
He still wants to be a doctor at the end of the story, but he no longer believes that becoming a doctor is an impossibility,
He still does not understand the hard work that goes into becoming a doctor at the end of the story, but he is no longer willing
to try.
He does not know what he wants to do with his life at the beginning of the story, and he still struggles with this at the end.
He has clear ideas about how to achieve his goals at the beginning of the story, and he still has these ideas at the end.
Activity

Respuesta :

Answer:

He still wants to be a doctor at the end of the story, but he no longer believes that becoming a doctor is an impossibility

Explanation:

just took the test

Answer/Explanation:

The correct and most understandable answer is:

"A- He still wants to be a doctor at the end of the story, but he no longer believes that becoming a doctor is an impossibility,"

This is due to the fact that after he gained more knowledge about such, he figured out how to achieve his goals with hard work.

I hope this helped!!

~Penny

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