Reading comp PrepTest 139 · Section 2 · Question 5

Passage

Questions 1-7  .        Over the past 50 years, expansive, low-density  . communities have proliferated at the edges of many Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Social Science


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • New Urbanists' problem with suburbs (eliminates common space, decreases civic life)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Definition of "suburban sprawl": the proliferation of expansive, less densely populated communities at the edges of cities in the U.S. and Canada (first sentence)
    • Cause-and-effect relationship, according to the New Urbanists:
      • The need for traffic to flow in the suburbs causes zoning laws to separate homes, stores, and businesses, which causes a lack of communal space to gather, which causes people to not get to know each other, which causes a decline in civic life/civility (second and third sentences)
    • Comparison, according to the New Urbanists:
      • A town without town square is like a family without home (last sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "proliferated" (first sentence); "prominent" (second sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • More on New Urbanists' problem with suburbs (economic segregation, roads lead to antisocial behavior) and solution (walkable, economically diverse urban neighborhoods)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Cause-and-effect relationships, according to the New Urbanists:
      • In the suburbs, the houses are all the same price, which causes economic segregation, which causes children to be poorly prepared for life in a diverse society (first and second sentences)
      • Widely separated suburban homes and businesses cause people to spend a lot of time on heavily trafficked roads, which causes people to act combatively toward each other (third and fourth sentences)
      • Developing walkable, economically diverse urban cities with tree-lined streets, parks, businesses, and small schools would cause people of different backgrounds to interact and develop mutual respect (sixth and last sentences)
    • Comparison, according to the New Urbanists:
      • Unlike pedestrians in a walkable city, suburban residents spend a lot of time in their cars and act combatively toward each other — replacing time to socialize with road rage (fourth and fifth sentences)

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • Opponents of New Urbanism (people want to live in the suburbs) and New Urbanists' rebuttal (true, but we should question values that harm community life)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • New Urbanism opponents' view:
      • The suburbs represent people's values and what they want (first sentence)
    • New Urbanists' view:
      • People can value what they want, but suburban values (individual mobility, consumption, wealth) harm community life, so maybe we should reevaluate these values (second and last sentences)
    • Author's attitude: "fundamentally concerned" (last sentence); "long-term social costs" (last sentence)

Main Point: The New Urbanists argue that suburban sprawl contributes to the decline of civic life and civility, so we should replace the suburbs with walkable, economically diverse neighborhoods based on early-twentieth-century urban life.

Meta-Structure?

Problem/Solution: This passage best fits the Problem/Solution Meta-Structure.* Early on, the author presents a problem, at least in the minds of the New Urbanists. They have a problem with suburban sprawl, which they argue contributes to the decline of civility. Later, the author presents their solution: walkable, economically diverse urban neighborhoods.

In a Problem/Solution passage, the main point is generally the solution the author endorses or proffers. However, the author doesn't explicitly endorse the New Urbanists' position. The author provides, at most, subtle hints that they agree with the New Urbanists' view. (Giving the New Urbanists the last word against their opponents is the strongest hint the author agrees with the New Urbanists' position. The author also uses tonal phrases, like referring to suburban sprawl's "long-term social costs," that suggest that the author is aligned with the New Urbanists.) So, we'll make the main point the New Urbanists' view on the solution, and we'll need the main point to specify that it is the New Urbanists' beliefs.

*That said, you could certainly call this a Reporting a Viewpoint passage since the author spends nearly the entire passage outlining the New Urbanists' view without explicitly stating that they agree with the New Urbanists. You could also call this an Old Approach/New Approach passage, with suburban sprawl as the "old approach" and the New Urbanists' walkable towns as the "new" one. Remember, a passage's Meta-Structure is rarely definitive — often, more than one Meta-Structure will help you understand the passage's content, organization, and main point.

Causality: The New Urbanists express a lot of cause-and-effect relationships, making causality the most prominent minor Meta-Structure in this passage. Across the passage, the New Urbanists argue that suburban sprawl causes de facto economic segregation and causes zoning laws to separate homes, stores, and businesses by many commuter roads, which causes a lack of communal space to gather and causes people to spend time fuming in their cars instead of walking with their fellow residents, which causes people to not get to know each other, all of which causes a decline in civic life and civility. On the other hand, developing walkable, economically diverse urban cities with tree-lined streets, parks, businesses, and small schools would cause people of different backgrounds to interact and develop mutual respect. Expect several questions about these cause-and-effect relationships, perhaps even a challenging Strengthen or Weaken question.

Last Thoughts?

Two things here.


First, note how the second paragraph is divided. There was a pretty significant shift in the sixth sentence ("Duany and his colleagues ..."). The first half discusses the problem, while the second part discusses the solution. By noting this as we work through the questions, we'll make it a lot easier to find specific information from this paragraph.

Second, the last paragraph is a bit odd and has an element we need to be careful with. It's odd because it features criticism of the central viewpoint, but that criticism is quickly addressed by the New Urbanists. So, this paragraph seems more like a side point than anything related to the main point. Moreover, the New Urbanists agree with the criticism — they agree that the growth of the suburbs reflects people's values and desires, as their opponents say. What they argue, rather, is that these values need to be reconsidered with a more critical eye, as they're resulting in bad things. The rebuttal, therefore, is a bit more subtle than just saying that the criticism is wrong.

Question prompt

Which one of the 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

Review the views held by the critics of the New Urbanists, determine weaknesses in their claims to anticipate how to weaken them, and select the answer choice that makes their claims less convincing

Answer Anticipation

We'll approach Weaken questions in Reading Comprehension in a very similar manner as we would in Logical Reasoning. We can review the excerpt from the passage, just like we'd carefully read an argument in LR. We'll then interrogate the claim for any weaknesses, as the correct answer on both RC and LR will probably weaken the claim by exploiting a problem. Additionally, causation flaws are commonplace on Weaken questions in both RC and LR, so we should be especially mindful of those.In this case, we're asked to weaken the claims made by the critics of the New Urbanists. According to our notes, their views are expressed at the beginning of the third paragraph. There, they argue that the move to the suburbs reflects what people want — an enjoyment of the mobility of the automobile and the lifestyle that it makes possible (P3, S1). In short, people like living in the suburbs and they like the freedom of having a car.This is a causal claim — it explains that people move to the suburbs because they like going vroom vroom with their cars. When a causal claim takes the form of an explanation, the most common way to weaken that claim is to propose an alternative explanation. So, we should look for an answer choice that shows another reason why people move to the suburbs. Maybe it's the schools, the relatively safety, the more affordable housing, or the abundance of chain restaurants. Any other reason that could plausibly explain why people move to the suburbs would weaken these critics' argument.That said, many things could feasibly weaken the critics' argument, so we should keep an open mind as we progress through the answer choices. We'll start by asking ourselves, "Does this weaken the belief that people move to the suburbs because they want the freedom and lifestyle associated with cars?"

Answer choices

  1. A
    Most people who spend Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited

    (B) Does this weaken the belief that people move to the suburbs because they want the freedom and lifestyle associated with cars?

    Nope. The New Urbanists and their opponents discuss why people choose to live in the suburbs — bringing in "small towns" is irrelevant to their debate.

  2. B
    Most people who often Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (C) Does this weaken the belief that people move to the suburbs because they want the freedom and lifestyle associated with cars?

    Negative. The critics of the New Urbanists argue that the freedom of personal mobility makes people want to live in the suburbs, not because it's easy to access shopping and entertainment. The critics would probably acknowledge that city-dwellers have easier access to shopping and entertainment.

  3. C
    Most people who have Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (D) Does this weaken the belief that people move to the suburbs because they want the freedom and lifestyle associated with cars?

    Yes! And, as anticipated, it does so by presenting an alternative explanation of why people move to the suburbs. The critics of the New Urbanists argue that living in the suburbs reflects a desire to gain the personal mobility of a car and its concomitant lifestyle. This answer suggests that's not the case — people move to the sprawling suburbs because living in a place that doesn't require a lot drive-time is more expensive. In providing an alternative reason for why people have chosen to live in the sprawling suburbs, this answer weakens the critics' argument, making it the correct answer.

  4. D
    Most people who choose Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D matches the stem

    (E) Does this weaken the belief that people move to the suburbs because they want the freedom and lifestyle associated with cars?

    Nope. This answer is too far removed from why people move to the suburbs in the first place, which is the crux of the New Urbanist's critics' argument.

  5. E
    Most people who vote Remaining source text redacted.

What this tests

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 13%
  2. B 18%
  3. C 6%
  4. D Credited 62%
  5. E 2%

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