Passage One Questions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage . Most kids grow up learning they cannot draw on thewalls. But it might be time to unlearn that training-this summer, a group of culture addicts, artists and community organizers are inviting New Yorkers to write all over the walls of an old house onGovernor's Island. The project is called Writing On It All, and it's a participatory writing project and artistic experiment that has happened on Governor's Island every summer since 2013. "Most of the participants are people who are just walking by or are on the island for otherreasons, or they just kind of happen to be there," Alexandra Chasin, artistic director ofWriting On It All, tells Smithsonian, com. The 2016 season runs through June 26 and features sessions facilitated by everyone fromdancers to domestic workers. Each session has a theme , and participants are given a variety of materials and prompts and asked to cover suces with their thoughts and art. This year, theprograms range from one that turns the house into a collaborative essay to one that exploresthe meaning of exile . Governor's Island is a national historic landmark district long used for military purposes. Nowknown as "New York's shared space for art and play," the island, which lies between Manhattanand Brooklyn in Upper New York Bay, is closed to cars but open to summer tourists who flock for festivals, picnics, adventures, as well as these " legal graffiti (涂鸦)" sessions. The notes and art scribbled (涂画)on the walls are an experiment in self-expression. So far, participants have ranged in age from 2 to 85. Though Chasin says the focus of the work is onthe activity of writing, rather than the text that ends up getting written, some of the work thatcomes out of the sessions has stuck with her. "One of the sessions that moved me the most was state violence on black women and blackgirls," says Chasin, explaining that in one room, people wrote down the names of those killedbecause of it. "People do beautiful work and leave beautiful messages." What does the project Writing On It All invite people to do?