- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23052
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
The stimulus observes that over the past 13 years, counselors have implemented a program to convince students to select careers requiring college degrees. A study indicates a 15% increase over 10 years in the rate of graduates who go on to college, so the counselors conclude that the program is successful.
The counselors make two huge assumptions. First of all, they presume that their program is the cause of the increase, ignoring that the increase could be due to many other factors. Secondly, the counselors' program has to do with career selection, and the counselors ignore that the 15% increase might not indicate that the students are aiming for careers that require college degrees.
Since you are asked to identify a necessary assumption, you should look for one of the discussed assumptions.
Answer choice (A): If the number of graduates going to college remains constant, while the rate increases, that could suggest that many more students do not even graduate high school, let alone select a career that would require college. This choice can be a means of attacking the counselor's causal assumption, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): The counselors are trying to promote careers that require degrees, not careers that require just a bit of college. The fact that any college courses can improve career prospects might actually undermine the assumption that the 15% increase is due to students aiming for degree-requiring careers.
Answer choice (C): The counselors are interested in proclaiming their own success, so they would not necessarily assume that some of the increase cannot be attributed to their own actions.
Answer choice (D): This choice is somewhat supportive of the counselor's position, but the problem is that career plans do not indicate careers that actually require a college degree. This choice does not support the causal relationship, and this choice does not adequately link the 15% increase to an increase in degree-requiring career aims.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The counselors have to assume that the 15% increase indicates something about an increase in the percentage of students seeking degree-requiring careers, and the idea that many of last years graduates who went on to college want to prepare for careers that require college degrees is an adequate expression of that assumption.
Assumption-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
The stimulus observes that over the past 13 years, counselors have implemented a program to convince students to select careers requiring college degrees. A study indicates a 15% increase over 10 years in the rate of graduates who go on to college, so the counselors conclude that the program is successful.
The counselors make two huge assumptions. First of all, they presume that their program is the cause of the increase, ignoring that the increase could be due to many other factors. Secondly, the counselors' program has to do with career selection, and the counselors ignore that the 15% increase might not indicate that the students are aiming for careers that require college degrees.
Since you are asked to identify a necessary assumption, you should look for one of the discussed assumptions.
Answer choice (A): If the number of graduates going to college remains constant, while the rate increases, that could suggest that many more students do not even graduate high school, let alone select a career that would require college. This choice can be a means of attacking the counselor's causal assumption, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): The counselors are trying to promote careers that require degrees, not careers that require just a bit of college. The fact that any college courses can improve career prospects might actually undermine the assumption that the 15% increase is due to students aiming for degree-requiring careers.
Answer choice (C): The counselors are interested in proclaiming their own success, so they would not necessarily assume that some of the increase cannot be attributed to their own actions.
Answer choice (D): This choice is somewhat supportive of the counselor's position, but the problem is that career plans do not indicate careers that actually require a college degree. This choice does not support the causal relationship, and this choice does not adequately link the 15% increase to an increase in degree-requiring career aims.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The counselors have to assume that the 15% increase indicates something about an increase in the percentage of students seeking degree-requiring careers, and the idea that many of last years graduates who went on to college want to prepare for careers that require college degrees is an adequate expression of that assumption.