Reading comp PrepTest 104 · Section 3 · Question 1
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Legal
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- The expansion of mass media coverage of judicial cases has led to difficulty in empaneling impartial juries.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Impossible to find potential jurors who are unaware of the details of cases arising from happenings in their communities (first sentence)
- It is believed that people who haven’t heard any information about a case and therefore have no prejudices to set aside are more impartial jurors (second sentence)
- Problem: Empaneling an impartial jury each member of which hasn’t previously been exposed to mass media coverage of a case is nearly impossible (first and second sentences)
- Author’s attitude: “virtually impossible” (first sentence); “generally believed” (second sentence); “more desirable” (second sentence); “daunting task” (second sentence)
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Judges use different venues and specific jury instructions to minimize jury partiality, but critics charge these techniques are ineffective.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Judges believe in changes of venue and jury instructions as effective tools against jury partiality (second sentence)
- Critics believe these techniques are ineffective (second sentence)
- Changes of venue don’t make any difference because jurors will hear mass media coverage of a case anyway (third sentence)
- Jury instructions can’t prevent jurors from letting what they’ve gleaned from media coverage of a case creep into their courtroom deliberations (fourth sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “judges are convinced” (second sentence); “critics have concluded” (second sentence); “the critics argue” (third sentence); “they claim” (fourth sentence); “‘mental contortions’” (fourth sentence)
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Judges often use voir dire to determine whether potential jurors are impartial, but critics charge that even this method of weeding out partial jurors is ineffective.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Most judges use voir dire, a process by which they interview jurors to determine whether they are impartial in a particular case (first sentence)
- Critics believe this is unreliable (second sentence)
- Some potential jurors mask their prejudices (third sentence)
- Other potential jurors exaggerate their prejudices to seem partial and avoid jury duty (third sentence)
- Some potential jurors underestimate their own partiality due to mass media coverage of the case (fourth sentence)
- Judges’ questions are weighted to elicit a desired response (fifth sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “critics charge” (second sentence); “unreliable” (second sentence); “for a number of reasons” (second sentence); “they argue” (third sentence); “confess untruthfully” (third sentence); “claiming ignorance” (fourth sentence); “indicate a desired response” (fifth sentence)
Paragraph 4
- Paragraph note
- Juror partiality is impossible to eradicate; indeed, it is deliberation among many jurors who may be well aware of mass media coverage of a case that will lead to impartiality.
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Some countries like Canada and the UK have abandoned voir dire in all but a few circumstances because it is ineffective (first sentence)
- Recasting of Problem: Eliminating all methods designed to detect juror partiality does not solve the problem of juror partiality; it just recognizes that ignorance of the details of cases is impossible in the mass media age (second-third sentences)
- Solution: recast “impartiality” as a trait arising from deliberations between a representative group of citizen-jurors who have been exposed to mass media coverage of a case.
- Author’s attitude: “seriously enough” (first sentence); “recognizes” (third sentence); “virtual impossibility” (third sentence); “truly impartial” (fourth sentence); “informed citizens” (fourth sentence); “community’s collective experience” (fourth sentence); “results from a process” (fifth sentence)
Main Point: The problem of how to achieve jury impartiality will not be solved by attempting to empanel jurors who are individually impartial, but rather by acknowledging that it is the deliberations between jurors who may have been exposed to mass media coverage of cases that will achieve impartiality in the jury as a whole.
Key Lines?Paragraph 1, Sentence 2 (P1 S2) - Statement of problem
P2 S2 - Usual solutions ineffective
P4 S3 - Recasting of the problem with new definition of “impartiality”
P4 S4-5 - Solution
Meta-Structure?Problem/Solution: This passage uses a Problem/Solution Meta-Structure. The problem the passage addresses is the difficulty of identifying jurors who are impartial in criminal cases that have been widely covered by the media. The passage describes three major methods that judges use to weed out partial jurors, and the author uses criticisms of each one to discard them as solutions to the problem. Finally, having reached the conclusion that it is impossible to empanel a jury entirely made up of individuals who are impartial and ignorant of media coverage of a case, the author recasts the problem. The author then presents their solution: change the definition of “impartial” to apply to a jury as a whole rather than to each individual juror. As long as the jury as a whole reflects the various experiences of the community, media knowledge and all, they can be considered impartial due to the deliberations they will engage in.
The minor Meta-Structure used in this passage is List. The author, after identifying the problem, lays out three solutions that are often used and shoots each one down. Then, they lay out their own solution.
The author’s attitude throughout this passage is clear and unequivocal; they are critical of all existing solutions to the problem of empaneling an impartial jury and supportive of the solution they advocate. Thus, according to the author, it is impossible to empanel a jury all of whose members are individually impartial, but it should be recognized that, as long as the jury as a whole engages in deliberations, it can be considered collectively impartial.
Last Thoughts?This is a passage with a clear author viewpoint that is well-organized and comprehensible. Keeping an eye on the author’s opinion is paramount to digesting this passage, and since the author often speaks through the “critics” they mention, it is important to keep track of what the critics say about traditional methods of weeding out partial jurors. In the matter of an ultimate solution to the impartiality problem, it is the author’s own voice that is used, not anyone else’s, and it is there that we can most clearly see the author’s opinion.
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: E
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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ADue to the expansion Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) Does this answer choice match our anticipation of the main point (“The problem of how to achieve jury impartiality will not be solved by attempting to empanel jurors who are individually impartial, but rather by acknowledging that it is the deliberations between jurors who may have been exposed to mass media coverage of cases that will achieve impartiality in the jury as a whole”)?
No. This answer choice misses the crucial point the author makes, which is that the definition of “impartiality” as it applies to juries needs to be adjusted in order to come up with a solution to the problem of empaneling an impartial jury. Indeed, when “impartiality” is defined as it is at the beginning of the passage, namely, complete individual ignorance of mass media coverage (P1 S2), the author says that it is “virtually impossible” (P4 S3) to empanel an impartial jury. So, according to the author, no “other methods” of ensuring impartiality would be successful, and this answer choice is not the right one.
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BCriticisms of traditional methods Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) Does this answer choice match our anticipation of the main point (“The problem of how to achieve jury impartiality will not be solved by attempting to empanel jurors who are individually impartial, but rather by acknowledging that it is the deliberations between jurors who may have been exposed to mass media coverage of cases that will achieve impartiality in the jury as a whole”)?
No. This answer choice may be accurate, because the author points out that Canadian and British courts have abandoned voir dire (P4 S1), but this is not the main point that the author is making in the passage. It is more a statement of fact that is used to bolster the author’s argument.
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COf the three traditional Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) Does this answer choice match our anticipation of the main point (“The problem of how to achieve jury impartiality will not be solved by attempting to empanel jurors who are individually impartial, but rather by acknowledging that it is the deliberations between jurors who may have been exposed to mass media coverage of cases that will achieve impartiality in the jury as a whole”)?
No. The first part of this answer choice is true; voir dire is the method most favored by judges to rid juries of partiality (P3 S1), but the passage doesn’t tell us whether it’s the most flawed. The author points out several problems with it (P3 S2-5), but doesn’t say that it is the most ineffective method. Also, the frailties of voir dire are not the main point of the passage.
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DVoir dire is ineffective Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) Does this answer choice match our anticipation of the main point (“The problem of how to achieve jury impartiality will not be solved by attempting to empanel jurors who are individually impartial, but rather by acknowledging that it is the deliberations between jurors who may have been exposed to mass media coverage of cases that will achieve impartiality in the jury as a whole”)?
No. As in (C), the main point of the passage is not limited to the problems of voir dire. (D) is an accurate statement, according to the passage, but the author’s point is much broader than a statement about one method of ensuring jury impartiality.
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EDue to the expansion Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E matches the stem
(E) Does this answer choice match our anticipation of the main point (“The problem of how to achieve jury impartiality will not be solved by attempting to empanel jurors who are individually impartial, but rather by acknowledging that it is the deliberations between jurors who may have been exposed to mass media coverage of cases that will achieve impartiality in the jury as a whole”)?
Yes. This answer choice matches our anticipation fairly well. It adds the issue of mass media, which we didn’t have but which is entirely appropriate to bring up, and, instead of explaining how to redefine “impartiality,” as we did, it simply states that the notion must be redefined. However, these differences don’t make it that different from our anticipation, and, given that it is the only answer choice that gets to the heart of the author’s argument (“impartiality” must be redefined), we can be sure it is the right answer.
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