Statements A, B and D are correct descriptions of learner participation techniques. A is true because brainstorming postpones judgement to enable free flow of ideas. B is true as think–pair–share structures participation from individual reflection to peer talk and whole-class sharing. D is true since role play allows students to experience different viewpoints through enactment. C is false because participation strategies benefit learners across ability levels, and E is false because equitable participation requires involving many students, not just a vocal minority; therefore A, B and D only is the correct combination.
Option A:
Option A combines A, B and D, accurately presenting brainstorming, think–pair–share and role play as participatory methods. It properly excludes C and E, which restrict participation to a few students or a narrow ability group, so this option is correct.
Option B:
Option B lists A and B but omits D, ignoring the role of role play in encouraging empathy and perspective-taking. Without D, the description of participation techniques is incomplete.
Option C:
Option C brings in B and D but leaves out A, underestimating the contribution of brainstorming as a widely used participation strategy. This omission means B and D only cannot be the full set of correct statements.
Option D:
Option D includes A, C and D but adds C, which wrongly limits the usefulness of participation techniques. Accepting C makes this combination logically unsound.
Option E extends A, B and D with C, again accepting the incorrect claim that such techniques are only for high-ability students. Because it mixes true and false statements, A, B, C and D only is not a valid answer.
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