- Sat Apr 09, 2016 10:05 am
#22900
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen-CE. The correct answer choice is (C)
The author understands the correlation between automatic writing of letters and composition skills as one of causation: because the students whose composition skills had improved the most also learned to write letters the most automatically, the latter must have caused the former by freeing up mental resources for it.
Answer choice (A): Since this answer choice does not deal with improvement in composition skills, it will not be useful in strengthening the author's argument.
Answer choice (B): As explained earlier, this could suggest an alternate cause for the stated effect: instead of freeing up mental resources for other activities, greater ability to write automatically may simply be the result of other mental traits that benefit both composition and handwriting.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. By establishing a correlation between the group of students who improved the most in automatic letter writing and those who improved in their composition skills, this answer choice eliminates the possibility that automatic letter writing was an a priori given.
Answer choice (D): It is neither necessary nor beneficial to the argument that the first-graders studied were representative of first-graders generally. The conclusion is not about first-graders generally but about how certain mental faculties influenced others.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice might suggest a reverse cause-and-effect relationship and is therefore incorrect.
Strengthen-CE. The correct answer choice is (C)
The author understands the correlation between automatic writing of letters and composition skills as one of causation: because the students whose composition skills had improved the most also learned to write letters the most automatically, the latter must have caused the former by freeing up mental resources for it.
- Cause Effect
Automatic writing → Frees up mental resources for other activities
Answer choice (A): Since this answer choice does not deal with improvement in composition skills, it will not be useful in strengthening the author's argument.
Answer choice (B): As explained earlier, this could suggest an alternate cause for the stated effect: instead of freeing up mental resources for other activities, greater ability to write automatically may simply be the result of other mental traits that benefit both composition and handwriting.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. By establishing a correlation between the group of students who improved the most in automatic letter writing and those who improved in their composition skills, this answer choice eliminates the possibility that automatic letter writing was an a priori given.
Answer choice (D): It is neither necessary nor beneficial to the argument that the first-graders studied were representative of first-graders generally. The conclusion is not about first-graders generally but about how certain mental faculties influenced others.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice might suggest a reverse cause-and-effect relationship and is therefore incorrect.