- Wed Jan 11, 2017 6:07 pm
#32009
Hi lsatstudier,
You did an excellent job diagramming the stimulus, so I will quote it here and work from it:
Take a look at the first two sentences. There is a disconnect there. Yes, reducing class size would require hiring more teachers. And yes, there is a shortage of qualified teachers in the region. Answer choice (E) addresses this disconnect. So here's the thing about Assumption questions - there are often MANY, MANY assumptions that an argument makes. For example, if I say "A study supports my conclusion," I am assuming any number of things - the study was not biased, it used a representative sample, the data was recorded correctly, etc. The trick here is to negate an answer choice and see if the conclusion fails. When you negate answer choice (E), you get: "Qualified teachers could be persuaded to relocate in significant numbers to the educator’s region to take teaching jobs." Well, there goes the argument! The school district could hire qualified teachers outside the region and thus reduce class size, and student achievement could go up! The negated version of answer choice (E) kills the conclusion.
Let's take a look at answer choice (D): Hiring more teachers would not improve the achievement of any students in the school district if most or all of the teachers hired were underqualified.
It's a conditional statement, which are often a little tricker to negate. Say you have a conditional statement "If A, then B." The negated version will be "If A, then not necessarily B." You can also think of it this way: "B is necessary for A." The negated version is "B is not necessary for A." So let's apply that principle here.
Original: "If most or all of the teachers hired were underqualified, then hiring more teachers would not improve the achievement of any students in the school district."
The negated version is:
"If most or all of the teachers hired were underqualified, then hiring more teachers could improve the achievement of any students in the school district." That doesn't kill the conclusion because we haven't actually been told that the teachers hired will not be underqualified. We only know that there is a shortage of qualified teachers in the region. That's why answer choice (E) works.
Hope this helps.
You did an excellent job diagramming the stimulus, so I will quote it here and work from it:
lsatstudier wrote:Reducing class size --> hiring more teachersI do want to clarify that the conclusion is not a conditional statement. It uses the word "probably," so you want to be cautious there. You might even rewrite it as RCS --probably--> Not improve overall student achievement.
shortage of qualified teachers in region (not SN)
smaller classes-->individualized attn
teachers underqualified -->education suffers
C: RCS --> not improve overall student achievement
Take a look at the first two sentences. There is a disconnect there. Yes, reducing class size would require hiring more teachers. And yes, there is a shortage of qualified teachers in the region. Answer choice (E) addresses this disconnect. So here's the thing about Assumption questions - there are often MANY, MANY assumptions that an argument makes. For example, if I say "A study supports my conclusion," I am assuming any number of things - the study was not biased, it used a representative sample, the data was recorded correctly, etc. The trick here is to negate an answer choice and see if the conclusion fails. When you negate answer choice (E), you get: "Qualified teachers could be persuaded to relocate in significant numbers to the educator’s region to take teaching jobs." Well, there goes the argument! The school district could hire qualified teachers outside the region and thus reduce class size, and student achievement could go up! The negated version of answer choice (E) kills the conclusion.
Let's take a look at answer choice (D): Hiring more teachers would not improve the achievement of any students in the school district if most or all of the teachers hired were underqualified.
It's a conditional statement, which are often a little tricker to negate. Say you have a conditional statement "If A, then B." The negated version will be "If A, then not necessarily B." You can also think of it this way: "B is necessary for A." The negated version is "B is not necessary for A." So let's apply that principle here.
Original: "If most or all of the teachers hired were underqualified, then hiring more teachers would not improve the achievement of any students in the school district."
The negated version is:
"If most or all of the teachers hired were underqualified, then hiring more teachers could improve the achievement of any students in the school district." That doesn't kill the conclusion because we haven't actually been told that the teachers hired will not be underqualified. We only know that there is a shortage of qualified teachers in the region. That's why answer choice (E) works.
Hope this helps.