Writing Question

<p>The exchange between the teacher and the students promotes(a) learning far different(b) from that which results as(c) the student listens but does not(d) participate. No error (e)</p>

<p>For we(a) students, concern about impending(b) tuition hikes was even more acute than(c) apprehension about(d) final exams. No error (e)</p>

<p>Can someone please explain me the
"Us Vs. We Rule"
I remember something about taking out the unnecessary words and reading a simplified version of the sentence so that when you read the word (Us or We), the wrong answer would sound awkward.</p>

<p>1) “as” should be replaced with “when.”</p>

<p>“as” describes two actions being done at the same time in a specific situation (“I ate breakfast as I was walking”)
“when” in this case means “whenever”; it does not describe a specific situation. It is hypothetical, and typically describes routines, customs, observations, etc. (“I immediately use the bathroom when[ever] I wake up,” “the experiment shows that this happens when that happens”).</p>

<p>2) “We” is a subject and “us” is an object. You say “for [somebody],” as in, “for Jane, the exam was easy.” A person is an object unless it is the subject of the sentence, which does an action.</p>

<p>“I did this for [somebody]”: “I” is the subject and “somebody” is the object.
“For [somebody], I did this”: same as above</p>