Reading comp PrepTest 119 · Section 1 · Question 3

Passage

Questions 1-7  .        Economists have long defined prosperity in terms  . of monetary value, gauging a given nation's  . Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Social Science


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Debate is introduced - Economists vs. Critics/Author
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Economists - Prosperity is measure of $
    • Critics - Bad definition, ignores other things (quality of life, environment)
    • Example - Ozone layer weakening
      • Critics/Author - Troubling reduction in quality of life
      • Economists - Great! more hats sold

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Generalization/Intro example (Community/Econ viewpoint)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Generalization - Trying to make $ cn decrease community’s quality of life
    • Example - Rural community that relies on timber fought against limits
    • This reflects Economists’ view

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Example continued (Critics response)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Residents value natural beauty which will be hurt without harvest limits
    • They’d move elsewhere to make more $ if they valued it more
    • Even in $ terms, the community loses more without limits

Paragraph 4

  • Paragraph note
    • Economists defend view; Author rebuts
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Economists - $ is easily quantifiable, so best to define prosperity with it
    • Author - Dodges question to make it “easy”
    • Analogy - Lit critic who just looks at copies sold instead of analyzing book

Main Point: By focusing solely on economic value when defining prosperity, economists miss a lot of what most people think of when they think of the concept, as can be seen in examples of people valuing things other than money.

Key Lines?

Lines 1-4 - One viewpoint

Lines 5-9 - An opposing view

Line 10 - An example highlighting the debate (Author takes Critics’ side)

Lines 18-21 - Generalization

Lines 21-22 - Extended example introduced (reinforces earlier views)

Lines 49-52 - Author’s view on Economists stated

Line 52 - Analogy introduced

Meta-Structure?

Generalization/Example - The passage here presents two examples, both of which are meant to highlight general principles that the Author argues for. The first generalization shows up in Paragraph 1, where the Critics argue that defining prosperity just in monetary terms misses a lot of relevant factors (Lines 5-9). This is backed up by the example of ozone thinning, which would hurt quality of life but sell a lot of goods. The Author aligns with the critics here (Line 14 - “troubling”). She then goes on to present another generalization in Lines 18-21, arguing that trying to maximize money can decrease prosperity. This is backed up by an example of a rural town that relies on lumber, an extended example that serves as the basis for the rest of the passage. When a passage falls into this Meta-Structure, the Author’s generalization generally makes up the main point. Here, the two examples largely align in supporting similar generalizations - the definition of prosperity put forward by the economists that relies on monetary value is too limited - and our main point reflects that.

Criticize/Rebut a View - The Author doesn’t put forward her view (and that of the critics) as existing in a vacuum. In fact, by framing it as the view of “critics” of a viewpoint, the Author is inherently setting up that argument as a rebuttal to another viewpoint. Since this central rebuttal makes up the main argument of the passage, the main point should reflect that the Author isn’t arguing for her stance, but rather is presenting it as an argument against another viewpoint, as our main point highlights.

Last Thoughts?

There’s one sentence that’s interesting and will very likely lead to a question - Lines 42-44. There, the Author is rebutting the view of the economists, but she frames it as dealing with the “monetary terms” that those economists are using. This is interesting as the broader point is that focusing on monetary value misses a lot of things that are important to prosperity. Here, the author is showing how this one example runs counter to what the economists argue even when using their definition. Such unexpected arguments tend to get asked about, so let’s be sure to keep our eyes open for a question about it.

Question prompt

Based on the information Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: D

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Social Science

Strategy Overview

Find the section on the weakening of the ozone layer and review the Author’s statements on it

Answer Anticipation

If we did our job and noted all examples, we should be able to see that the ozone layer is discussed starting in Line 10 - it’s an example of the critics’ (and Author’s) general view that focusing only on monetary value is a “questionable” way to analyze prosperity (Lines 5-9).The example shows that this “troubling reduction[]” in environmental health could lead to increased sales of hats, sunglasses, and sunscreens (Lines 12-15). As such, it would increase “prosperity” as defined by the economists while leading to lower quality of life for people.So, in short, the Author believes that the weakening of the ozone layer illustrates how something that hurts environmental health and quality of life could be viewed as a positive by economists. Let’s find an answer reflecting any portion of this viewpoint.

Answer choices

  1. A
    Paradoxically, the weakening of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (A) (Lines 14-16) The Author states at the end of the example that it would lead to reductions in environmental health and quality of life, contradicting this answer.

  2. B
    The environmental effects of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) The Author doesn’t discuss the rate at which any of these effects occur, so this answer is out of scope.

  3. C
    The appearance of prosperity Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) The Author doesn’t discuss efforts to solve the weakening of the ozone layer, so this answer is out of scope.

  4. D
    This problem should be Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D matches the stem

    (D) (Lines 13-15; Lines 5-9) The Author uses the ozone layer example to illustrate how situations that would suggest prosperity by the economists’ definition doesn’t reflect actual prosperity. She also concludes the example by referencing the “troubling” reductions in environmental health and quality of life. As such, we can infer that she believes the weakening of the ozone layer is leading to a reduction in prosperity, rather than an increase as the economists might argue. This answer is therefore correct.

  5. E
    This problem has resulted Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) The Author doesn’t blame anyone for the weakening of the ozone layer, so this answer is out of scope.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 6%
  2. B 4%
  3. C 19%
  4. D Credited 69%
  5. E 2%

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