- Mon Feb 12, 2018 8:17 pm
#43877
Hi Lawana,
This is actually a Resolve the Paradox question, where a seeming paradox between the premises, or occasionally between premises and conclusion, is presented and must be resolved by inserting another premise into the argument. The way the correct answer will do this is as follows:
1. Contains a resolution that allows both seemingly conflicting sides of a paradox to be simultaneously true.
2. Explains how the paradox arose, giving a possible cause for the situation.
3. Deals with the stimulus's facts directly
Here, the paradox is that the students that studied the most didn't receive grades as high as "many" who didn't study as much, but the researchers still concluded that the study showed that studying more leads to higher grades. Underlying this paradox is the lack of like-to-like comparisons; the conclusion is stating that an individual student is more likely to get a better grade in a class by studying more, while the premise is comparing students of varying aptitudes and showing that across all students, the greatest study time did not result in the highest grades.
Answer choice (A) fails to resolve this paradox because it doesn't get to the origin of the paradox, which is whether an individual student improves their chance of getting a higher grade by studying more. Instead, we're still comparing across students, and in a similarly vague way as in the stimulus.
Answer choice (C) does resolve our paradox by showing that the individual student could improve their own grade by studying more than they did prior, which allows that some students studying less (but with natural aptitude in some subjects) could still have higher grades overall than students who studied more overall.
Hope this clears things up!