- Mon Jun 14, 2021 2:46 pm
#87922
Hey LuckieSailor,
So in this passage, there was a lot of information given in the first paragraph, and I would have taken notes in that paragraph. I take notes on roughly 25 percent of passages, personally. The notes I took were that the United States favored a substantive system and that Britain favored a more formal system, and that the United states focused more on right vs wrong and Britain focused more on rules. Also, I did not write this down, but I made sure that I understood that substantive meant that the law took into account moral, political, and economic considerations. Writing down these notes in the first paragraph and the first sentence of the second paragraph allowed me to move faster throughout the remainder of the passage with confidence.
Now, as far as this question goes, it was nearly impossible, in my opinion, to pre-phrase the correct answer. My pre-phrase was thinking that we were going to be in more of a substantive system rather than a formal system, but this was not the case. But we wanted a correct answer choice where the judge would not apply the rule that a will needs a written witness, and answer choice E ends up being the only answer choice that is a contender.
Answer choice E is the only answer choice that would make it more likely that the judge is not enforcing the rule of a written witness being required for the will.
I would make sure you read the question stem two times in this question as it is a longer and more complicated question stem. You can even read it three times if need be. But this was a case where my pre-phrase did not match the correct answer, but you can still get the question right. It was not that my pre-phrase was wrong, there is just more than one possibility for a correct answer.
I hope this helps, and I wish you all of the luck in your studies.
Best,
Ryan