- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#73268
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True - SN The correct answer choice is (D).
The stimulus of this fact set is filled with conditional reasoning indicators, including "every," "if," and "all." This should alert the test-taker to grab their pencil or pen and start diagramming, for the question will likely be based on that reasoning and easily answered once all the pieces are put in place.
The first sentence gives us this relationship:
SIT (Street In Town) Sw1+M (Swept at least Once a Month)
The second sentence can be diagrammed as:
NMFS (Need More Frequent Sweepings) QIS (Qualified for Interim Sweepings)
Finally, we get a multi-conditional claim:
QIS
+ SwI (Swept Immediately)
RIS (Request Interim Sweeping)
From this we can build a chain - if a street needs to be swept more frequently, and asks to be swept in the interim (meaning between the monthly sweepings), they will be swept immediately. That means that they will not have to wait the whole month for their usual sweeping, but will get one sooner. That is a pretty good prephrase, but we should also be on the lookout for a contrapositive, such as "if a street is not swept immediately then either it did not request an interim sweeping or it did not qualify for one."
Answer choice (A): "Construction Under Way" is NOT a sufficient condition for qualifying for interim sweeping. The street has to NEED more frequent sweeping, and construction is only mentioned as one possible source of the extra mess (and only major construction is actually mentioned, so maybe minor construction won't be enough).
Answer choice (B): Being qualified for an interim sweeping isn't sufficient - the neighborhood also has to request that sweeping to guarantee that it will happen immediately instead of waiting for the regular monthly sweeping.
Answer choice (C): This is a Mistaken Reversal of a portion of the final conditional claim. It could be true that some street gets swept more often even if it is NOT qualified and even if nobody requests it. Being qualified and requesting an interim sweeping is sufficient, but that doesn't mean it is necessary!
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This follows from our conditional chain and must be true. If a street is qualified and requests an interim sweeping, they will get one immediately. The fact that they call it an "interim" sweeping very strongly suggests that it is not the usual monthly sweeping, but happens sooner than it otherwise would. Some might want to quibble and say "okay, but they could then delay the next sweeping so they still only get one per month," but the stimulus was about getting "more frequent" sweepings, not just an earlier one!
Answer choice (E): Essentially the same as answer C, this is a Mistaken Negation of the conditional rules in the stimulus. Qualified streets where neighbors submit a request will be swept immediately, but so might some other streets.
Must Be True - SN The correct answer choice is (D).
The stimulus of this fact set is filled with conditional reasoning indicators, including "every," "if," and "all." This should alert the test-taker to grab their pencil or pen and start diagramming, for the question will likely be based on that reasoning and easily answered once all the pieces are put in place.
The first sentence gives us this relationship:
SIT (Street In Town) Sw1+M (Swept at least Once a Month)
The second sentence can be diagrammed as:
NMFS (Need More Frequent Sweepings) QIS (Qualified for Interim Sweepings)
Finally, we get a multi-conditional claim:
QIS
+ SwI (Swept Immediately)
RIS (Request Interim Sweeping)
From this we can build a chain - if a street needs to be swept more frequently, and asks to be swept in the interim (meaning between the monthly sweepings), they will be swept immediately. That means that they will not have to wait the whole month for their usual sweeping, but will get one sooner. That is a pretty good prephrase, but we should also be on the lookout for a contrapositive, such as "if a street is not swept immediately then either it did not request an interim sweeping or it did not qualify for one."
Answer choice (A): "Construction Under Way" is NOT a sufficient condition for qualifying for interim sweeping. The street has to NEED more frequent sweeping, and construction is only mentioned as one possible source of the extra mess (and only major construction is actually mentioned, so maybe minor construction won't be enough).
Answer choice (B): Being qualified for an interim sweeping isn't sufficient - the neighborhood also has to request that sweeping to guarantee that it will happen immediately instead of waiting for the regular monthly sweeping.
Answer choice (C): This is a Mistaken Reversal of a portion of the final conditional claim. It could be true that some street gets swept more often even if it is NOT qualified and even if nobody requests it. Being qualified and requesting an interim sweeping is sufficient, but that doesn't mean it is necessary!
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This follows from our conditional chain and must be true. If a street is qualified and requests an interim sweeping, they will get one immediately. The fact that they call it an "interim" sweeping very strongly suggests that it is not the usual monthly sweeping, but happens sooner than it otherwise would. Some might want to quibble and say "okay, but they could then delay the next sweeping so they still only get one per month," but the stimulus was about getting "more frequent" sweepings, not just an earlier one!
Answer choice (E): Essentially the same as answer C, this is a Mistaken Negation of the conditional rules in the stimulus. Qualified streets where neighbors submit a request will be swept immediately, but so might some other streets.