- Fri Nov 02, 2012 11:00 pm
#25688
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
Here, the educator discusses some experimental educational programs. Guided by the notion that home is where children should receive their first education, these programs teach parents how to be their child’s “first teacher.” The educator points to the above average school performance of children in these programs as support for the conclusion that the programs are successful and should be expanded.
Notice that the phrase “first teacher” is in quotation marks in the stimulus. When you see information highlighted like this in the stimulus, stop to think about why it is presented this way. Here, the educator is saying that the parents are not really teachers.
The argument is causal: the program makes the parents capable of instructing the child, and the parent’s instruction makes the child a better student. Although it likely is not necessary for you to diagram this relationship, we can diagram it as:
P = program
PI = parent as instructor
BS = child as better student
The question stem indicates this is a Weaken question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will attack some portion of the causal chain described above.
Answer choice (A): Whether children enjoy being taught by their parents is irrelevant to the conclusion, which focused on the success of the program in enabling parents to teach their children.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it attacks the causal chain at the heart of the educator’s argument. If it is the case that most of the parents participating in the program have prior experience as educators, then the program does not turn the parents into faux “teachers,” they already are teachers. This fact potentially eliminates the value of the program as the initial cause that set the chain in motion.
Answer choice (C): Although some parents are participants in the program, the approval of a majority of parents, generally, to the expansion of the program is not relevant to the educator’s conclusion that the program is a success, and should be expanded.
Answer choice (D): The cost of the program expansion would matter to the question of whether expansion is feasible, but it has no impact on the question of whether the conclusion is valid.
Answer choice (E): If the educator’s argument were conditional, and established the program as necessary for any child to perform well in school, then this answer choice would attack that conditional relationship. However, the educator’s conclusion was causal, and was restricted to only those students who participated in the program. So, this answer choice is irrelevant to the conclusion.
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
Here, the educator discusses some experimental educational programs. Guided by the notion that home is where children should receive their first education, these programs teach parents how to be their child’s “first teacher.” The educator points to the above average school performance of children in these programs as support for the conclusion that the programs are successful and should be expanded.
Notice that the phrase “first teacher” is in quotation marks in the stimulus. When you see information highlighted like this in the stimulus, stop to think about why it is presented this way. Here, the educator is saying that the parents are not really teachers.
The argument is causal: the program makes the parents capable of instructing the child, and the parent’s instruction makes the child a better student. Although it likely is not necessary for you to diagram this relationship, we can diagram it as:
P = program
PI = parent as instructor
BS = child as better student
- Cause Effect/Cause Effect
P PI BS
The question stem indicates this is a Weaken question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will attack some portion of the causal chain described above.
Answer choice (A): Whether children enjoy being taught by their parents is irrelevant to the conclusion, which focused on the success of the program in enabling parents to teach their children.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it attacks the causal chain at the heart of the educator’s argument. If it is the case that most of the parents participating in the program have prior experience as educators, then the program does not turn the parents into faux “teachers,” they already are teachers. This fact potentially eliminates the value of the program as the initial cause that set the chain in motion.
Answer choice (C): Although some parents are participants in the program, the approval of a majority of parents, generally, to the expansion of the program is not relevant to the educator’s conclusion that the program is a success, and should be expanded.
Answer choice (D): The cost of the program expansion would matter to the question of whether expansion is feasible, but it has no impact on the question of whether the conclusion is valid.
Answer choice (E): If the educator’s argument were conditional, and established the program as necessary for any child to perform well in school, then this answer choice would attack that conditional relationship. However, the educator’s conclusion was causal, and was restricted to only those students who participated in the program. So, this answer choice is irrelevant to the conclusion.