- Tue Dec 13, 2016 2:08 pm
#31411
Sending this one back to you, angel - if you believe that both of those answers were supported by the passage, where is the support for each? Lift quotes from the passage and explain why you believe that the selected quote supports one of the answer choices. Ultimately, which one has more support, and is therefore the better answer? Typically, when two answers look good it's because you are making some unwarranted assumptions, making some connections on your own that the author didn't actually make.
If you aren't sure about which "innovative painting techniques" are being referred to, go back to the passage and see if you can find them. What did the author describe as innovative (or some synonym for innovative - revolutionary, unique, etc.) in what Bearden did? The text is your guide in RC, always, so explore it and use it.
Rather than handing you my opinion of why one answer is better than the other, I want you to make your case. Why do you think your chosen answer is best? What evidence did you use, and what evidence in support of another answer choice did you compare it to? This is what the LSAT is all about, and why it is such a good test (in my opinion) for what you should expect in law school. You have to make your argument, and defend it with evidence, rather than have someone make the case for you.
Once you have done that, and shared your thoughts here in detail, we can respond and, if you are off base in some way, help show where you may have gone astray.
One more thing, and that is to remind you to always, always, always prephrase your answers to the best of your ability. That can be a real challenge sometimes on RC, but it's still possible most of the time. What did you expect the answer to say or do? What evidence in the text did you base that prephrase on? Which answer is the best match for your prephrase? If you go into the answer choices without a solid idea of what the correct answer should be, or do, or include, then you are guaranteed to fall for attractive (and sometimes not so attractive) wrong answers.
Okay, with that said, I'm sending you back into the trenches. Go try again, and come back with a solid argument in favor of one answer being better than all the others. Not just good or acceptable or possible - better than all the others. Once you have done that, we can talk more about your process.
Go get 'em!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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https://twitter.com/LSATadam