- Thu Apr 14, 2016 2:26 pm
#23063
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus begins by expressing the author's reservations with the wide-spread use of calculators in the classroom, and ends by reiterating her main point. While she acknowledges that calculators can sometimes enable students to focus on the general principles at hand, the author argues that remembering these principles is still a matter of habit that requires tedious and painstaking work to cultivate.
This argument is solid, as long as we agree with its presumption that remembering a principle is more valuable than the ease with which we acquire it. What if our ability to painlessly master principles is more pedagogically useful than the ability to retain information about them in the long run? If true, this would defend the use of calculators in the classroom and weaken the author's conclusion.
Answer choice (A): Students' thorough understanding of the mathematical principles that calculators obey provides no indication of how easily they are able to remember them. Furthermore, if thorough understanding is indeed possible despite the use of calculators, why not allow unlimited use of calculators? Because this answer choice does the exact opposite of what is needed, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): While this answer choice draws an analogy between the widespread use of calculators and the use of slide rules in the past, it gives no indication as to whether slide rules increased the likelihood of remembering mathematical principles or not.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If retaining the knowledge of mathematical principles is far more important than the acquisition of such knowledge, and calculators obviate the need to perform the painstaking work required for principle retention, then perhaps it is reasonable to restrict their use.
Answer choice (D): If painless mastery of habits were more valuable than tedious work, the author's recommendation would be weakened. Because this answer choice does the exact opposite of what is needed, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): If the author's conclusion is correct, then it may be reasonable to infer that teachers' enthusiasm for new educational aids is not proportional to the pedagogical effectiveness of those devices. A Strengthen question, however, will never ask us to assume that the author's conclusion is true or determine what follows from it (this would be an answer to a Must Be True question); instead, our task here requires the assumption that each answer choice is true, and the subsequent determination of the relative impact of each answer choice upon the conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus begins by expressing the author's reservations with the wide-spread use of calculators in the classroom, and ends by reiterating her main point. While she acknowledges that calculators can sometimes enable students to focus on the general principles at hand, the author argues that remembering these principles is still a matter of habit that requires tedious and painstaking work to cultivate.
This argument is solid, as long as we agree with its presumption that remembering a principle is more valuable than the ease with which we acquire it. What if our ability to painlessly master principles is more pedagogically useful than the ability to retain information about them in the long run? If true, this would defend the use of calculators in the classroom and weaken the author's conclusion.
Answer choice (A): Students' thorough understanding of the mathematical principles that calculators obey provides no indication of how easily they are able to remember them. Furthermore, if thorough understanding is indeed possible despite the use of calculators, why not allow unlimited use of calculators? Because this answer choice does the exact opposite of what is needed, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): While this answer choice draws an analogy between the widespread use of calculators and the use of slide rules in the past, it gives no indication as to whether slide rules increased the likelihood of remembering mathematical principles or not.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If retaining the knowledge of mathematical principles is far more important than the acquisition of such knowledge, and calculators obviate the need to perform the painstaking work required for principle retention, then perhaps it is reasonable to restrict their use.
Answer choice (D): If painless mastery of habits were more valuable than tedious work, the author's recommendation would be weakened. Because this answer choice does the exact opposite of what is needed, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): If the author's conclusion is correct, then it may be reasonable to infer that teachers' enthusiasm for new educational aids is not proportional to the pedagogical effectiveness of those devices. A Strengthen question, however, will never ask us to assume that the author's conclusion is true or determine what follows from it (this would be an answer to a Must Be True question); instead, our task here requires the assumption that each answer choice is true, and the subsequent determination of the relative impact of each answer choice upon the conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.