- Sun Jan 17, 2021 11:52 am
#83301
Hi PowerScore -
I also admittedly chose A (both in my timed test and my subsequent untimed do-over) before seeing answer choice B to be correct, let alone lost sight that some = 1+, which should have been a red flag for me in this answer choice. I also notice that A talks about citations that HAVE BEEN peer-reviewed, so I’m guessing that A, in a way, is out of scope because the stimulus is on citations that are NOT peer-reviewed?
More importantly, I’m grappling with why B is the correct answer, and wanted to put my own thoughts and analysis as to why B is the correct answer here, and run this by you to see if this is correct.
B - prohibiting a certain sort of online source material from being cited as a reference —> prohibiting students from reading that source material.
→ = “amounts to”
Obviously, both the student and professor acknowledges the existence of the prohibition of students using those certain online encyclopedias, but what I notice from the stimulus is:
Student: “Students SHOULD be able to read whatever they wish; otherwise, it’s censorship”
Professor: “Students ARE allowed to read whatever they’d like.”
(Caps added for emphasis.)
The student and professor differ in the above statements in that, in the concepts of “students” and “being to read whatever they’d like”, the student uses a opinion-based connector (“should”), while the professor uses a factual-based connector (“are”), which, to me in the professor’s statements, establishes certainty that the student does not, in regard to whether students are allowed to read whatever they'd like in their papers.
So, how I’m interpreting the above, is, when answer choice B is applied:
Student: Prohibition of the use of an online source material → MAY prohibit students from reading it.
Professor: Prohibition of the use of an online source material → DOES NOT prohibit students from reading it.
My questions: Along with whether A can be ruled out also because it's out of scope, is my above reasoning for why B is correct, correct? Please let me know.
Thanks very much!
-Dustine B. (“AnimalCrossingLSATer”)