When Mr. Kwan collected the workbooks, he paused at Elena’s. He smiled.
And that, she finally understood, was the whole point of Module 2.
She could copy it. Just this once. No one would know.
Her pencil was chewed to a splinter. Mr. Kwan had asked: “What is Rama’s greatest test of dharma—not in the forest, but within himself?” wit and wisdom grade 6 module 2 answer key
Elena stared at the blank page in her workbook. Above it, the heading read: Grade 6, Module 2: Ramayana, The Hero’s Journey.
Elena set the paper down. She turned it over, and on the blank back, she wrote her own answer:
That afternoon, Elena dropped the real answer key into the recycling bin. She didn’t need it. She had found something better—her own voice in the margins. When Mr
She had no idea. She had read the excerpt three times. Her friends had notes filled with arrows and Sanskrit words. Elena just had a headache.
“Rama’s greatest test is wanting to be sure, but choosing to be brave anyway.”
Her heart slammed against her ribs. There it was. Question 5. Rama’s inner test: his willingness to accept doubt without proof, trusting the duty over the desire. And that, she finally understood, was the whole
But as she picked up her pencil, she remembered the story. Rama didn’t have an answer key when Sita was taken. He didn’t have a script when his own brother doubted him. He had to wander the wilderness of not knowing.
At the top, in neat teacher-font, it read:
At the bottom of her page, he wrote: “This is wisdom. No key required.”
That’s when she saw it—tucked under her desk leg, a single, crumpled sheet of paper. She unfolded it.