- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#72941
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (A).
When evaluating a Main Point stimulus, look for the one thing that the author said that everything else is intended to support. Ask yourself "what is the author trying to prove." When testing your prephrase, or any answer choice, ask yourself "was this claim used to support some other claim, or did it only receive support?" Main conclusions don't support other claims, but only get support. They are selfish.
What this author wants us to believe, and what they set out to prove, is the first sentence, about what community organizations need to do. The rest of the stimulus is designed to support that claim. Rearranging the stimulus can help clarify this, as follows:
Premise: Convincing the public that they will benefit from a program makes them more receptive to it.
Premise/Example: It's easier to get support for roads, which benefit everyone, than for things that do not.
Conclusion: If you want support for education, you need to convince the public it is beneficial to everyone.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As this answer accurately paraphrases the conclusion in the first sentence, it is the correct answer.
Answer choice (B):This is a premise of the argument, used to support the claim about education programs.
Answer choice (C): This answer misstates the premise about roads. Nobody said it was easy to get support for roads - they just said it was easier ,relative to programs that do not appear to benefit everyone.
Answer choice (D): Beware of this clever shell game! This answer is essentially an implied premise of the argument, using much of the same language as found in the conclusion, but it misses the mark by not expressing the idea that community organizations need to take this approach if they want to achieve their goal. This answer is about what will happen, rather than what needs to happen.
Answer choice (E): The author never suggested that education IS beneficial to everyone, but only that community organizations supporting education need to convince people of this idea. Again, the conclusion is not about what will happen or what is true, but is instead about what those groups need to do if they want to achieve their goal.
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (A).
When evaluating a Main Point stimulus, look for the one thing that the author said that everything else is intended to support. Ask yourself "what is the author trying to prove." When testing your prephrase, or any answer choice, ask yourself "was this claim used to support some other claim, or did it only receive support?" Main conclusions don't support other claims, but only get support. They are selfish.
What this author wants us to believe, and what they set out to prove, is the first sentence, about what community organizations need to do. The rest of the stimulus is designed to support that claim. Rearranging the stimulus can help clarify this, as follows:
Premise: Convincing the public that they will benefit from a program makes them more receptive to it.
Premise/Example: It's easier to get support for roads, which benefit everyone, than for things that do not.
Conclusion: If you want support for education, you need to convince the public it is beneficial to everyone.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As this answer accurately paraphrases the conclusion in the first sentence, it is the correct answer.
Answer choice (B):This is a premise of the argument, used to support the claim about education programs.
Answer choice (C): This answer misstates the premise about roads. Nobody said it was easy to get support for roads - they just said it was easier ,relative to programs that do not appear to benefit everyone.
Answer choice (D): Beware of this clever shell game! This answer is essentially an implied premise of the argument, using much of the same language as found in the conclusion, but it misses the mark by not expressing the idea that community organizations need to take this approach if they want to achieve their goal. This answer is about what will happen, rather than what needs to happen.
Answer choice (E): The author never suggested that education IS beneficial to everyone, but only that community organizations supporting education need to convince people of this idea. Again, the conclusion is not about what will happen or what is true, but is instead about what those groups need to do if they want to achieve their goal.