- Mon May 02, 2016 11:39 am
#23744
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus tells us that a recent tuition increased has been attributed to increases in faculty salaries and in need-based student aid. As we may have noticed, although the author does not use the words “cause” or “effect,” this stimulus presents the causal argument provided by the administration:
The author concludes that “the administration’s explanation is not believable.” This is based on the following two premises:
Premise: Faculty salaries comprise only a small portion of school expenditures.
Premise: The only significant aid increases were those based on merit rather than need.
The strength of the author’s argument is difficult to assess, since we don’t have information on the size of the tuition increase, the number of students paying tuition, or the actual amount of faculty salaries increases.
The question stem asks that we find the answer choice which most strengthens the author’s argument (this will also be the answer choice which most weakens the administration’s causal explanation. We might consider the various ways to weaken a causal argument, because the correct answer choice will likely reflect one of these attacks).
Answer choice (A): Without knowing what was originally spent on scholarship aid, there is no way to know what effect this might have on the overall budget, so this answer choice does not strengthen the author’s argument.
Answer choice (B): Like incorrect answer choice (A) above, this choice presents only information on percentages, which are relative amounts. That is, without knowing what role salaries have in the overall budget, or how much extra tuition was collected, this information does not have an effect on the argument and must be incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This information has no bearing on the causal argument presented (and refuted) in the stimulus, so this cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, as it provides an alternative cause for the tuition increase: if administrative, maintenance and athletic facilities costs made up the greatest increases to the budget, then this severely weakens the administrations argument.
Answer choice (E): The ability to estimate tuition costs ahead of time does not come into play in the author’s argument, which takes place after the fact. Since both the administrations argument and the author’s skepticism are retrospective, this answer choice has not effect on the causal argument from the stimulus.
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus tells us that a recent tuition increased has been attributed to increases in faculty salaries and in need-based student aid. As we may have noticed, although the author does not use the words “cause” or “effect,” this stimulus presents the causal argument provided by the administration:
- Cause Effect
Faculty salaries
and tuition increase
need-based aid increases
The author concludes that “the administration’s explanation is not believable.” This is based on the following two premises:
Premise: Faculty salaries comprise only a small portion of school expenditures.
Premise: The only significant aid increases were those based on merit rather than need.
The strength of the author’s argument is difficult to assess, since we don’t have information on the size of the tuition increase, the number of students paying tuition, or the actual amount of faculty salaries increases.
The question stem asks that we find the answer choice which most strengthens the author’s argument (this will also be the answer choice which most weakens the administration’s causal explanation. We might consider the various ways to weaken a causal argument, because the correct answer choice will likely reflect one of these attacks).
Answer choice (A): Without knowing what was originally spent on scholarship aid, there is no way to know what effect this might have on the overall budget, so this answer choice does not strengthen the author’s argument.
Answer choice (B): Like incorrect answer choice (A) above, this choice presents only information on percentages, which are relative amounts. That is, without knowing what role salaries have in the overall budget, or how much extra tuition was collected, this information does not have an effect on the argument and must be incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This information has no bearing on the causal argument presented (and refuted) in the stimulus, so this cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, as it provides an alternative cause for the tuition increase: if administrative, maintenance and athletic facilities costs made up the greatest increases to the budget, then this severely weakens the administrations argument.
- Cause Effect
administrative, maintenance and athletic costs tuition increases
Answer choice (E): The ability to estimate tuition costs ahead of time does not come into play in the author’s argument, which takes place after the fact. Since both the administrations argument and the author’s skepticism are retrospective, this answer choice has not effect on the causal argument from the stimulus.