- Fri Mar 08, 2019 8:02 pm
#63255
I think that's a great way to quickly and efficiently narrow down the contenders, LSAT2018, and that is essentially how I did it myself. A is about numbers - I need an answer about percentages or proportions. B and D are irrelevant - I want to know about recruitment and proportions. That gets me down to C and E. My first reaction to C was "uh, what...I don't know, maybe, moving on." At answer E I saw proportions, but then the stuff about two years of college seemed irrelevant, and in any event it told me nothing about changes in the percentage of dropouts recruited. Okay, so you used to have 2% of your recruits with two years of college, and now it's up to 3% - what does that tell me about the dropouts? Nada.
Okay, I'll pick C, because the others are all wrong. Done
Then, after I was done, and the test was over and I was cracking open a beer and ordering some chili cheese fries, I looked at C more closely and actually thought about it. I started imagining numbers. They used to recruit 10% of all 18-year-olds, now they recruit 12%. During the same time the dropout rate went up from 2% to 3%. Does this mean that the extra recruits had to come from the extra dropouts? Not at all! Lousy argument! Heck, for all we know, they never recruit dropouts. What if the extra recruits all came from the graduates? This argument is no better than if they had said that the percentage of grocery bills spent on fresh fruits went up during that time period, so military recruiting is dependent in some way on people buying apples! Bunch of nonsense. Now where are my fries?
Good work on sorting the answers here! That's the way to cut through the noise and get to the right answer with no muss and no fuss.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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