- Thu Apr 28, 2022 4:54 pm
#95077
Hi shanhickey,
The term "issues" in the first part of answer choice (B) is not a great descriptor of what Passage A is doing. For "issues" to be correct in that phrase, we'd expect to see both pros and cons discussed, whereas Passage A is really focused on the risks. Issues in a debate are more like topics to discuss. Think about the presidential debates. When they announce the issues to be discussed in each, the moderators aren't taking a side (or shouldn't be). It's a neutral topic of discussion that different people may disagree on.
I also object to the term "unexpected" in the second part of answer choice (B). There's no indication that the jury nullification results are unexpected.
For me, answer choice (C) stood out as it described Passage A as clearly negative toward the topic. My prephrase was to look for something about risk in describing Passage A. The term "dangers" was very close to that prephrase. For Passage B, I was looking for something about the beneficial impact of the process. The term "assist" in the answer choice made it jump out as what I was looking for.
Hope that helps!