- Tue Sep 20, 2016 5:06 pm
#28808
Hi Cboles,
Thanks for the question! I would recommend that you read the question and pre-phrase a response, based on your understanding of the stimulus, before you go through the answer choices. That way, you have the right answer in your head and you merely match it with a similar answer choice.
Start by looking at the question stem: "Which one of the following principles, if valid, most helps to justify the folklorist’s argumentation?"
The word "conclusion" is not mentioned, but in order to help justify the "argumentation," you'll need to know what the folklorist concluded. Now find the part of the stimulus that represents the folklorist's conclusion. You'll see that the first sentence is the conclusion: "Oral traditions are often preferable to written ones." The other sentences are premises. Answer A is supported by one of the premises about memory, but it doesn't really relate to the conclusion. Answer choice D, on the other hand, matches the conclusion well because it mentions what is "preferred." In that way, you don't actually need to completely understand what "Economy of expression is to be preferred over verbosity" means in order to answer the question correctly. But, since you are curious, "economy of expression" means using fewer words, whereas "verbosity" means using many.
In my response to your question, I've tried to model the way to think through the question. Ultimately, studying is more about learning the process and less about learning the answers. Every single question has unique content, but to solve them, you will employ a similar thought process. You can practice the process by writing it out in your forum posts. You can point out what you think are conclusions or premises, and why. You can summarize the main idea in your own words--prephrase. You can explain why you eliminated answer choices. All of that analysis will help you increase your eventual test score.