- Mon Mar 20, 2017 5:10 pm
#33563
yrivers,
Those words do not indicate a bias in the people surveyed. Answer choice (C) indicates that the 62% number would still be true even if the survey were extended to the entire potential readership. Think about it this way. Imagine 100 people returned the survey. 62 of those people liked the format change. Answer choice (C) is saying that if we took every potential reader, 62% of that group would also like the format change. I think your confusion arises from thinking that answer choice (C) said something only about people who like the format change, which would be dealing with a biased group. It's not; it's saying "of all potential readers," which is not a biased group, 62% would like the format change. Thus, if you extended the total number of people, you'd get a similar percent liking the format change, which means it seems like the survey was accurate.
If an answer choice is confusing, keep always in mind what you're looking for in an answer choice. This is a Strengthen question. After reading the question, you'll have a prephrase in mind. If answer choice (E) doesn't match that prephrase, try to interpret how, if at all, answer choice (E) could be strengthening the argument. In this case, it's indicating a possible bias in people's responses to the survey - a larger percentage of dissatisfied than of satisfied people responded. How would that affect the argument? In this case, it wouldn't affect it in any positive way, so it can be discarded.
Robert Carroll