- Thu Jul 30, 2015 12:07 pm
#19212
I have several points that I want to clarify here:
1. I know that this is an inference question, so I thought that any answer choice that is explicitly stated in the passage is wrong as it is not an inference/implied from the passage. So, that's why I crossed off E because it is already stated in the passage that the Native soil movement was different than the Scar Art movement because it focused on the traditional peasant society. And that the two movements came about in opposition to the Revolution. All this was given explicitly in the passage so I felt that I didn't have to "infer" this on my own.
2. I chose D because the revolution was by the elite (powerful people with money) and even though the Native Soil movement was in opposition to the revolution, at the end of the passage, the author criticized it because it still was trying to appeal to the galleries and collectors (a form of elite with money and power). This felt more like an "inference" as I had to connect the points from the passage and do a little more work than just restating hat was already in passage (in the case of choice E).
- Can you go over exactly what to do in the case of inference questions?
- Is there a difference in the following two questions? and how to approach them?
"Which of the following can most reasonable be inferred from the passage?"
vs
"It can be inferred from the passage that the author would most likely agree with which of the following."
I feel that in some other inference questions (I don't recall from which PT exactly but will keep an eye out when I come across them again), I have gotten them wrong because I chose an answer that was a true fact or statement which was explicitly given in the passage. So when I come across inference questions now, I seem to think that I need to do some mental work to deduce the answer and any simple given facts can't be true as they are too easy to be part of an inference questions (those are more for detail/recall questions).
1. I know that this is an inference question, so I thought that any answer choice that is explicitly stated in the passage is wrong as it is not an inference/implied from the passage. So, that's why I crossed off E because it is already stated in the passage that the Native soil movement was different than the Scar Art movement because it focused on the traditional peasant society. And that the two movements came about in opposition to the Revolution. All this was given explicitly in the passage so I felt that I didn't have to "infer" this on my own.
2. I chose D because the revolution was by the elite (powerful people with money) and even though the Native Soil movement was in opposition to the revolution, at the end of the passage, the author criticized it because it still was trying to appeal to the galleries and collectors (a form of elite with money and power). This felt more like an "inference" as I had to connect the points from the passage and do a little more work than just restating hat was already in passage (in the case of choice E).
- Can you go over exactly what to do in the case of inference questions?
- Is there a difference in the following two questions? and how to approach them?
"Which of the following can most reasonable be inferred from the passage?"
vs
"It can be inferred from the passage that the author would most likely agree with which of the following."
I feel that in some other inference questions (I don't recall from which PT exactly but will keep an eye out when I come across them again), I have gotten them wrong because I chose an answer that was a true fact or statement which was explicitly given in the passage. So when I come across inference questions now, I seem to think that I need to do some mental work to deduce the answer and any simple given facts can't be true as they are too easy to be part of an inference questions (those are more for detail/recall questions).