- Sat Feb 21, 2015 12:00 am
#36503
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The pundit in this stimulus states that because the average salary for teachers is lower than the
average salary for athletes, it must be the case that our society values sports more than it values
education.
The question stem asks for the reason that the pundit’s argument is questionable: Is the average
salary the best means to determine how much a society values education? Perhaps there are
indicators other than this one simple comparison that would more accurately reflect our societal
priorities.
Answer choice (A): While sports may have some sort of educational value, the pundit doesn’t make
any such presumption in the stimulus. Regardless, such a presumption would not play into the
author’s conclusion that society values sports more than education.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If the total spent on education is much
greater than the total spent on sports, this would provide evidence against the pundit’s assertion that
our society values sports more than education. The failure to consider this fact renders the pundit’s
conclusion questionable, since information on total money spent might provide a better means to
judge the value that our society places on education.
Answer choice (C): The argument in the stimulus provides a simple comparison of salary—how
much each profession makes, on average, in a year. Information about the vacation time afforded
to the respective professions would not be relevant to the comparison offered by the pundit, so the
failure to consider such would not be a vulnerability in the argument, and this answer choice is
incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Comparing teachers’ salaries only to those of professional athletes is not a fl aw
in the pundit’s reasoning; when the relevant comparison is between the society’s valuation of sports
and education, further comparisons between teachers’ salaries and the salaries of other professionals
would be irrelevant, so this answer choice should be eliminated.
Answer choice (E): The pundit’s argument deals exclusively with our society’s valuation of sports
vs. education, so further comparisons to the salaries of other teachers from other nations would be
irrelevant to the argument. The pundit is making a judgment about his or her society alone. What
other societies do in terms of teachers’ salaries or athletes’ salaries does not play into the author’s
conclusion regarding this society.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The pundit in this stimulus states that because the average salary for teachers is lower than the
average salary for athletes, it must be the case that our society values sports more than it values
education.
The question stem asks for the reason that the pundit’s argument is questionable: Is the average
salary the best means to determine how much a society values education? Perhaps there are
indicators other than this one simple comparison that would more accurately reflect our societal
priorities.
Answer choice (A): While sports may have some sort of educational value, the pundit doesn’t make
any such presumption in the stimulus. Regardless, such a presumption would not play into the
author’s conclusion that society values sports more than education.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If the total spent on education is much
greater than the total spent on sports, this would provide evidence against the pundit’s assertion that
our society values sports more than education. The failure to consider this fact renders the pundit’s
conclusion questionable, since information on total money spent might provide a better means to
judge the value that our society places on education.
Answer choice (C): The argument in the stimulus provides a simple comparison of salary—how
much each profession makes, on average, in a year. Information about the vacation time afforded
to the respective professions would not be relevant to the comparison offered by the pundit, so the
failure to consider such would not be a vulnerability in the argument, and this answer choice is
incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Comparing teachers’ salaries only to those of professional athletes is not a fl aw
in the pundit’s reasoning; when the relevant comparison is between the society’s valuation of sports
and education, further comparisons between teachers’ salaries and the salaries of other professionals
would be irrelevant, so this answer choice should be eliminated.
Answer choice (E): The pundit’s argument deals exclusively with our society’s valuation of sports
vs. education, so further comparisons to the salaries of other teachers from other nations would be
irrelevant to the argument. The pundit is making a judgment about his or her society alone. What
other societies do in terms of teachers’ salaries or athletes’ salaries does not play into the author’s
conclusion regarding this society.