- Mon Jan 20, 2014 12:00 am
#64917
Complete Question Explanation
Must be true. The correct answer choice is (A)
This is a fact set. The stimulus begins with the author indicating that drivers with a large number of
demerit points who have also been convicted of a serious driving-related offense should either be
sentenced to jail or be forced to receive driver re-education. This either/or relationship sets up the
following diagram:
J = sent to jail
DE = receive driver re-education
sub-D = drivers with a large number of demerit points who have also been convicted of a
serious driving-related offense
J D DE D
DED J D
The next sentence begins with the conditional indicator “only if,” and introduces the following
conditional relationship:
R = likely to be made more responsible drivers
DE R D
The final sentence denies that drivers with a large number of demerit points can be made into more
responsible drivers. This can be represented as follows:
RD
At this point the stimulus ends, but you should continue your analysis by linking the pieces of the
stimulus together. The denial of the “R” condition in the final sentence enacts a contrapositive:
RD DE
Linking this contrapositive to the either/or diagram in the first sentence yields the following chain:
RD DE J D
Hence, the pieces of the argument allow us to conclude that drivers with a large number of demerit
points who have also been convicted of a serious driving-related offense should go to jail. This is
restated almost exactly in answer choice (A).
Answer choice (A): As explained on the previous page, this is the correct answer.
Answer choice (B): Like the other three incorrect answers, this answer contains new information,
which in a Most Strongly Supported question is cause for suspicion. The stimulus does not discuss
the “best chance” for making drivers more responsible.
Answer choice (C): Similar to the reasoning behind eliminating answer choice (B), the stimulus does
not discuss whether driver re-education is a “harsh enough punishment” and thus we can eliminate
this answer choice.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus does not address drivers who have not committed a serious driving
offense, only those convicted of such an offense.
Answer choice (E): This is, in part, an Opposite Answer. According to the last two sentences of the
stimulus, drivers with a large number of demerit points should not receive driver re-education.
Must be true. The correct answer choice is (A)
This is a fact set. The stimulus begins with the author indicating that drivers with a large number of
demerit points who have also been convicted of a serious driving-related offense should either be
sentenced to jail or be forced to receive driver re-education. This either/or relationship sets up the
following diagram:
J = sent to jail
DE = receive driver re-education
sub-D = drivers with a large number of demerit points who have also been convicted of a
serious driving-related offense
J D DE D
DED J D
The next sentence begins with the conditional indicator “only if,” and introduces the following
conditional relationship:
R = likely to be made more responsible drivers
DE R D
The final sentence denies that drivers with a large number of demerit points can be made into more
responsible drivers. This can be represented as follows:
RD
At this point the stimulus ends, but you should continue your analysis by linking the pieces of the
stimulus together. The denial of the “R” condition in the final sentence enacts a contrapositive:
RD DE
Linking this contrapositive to the either/or diagram in the first sentence yields the following chain:
RD DE J D
Hence, the pieces of the argument allow us to conclude that drivers with a large number of demerit
points who have also been convicted of a serious driving-related offense should go to jail. This is
restated almost exactly in answer choice (A).
Answer choice (A): As explained on the previous page, this is the correct answer.
Answer choice (B): Like the other three incorrect answers, this answer contains new information,
which in a Most Strongly Supported question is cause for suspicion. The stimulus does not discuss
the “best chance” for making drivers more responsible.
Answer choice (C): Similar to the reasoning behind eliminating answer choice (B), the stimulus does
not discuss whether driver re-education is a “harsh enough punishment” and thus we can eliminate
this answer choice.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus does not address drivers who have not committed a serious driving
offense, only those convicted of such an offense.
Answer choice (E): This is, in part, an Opposite Answer. According to the last two sentences of the
stimulus, drivers with a large number of demerit points should not receive driver re-education.