- Wed Mar 30, 2016 6:43 pm
#22661
Question #13: Weaken, CE. The correct answer choice is (C)
This is one of only two Weaken questions in this section, and one of only four on this test. Note how much more common Strengthen questions are than Weaken, with eight total versus just four, and consider how to prioritize your study time accordingly.
This is also arguably the hardest LR question on the entire exam, so if you struggled know that you’re not alone. Difficulty is always subjective, of course, but considering only around 1/3 of people answer this correctly it’s clearly a challenging problem.
The university administrator argues that the sole purpose (emphasis mine, and you’ll see why shortly) of having teaching assistants work at the university is to enable them to fund their education, and if they weren’t pursuing degrees there or could otherwise fund their education they wouldn’t hold their teaching posts at all.
Why does the administrator make those statements? They’re in response to graduate students who claim that teaching assistants should be considered university employees and receive employee benefits. The administrator disagrees with that position, and despite the fact that teaching assistants teach and are paid, feels they don’t deserve the usual benefits granted to employees.
We’re asked to weaken the administrator’s argument, so let’s return to the central point of it: the sole purpose of having teaching assistants work at the university is to enable them to fund their education. Initially I italicized “sole,” and the reason why is that it’s an incredibly limiting word! To weaken the administrator’s position all that is needed is any other reason or purpose for having teaching assistants besides helping them fund their education. Provide that and his claim about the “sole purpose” being educational funding is completely invalidated.
So my prephrase here is simply, “I need an answer choice that suggests another reason for the university to have teaching assistants.” Let’s see which one does it.
Answer choice (A): Whether the administrator knows that there are extra costs involved in granting teaching assistants regular benefits is irrelevant. The issue here is why the university has teaching assistants—the administrator says it’s solely to help them pay for school, and we need an answer that implies it could be something else. Answer (A) doesn’t provide that information.
Answer choice (B): Unfortunately for (B) we’re not told much about those adjunct instructors aside from their compensation, so without knowing their benefits status this answer choice does nothing to impact the argument. That is, if the adjuncts received full benefits it might bolster the graduate students’ claims, but we have no idea here and would be ill-advised to speculate.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. Remember what we’re looking for: an alternative reason to educational funding/assistance for having teaching assistants at the university. Answer choice (C) provides us with that alternative, in the form of economic interest! It’s clearly cheaper to use teaching assistants than regular faculty, which is why, in the interest of economy (saving money), the university has proposed to replace faculty with assistants. So it may not be that the only purpose of having them is to help them fund their education; it could well be that another reason for using teaching assistants is to save money.
If you struggled with this question it’s almost certainly because you lost sight of the conclusion itself, which, as outlined above, limits itself tremendously with the use of “sole purpose” and is thus vulnerable on that very point. Always focus extremely closely on the conclusion of an argument, particularly when you’re asked to directly affect that argument in some way.
Answer choice (D): If anything this answer choice probably helps the argument, since it tells us that the money earned by teaching assistants is sufficient to pay for school. Regardless, it definitely doesn’t provide an alternative reason for the university to employ them, so the argument is unharmed by this information.
The popularity of this answer among test takers does make a degree of sense, because it feels closely related to the argument (it talks about a seemingly-relevant issue). However it doesn’t do anything to negatively impact what the administrator claims—“the sole purpose...”—so it can be eliminated.
Answer choice (E): This is, at first glance, another tempting answer choice because it seems to strengthen the graduate students’ position that teaching assistants deserve equal benefits. After all, if they do the same amount of work shouldn’t they be entitled to the same rewards? But this does absolutely nothing to the administrator’s argument—there’s no reason to think he or she is any less correct in claiming that the only purpose in having them is to help them fund their education, meaning this answer choice doesn’t weaken the conclusion and is incorrect.
This is one of only two Weaken questions in this section, and one of only four on this test. Note how much more common Strengthen questions are than Weaken, with eight total versus just four, and consider how to prioritize your study time accordingly.
This is also arguably the hardest LR question on the entire exam, so if you struggled know that you’re not alone. Difficulty is always subjective, of course, but considering only around 1/3 of people answer this correctly it’s clearly a challenging problem.
The university administrator argues that the sole purpose (emphasis mine, and you’ll see why shortly) of having teaching assistants work at the university is to enable them to fund their education, and if they weren’t pursuing degrees there or could otherwise fund their education they wouldn’t hold their teaching posts at all.
Why does the administrator make those statements? They’re in response to graduate students who claim that teaching assistants should be considered university employees and receive employee benefits. The administrator disagrees with that position, and despite the fact that teaching assistants teach and are paid, feels they don’t deserve the usual benefits granted to employees.
We’re asked to weaken the administrator’s argument, so let’s return to the central point of it: the sole purpose of having teaching assistants work at the university is to enable them to fund their education. Initially I italicized “sole,” and the reason why is that it’s an incredibly limiting word! To weaken the administrator’s position all that is needed is any other reason or purpose for having teaching assistants besides helping them fund their education. Provide that and his claim about the “sole purpose” being educational funding is completely invalidated.
So my prephrase here is simply, “I need an answer choice that suggests another reason for the university to have teaching assistants.” Let’s see which one does it.
Answer choice (A): Whether the administrator knows that there are extra costs involved in granting teaching assistants regular benefits is irrelevant. The issue here is why the university has teaching assistants—the administrator says it’s solely to help them pay for school, and we need an answer that implies it could be something else. Answer (A) doesn’t provide that information.
Answer choice (B): Unfortunately for (B) we’re not told much about those adjunct instructors aside from their compensation, so without knowing their benefits status this answer choice does nothing to impact the argument. That is, if the adjuncts received full benefits it might bolster the graduate students’ claims, but we have no idea here and would be ill-advised to speculate.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. Remember what we’re looking for: an alternative reason to educational funding/assistance for having teaching assistants at the university. Answer choice (C) provides us with that alternative, in the form of economic interest! It’s clearly cheaper to use teaching assistants than regular faculty, which is why, in the interest of economy (saving money), the university has proposed to replace faculty with assistants. So it may not be that the only purpose of having them is to help them fund their education; it could well be that another reason for using teaching assistants is to save money.
If you struggled with this question it’s almost certainly because you lost sight of the conclusion itself, which, as outlined above, limits itself tremendously with the use of “sole purpose” and is thus vulnerable on that very point. Always focus extremely closely on the conclusion of an argument, particularly when you’re asked to directly affect that argument in some way.
Answer choice (D): If anything this answer choice probably helps the argument, since it tells us that the money earned by teaching assistants is sufficient to pay for school. Regardless, it definitely doesn’t provide an alternative reason for the university to employ them, so the argument is unharmed by this information.
The popularity of this answer among test takers does make a degree of sense, because it feels closely related to the argument (it talks about a seemingly-relevant issue). However it doesn’t do anything to negatively impact what the administrator claims—“the sole purpose...”—so it can be eliminated.
Answer choice (E): This is, at first glance, another tempting answer choice because it seems to strengthen the graduate students’ position that teaching assistants deserve equal benefits. After all, if they do the same amount of work shouldn’t they be entitled to the same rewards? But this does absolutely nothing to the administrator’s argument—there’s no reason to think he or she is any less correct in claiming that the only purpose in having them is to help them fund their education, meaning this answer choice doesn’t weaken the conclusion and is incorrect.