- Sun Nov 13, 2011 8:14 pm
#2787
I chose A on this problem because I thought A did not really weaken the support for the president's recommendation. I thought that even with the same criteria, the consultants could still evaluate a person as having very different efficiency and time management skill levels. I understand answer A as an attempt to show that the correlation between efficiency and time management could not be taken as causation if the criteria used to evaluate is the same because the same criteria somehow imply an unnatural correlation. After thinking about this issue for a long time, I may have an answer. If the consultants use a criteria to evaluate efficiency and apply the same criteria to evaluate time management skills, the managers who meet the standards for efficiency would likely also meet the standards for management skills because the standards that show you to be efficient (to be doing quality work in a certain amount of time) will also show you as having good time management skills. And if the consultants use a criteria to evaluate time management and apply the same criteria to evaluate efficiency, most likely they will find those who meet the standards for good time-management skills will also appear efficient because they have done some work within a short chunk of time. However, my second example does not totally work because efficiency is much more abstract than time management and deals with the quality of the work done rather than just meeting deadlines. So I still hold on to the opinion that the same criteria used to evaluate both efficiency and time management skills could yield different results, and thus, the correlation of efficiency and time management did not come into being through unnatural manipulation. I still don't completely see why using the same criteria would be that devastating to the argument and that manipulative of the result of the correlation between efficiency of time-management skills. Thank you in advance for replying.