Reading comp PrepTest 128 · Section 1 · Question 10
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Legal Studies
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Old Approach and New Approach
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Old Approach - Bankruptcy focuses on punishment
- New Approach - Bankruptcy as a remedy for individuals/businesses/creditors
- Critics - Trend to more bankruptcies is bad; we should go back to punishment
- Author - New approach serves needs of society and lets people participate in economy, so it’s good
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Why Old Approach; Author’s rebuttal
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Old approach - Throw people in jail; dissolve businesses
- Why? - Breaking social contract, need to be removed from society
- Author - That doesn’t help anyone - creditors don’t get paid, businesses closing disrupts employees and customers
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- New approach - Underlying beliefs; mechanism; goals
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Underlying beliefs (2) - 1) public good is paramount; 2) public good better served with businesses existing and people not in jail (they can earn and pay back)
- Mechanism - Courts reorganize debt and transfer assets
- Still have punitive functions (Examples - public record of bankruptcy; affect credit rating)
- Goal - Restore business/individual to economic health and get creditors paid
Main Point: Modern bankruptcy laws, with their focus on getting people and businesses back to economic health so that they can repay creditors, are better than the old punitive bankruptcy laws.
Key Lines?Lines 1-6 - An Old Approach and a New Approach
Lines 6-9 - An argument to go back to the old approach
Lines 13-18 - Author’s overall opinion (pro New Approach)
Lines 24-29 - Why Old Approach adopted
Lines 29-34 - Author rebuts
Lines 54-59 - Author sums up her argument
Meta-Structure?Old Approach/New Approach - The first sentence pretty explicitly raises an Old Approach to bankruptcy law and the shift to a New Approach. This strongly suggests that the Author is going to explore the two approaches to see which one is better, or take elements from each to recommend a “compromise” approach. In this case, we get the former - she concludes the first paragraph by stating that the New Approach “serve[s] the varied interests of the greatest number of citizens.” Paragraph 2 then explains why the Old Approach was adopted, but the Author then pivots away from that (Line 30 - “But”) to show why it wasn’t helpful. She then closes out the passage by spending the last paragraph arguing why the New Approach (modern bankruptcy law) is better - it is the most likely way to restore businesses, individuals, and creditors to economic health. When a passage falls into this Meta-Structure, the Author’s opinion of the New Approach is generally the main point. Since she argues in favor of it here, that should be our main point, as we stated above.
Last Thoughts?Paragraph 3 had a series of elements in it that are likely to show up in the questions - underlying beliefs, a mechanism, and goals. Each of these are generally important on the exam, so we should have noted where each one is in the paragraph, and also kept quick notes on what they were. While it would take a bit of time to do that while reading, it should save us a lot of time on the questions!
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: A
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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ADebt that has become Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A matches the stem
(A) (Lines 21-24; Lines 25-26) The Author says that punitive bankruptcy laws reflected society’s view that debtors were unwilling to pay back money or negligent in their actions, and that they were breaking “sacrosanct social contracts,” requiring jail time. This answer reflects that - breaking a “sacrosanct” contract would be a moral failing, as would refusing to pay or being negligent with someone else’s money - so it’s correct.
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BBecause insolvency ultimately harms Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) (Lines 26-29) The Old Approach was based on the view that people could be removed from society and prevented from defrauding creditors - it doesn’t tie insolvency into harming the economy as a whole. (If anyone mentions that, it’s the Author in stating why punishing people would harm the economy as a whole - 9-13.)
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CThe insolvency of companies Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) (Lines 21-29) The Old Approach was based on a view of debtors that was always negative. There was no carve-out for those who took on risk - they would be viewed as just as unwilling to pay back creditors or just as negligent as others.
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DThe dissolution of a Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D is not credited
(D) (Lines 31-34) This answer reflects a more extreme version of the Author’s argument against punitive bankruptcy laws, not something believed by those who implemented the punitive ones. They were for dissolving companies, even if it would hurt the economy.
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EThe employees of a Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) (Line 33) The Author mentions unemployment as a reason that the New Approach is superior to the Old one. However, from this, we can’t infer that those who support a punitive approach to bankruptcy law believe that the employees are “as negligent” as the owner - they could just believe that it’s a tough break for those employees!
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Discussion
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Why is B incorrect? 4 replies
Started by Shula
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Why is A incorrect? 2 replies
Started by ginakd
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Answer choice (b) 5 replies
Started by Boram