- Wed Dec 12, 2018 4:11 pm
#61146
Here was my train of thought on this one:
Stimulus Summary: Demosthenes reads the tablet to himself and expresses his amazement at the contents (note: he does not read its contents aloud, but rather “expresses his amazement” aloud). His companion asks him what is written on the tablets.
Question Stem: Fourth family “cannot be true”. We need to find the answer which, according to the information in the stimulus, “cannot” be true. Wrong answers “could be true” and can therefore include information that does not appear in the stimulus.
My Answering Strategy: To be honest, I couldn’t come up with a prephrase, so I dove right into the possible answers. First, I excluded any answers that did not include information in the stimulus. Once I narrowed down my options, I found that I was having difficulty focusing on the “cannot be true” element and (possibly wasting valuable time) resorted to negating key terms to determine whether the negated phrase “could” occur and therefore be the correct answer. In hindsight, I should have just jumped to my third step where I looked at the strength of language to determine which questions “could” be true and therefore be discounted.
Possible Answers:
A. The stimulus said nothing about the characters’ ability to read, so I discounted this answer.
B. The stimulus said nothing about the characters’ basis in fact or fiction, so I discounted this answer.
C. I initially kept this as a contender because (1) it talks about reading aloud in Ancient Greek plays, and (2) I negated the statement “the reading aloud of written texts commonly occurred” and came up with “the reading aloud of texts did not commonly occur”, which is sort-of supported by the stimulus, but (3) because the strength of language in the original answer suggested that reading aloud “could not” occur, it did not meet the “cannot” be true yardstick so I discounted this answer.
D. I selected this as the correct answer because (1) it talks about reading silently to oneself in Ancient Greek plays, which is mentioned in the stimulus, (2) the logical opposite of “did not read silently to themselves” is “sometimes read silently to themselves”, a statement which is supported by the stimulus, and (3) the strength of language “did not read silently to themselves” meets the “cannot be true” yardstick because Demosthenes most certainly read silently to himself.
E. I initially kept this as a contender because (1) it talks about prophecies written on tablets in Ancient Greece (in hindsight I should have discounted this one because it isn’t about Ancient Greek “plays”, specifically), and (2) I negated the statement “only rarely were prophecies written on tablets” and came up with “written prophecies were often written on tablets”, a statement which is sort-of supported by the stimulus, but (3) because the strength of language in the original answer suggested that prophecies “could” be written on tablets, it did not meet the “cannot” be true yardstick so I discounted this answer.
If anyone can think of a more streamlined way to answer this question, please post it - this one was a bit of a time thief....
Happy studying!
Liz