Reading comp PrepTest 114 · Section 3 · Question 25
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Social Science
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Problem (med school doesn’t make students empathetic or ethical) and solution (narrative lit) introduced
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Author’s view:
- Because medical school can make students overlook the personal and ethical parts of being a doctor, ethical training in medical school is needed, and narrative literature is “one method” to achieve this greater empathy with patients (first through last sentence)
- Cause-and-effect relationship, according to the author:
- Scientific thinking inherent in medical training can cause medical students to overlook the human and ethical side of patient care (second sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “greatest challenge" (first sentence); "risks" (second sentence); “insufficient” (second sentence); “need to develop" (third sentence); "one method of accomplishing this" (last sentence)
- Author’s view:
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Author’s criticism of traditional training (abstract, doesn’t prepare students for complex realities)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Comparison between traditional training and narrative literature, according to the author:
- Traditional ethical training in medical school does not contribute to students’ understanding of the patient experience or expose them to ethical dilemmas, while ethical training emphasizing narrative literature grounds students in real-world perspectives and shows them interpersonal relationships that are necessary for developing empathy with patients (second through last sentences)
- Author’s attitude: "relies heavily" (first sentence); “contributes little” (second sentence); “true foundation must be predicated” (third sentence); “required” (third sentence); “can better help students” (last sentence); “so forcefully” (last sentence)
- Comparison between traditional training and narrative literature, according to the author:
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Benefits of solution (adopting others’ viewpoints, which develops flexible ethical thinking)
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- List of ways in which reading narratives leads to desirable moral relativism
- Readers see moral dilemmas from perspectives other than their own and utilize moral imagination (first sentence)
- Readers abandon an absolute set of moral principles while reading narratives (second sentence)
- Readers abandon their own point of view and set of ethical principles in favor of those presented in the narrative (third sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “uniquely suited” (first sentence), “worthy of attention” (second sentence); “must use” (second sentence); “requires” (third sentence), “strictly, absolute, inviolate sets of moral principles” (third sentence); “demands” (last sentence), “requires” (last sentence)
- List of ways in which reading narratives leads to desirable moral relativism
Paragraph 4
- Paragraph note
- Rebutting objection that narrative lit. leads to no principles (it’s a middle-ground between no principles and strict principles)]
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Comparison between situational ethics, absolutist ethics, and narrative literature, according to the author:
- In situational ethics, decisions are entirely relative to the circumstances, which is not desirable (first and second sentences)
- In absolutist ethics, decisions are made based on an inflexible set of principles, which is not desirable either (second sentence)
- Reading narrative literature will help balance medical students between situational and absolutist decision-making (third and last sentences)
- Author’s attitude: “does not follow” (first sentence); “entirely relative” (first sentence); “extremely relativistic stance” (second sentence), “as little benefit” (second sentence); “dogmatically absolutist one” (second sentence); “fortunately” (third sentence); “corrective” (third sentence); “need not lead” (third sentence); “can give us” (last sentence); “lacking” (last sentence); “a deeper understanding” (last sentence); “can serve as a foundation” (last sentence); “allow greater flexibility (last sentence)
- Comparison between situational ethics, absolutist ethics, and narrative literature, according to the author:
Main Point: Narrative literature provides effective ethical training to medical students, as it encourages flexible ethical thinking and a better understanding of human behavior.
Key Lines?Paragraph 1, Sentence 1 (P1, S1) - Introduces problem
P1, S4 - Author’s proposed solution
P3, S1 - Specific reason why the proposed solution will work, according to the author
P4, S1 - Rebuttal of potential objection to the proposed solution
Meta-Structure?Problem/Solution: This passage utilizes a Problem/Solution Meta-Structure*. The first sentence introduces the central problem that the author will attempt to solve: that traditional ethical training might produce in medical students rigid ethical thinking and a lack of empathy for their patients. By the last sentence of the first paragraph, the author has proposed a solution to the problem: the use of narrative literature.
The main point in a Problem/Solution passage is the author's opinion on the proposed solution. In this passage, the author believes that ethical training incorporating narrative literature is preferable to the traditional, abstract, and more absolutist version of ethical training since narrative literature encourages flexible ethical thinking appropriate for the complex interactions doctors have with their patients. So, we summarized the main point as, "Narrative literature provides effective ethical training to medical students, as it encourages flexible ethical thinking and a better understanding of human behavior."
*You could make a solid case that this passage has an Old Approach/New Approach structure. There's the old, staid approach to medical ethics and this cool, new narrative literature-based approach. You could even argue that this is a Correcting the Record passage since the author addresses the shortcomings of the traditional way of teaching medical ethics, before "correcting" those shortcomings with narrative literature. If you determined that the passage had any of these Meta-Structures on test day, you'd almost certainly identify the main point correctly and understand the passage's overall structure.
Last Thoughts?The organization of the entire passage is based on the author's view, and all the paragraphs are structured to prove that the author's proposed solution to the problem is the right one. Even when the author mentions other types of ethical approaches (such as the absolutist and situational approaches), the author only mentions these to show why their version of ethical training is effective. This is important to keep in mind on Argument Structure questions. The correct answer to these questions will likely describe how the author's discussions of absolutist and situational approaches are meant to support the author's argument about narrative literature.
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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AIt tends to avoid Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) Do our main point or notes suggest that "narrative literature" avoids the extreme relativism of situational ethics?
Yes, so this is not the right answer. Check out our note for the fourth paragraph, which says that narrative literature is "a middle-ground between no principles and strict principles." The word "middle-ground" suggests that narrative literature avoids extremes. We could eliminate this answer choice without checking the passage.
If we had to check the passage to confirm that this is supported, we can check the fourth paragraph. There, the author states that reading narrative literature "need not" lead to the relativism of situational ethics (P4, S3).
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BIt connects students to Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) Do our main point or notes suggest that "narrative literature" connects students to "varied types of human events"?
Yes, so this is not the correct answer, either. Look at the note for the third paragraph. It says narrative literature allows students to adopt other people's points of view and develop flexible ethical thinking. That sounds a lot like "connect students to varied types of human events." Maybe not an exact match, but close enough to warrant crossing off (B).
We could review the just before the beginning of the third paragraph if we had to check the passage to confirm that (B) is supported. In the last sentence of the second paragraph, the author says that narrative literature attaches readers to the "varied world of human events" (P2, S4).
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CIt can help lead Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) Do our main point or notes suggest that "narrative literature" can lead students to "develop new ways of dealing with patients"?
This isn't an exact match to anything on our notes. But our third paragraph note says the solution "develops flexible ethical thinking." Becoming more flexible would entail being able to do more things. Plus, look how weak and wish-washy this answer choice's language is — "can help." That matches the softer language in the passage. Maybe this answer choice would be more problematic if it was more definitive, but we like the weaker language.
So, maybe we should eliminate this one at this point. It seems like it is probably supported, based on our notes. But, if you want to take the cautious route, let's see if (D) or (E) are less supported.
If you wanted to review the passage to check whether (C) is supported, you could see that the author says that students need "new ways of thinking about and interacting with patients" and that narrative literature will help lead to these new approaches (P1, S3-4).
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DIt requires students to Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) Do our main point or notes suggest that "narrative literature" requires "students to examine moral issues from new perspectives"?
Yes, so it is not the right choice. Our third-paragraph note says that narrative literature requires students to adopt others' viewpoints. That's synonymous with examining issues from others' perspectives. This answer choice is almost certainly supported, so we can cross it off.
If we needed to check the passage to find the support, the specific reference is in the last sentence of the third paragraph. There, the author says that narrative causes students to "examine moral issues from new perspectives" (P3, P4).
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EIt can help insulate Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E matches the stem
(E) Do our main point or notes suggest that "narrative literature" can "help insulate future doctors from the shock of the ethical dilemmas they will confront"?
We're looking at our notes and we're not seeing anything about being shocked by ethical dilemmas. We don't remember reading anything about that, either. This seems like it's probably not supported.
Also, this seems to be inconsistent with the author's main point. Being "insulated," or protected, from the shock of ethical dilemmas seems like a bad thing. We want to prepare med students for the ethical dilemmas they face! And the author thinks that narrative literature would prepare students for ethical dilemmas — not insulate them from those ethical dilemmas. Therefore, this is the correct answer on this Bizarro Must Be True question.
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Discussion
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"tends" A vs D 2 replies
Started by devon
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Answer E 1 reply
Started by MrLaw
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Another question on B 1 reply
Started by ShannonOh22