PrepTest 117

[lcid:3564] Prep Test 117 LSAT — Reading Comp — S1 Reading comp

Passage

Questions 21-27  .        The proponents of the Modern Movement in  . architecture considered that, compared with the  . historical Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary

Topic: Humanities


Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Modern Movement; Author points out irony
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Modern Movement (MM) proponent - Better than what it replaced at reflecting 20th c technology and building methods
    • Author - Irony - MM at odds with how buildings are built

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • Author previews opinion; Background on MM
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Adherence to ideology → Decline of movement
    • Background - Motive - Not just interpret client needs, but teach/persuade them MM was better
    • Examples - Wagner, Wright
    • Critics - Ignored non-Modern aspects of these inventors

Paragraph 3

  • Paragraph note
    • How MM declined
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Reason 1 - MMs were “ignorant of building methods”
    • Reason 2 - MMs didn’t admit they cared just about aesthetics
    • Reason 3 - Building industry moved to subcontractors, so more variation and MM methods couldn’t account for (e.g., expose structural elements = too expensive)

Paragraph 4

  • Paragraph note
    • Next movement; MM’s decline
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Postmodernists - Exposing structural elements unnecessarily limiting
    • Author - MM declined because of failure to abandoned ideals

Main Point: Proponents of the Modern Movement caused the decline of their own movement by failing to abandon their ideals in the face of practical building considerations.

Key Lines?

Lines 1-6 - New approach and proponents compare it to old approach

Lines 6-9 - Author’s view on movement (Irony)

Lines 10-12 - More on the Author’s (negative) view

Lines 31-40 - Author’s reasons for MM’s decline

Lines 58-60 - Another movement’s view of MM

Lines 60-63 - Author’s summary of viewpoint

Meta-Structure?

Old Approach/New Approach - In many Humanities passages that don’t feature a focus on innovation, there’s a comparison of a new style to an old one, or a discussion of the influences on a new style. That focus is present here, with the Author presenting Modernists and the Modern Movement as believing that they “more accurately reflected” modern sensibilities than the historical styles they replaced (Lines 1-6), and the passage goes on to flesh the Author’s thoughts on this movement out. When this Old Approach/New Approach Meta-Structure defines a passage, the Author’s opinion of the new approach generally serves as the main point. Interestingly, while these passages usually take a positive stance on the new approach, the Author here takes a negative one! She says it’s “ironic” that their focus on building methods didn’t translate to how things are built (Lines 6-9), and that their “tenacious adherence” to their ideology led to their downfall (Lines 10-12). She ends by stating that their unwillingness to “abandon their ideals” led to the decline of their movement (Lines 60-63). So while she doesn’t say much about the aesthetic or ideological value of the movement, she has a lot of criticisms as to how they went about making buildings, which should be reflected in any main point.

Examples - The Author ends Paragraph 2 with a couple examples of Modern architects who were praised by the Modern Movement (Lines 25-30). Interestingly, these architects serve a different purpose in the Author’s argument - she shows that the attention paid to them ignored parts of their work that didn’t line up with Modern ideology (Lines 28-30). While normally we’d expect at most a single question about examples that take up such little space in the passage, the fact that the Author uses these examples as a part of an argument against the modernist critics might result in a question or two being asked on it.

List - Paragraph 3 features a list of reasons that the Author believes contributed to the decline of the Modern Movement (two in the opening sentence, one after “Moreover” that’s more fleshed out). Since these reasons constitute the entire paragraph, there’s a good chance that there will be at least one question asked about them.

Last Thoughts?

The passage’s structure is a little slapdash. For example, Paragraph 2 starts out with a discussion of the movement’s decline, but it then goes into a long discussion of some history and motives in the MM. It’s not until Paragraph 3 that the Author circles back and justifies her stance that the ideological focus of Modernists led to the MM’s decline. We’ll need to keep that in mind as we address the questions, as there might be some where the support for the correct answer shows up in an unexpected place.

Question prompt

The author of the Remaining source text redacted.
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

Humanities

Strategy Overview

Review the main point and any defining Meta-Structures, then find an answer aligning with them

Answer Anticipation

This question type is where we derived our Meta-Structures from, so we should be focusing on that, along with the main point for how that Meta-Structure might be framed.In this case, we said that the passage fell into the Old Approach/New Approach Meta-Structure, looking at the Modern Movement compared to prior architectural movements. And, specifically, the Author showed why this new approach to architecture/movement failed.So the primary purpose of the passage is to explain what led to a movement’s failure. Let’s find an answer reflecting that.

Answer choices

  1. A
    analyzing the failure of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A matches the stem

    (A) (Lines 6-9; Lines 10-12; Lines 31-36; Lines 60-63) The Author spent this entire passage analyzing the Modern Movement, and her conclusions all point to reasons for its failure. This answer reflects that, so it’s the correct answer.

  2. B
    predicting the future course Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited

    (B) The Author repeatedly talks about the decline of the Modern Movement, and she provides no indication that she believes it can be salvaged, so this answer about the future course of the movement is out of scope.

  3. C
    correcting a misunderstanding about Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C is not credited

    (C) This answer does reflect a common Meta-Structure, where the Author defends an artist or movement from what she believes to be unfair criticism, correcting that misunderstanding. That’s not present here - she doesn’t believe the Modern Movement was unfairly maligned, but rather that it caused its own downfall.

  4. D
    anticipating possible criticism of Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    (D) The Author provides criticism of the movement, she doesn’t anticipate possible criticism.

  5. E
    contrasting incompatible viewpoints about Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    (E) One could argue that the Author’s viewpoint and the viewpoint of the proponents of the Modern Movement are incompatible. However, the point of the passage isn’t to contrast her view with that of the Modernists, but rather show how the Modernists led to their own downfall. When one of the viewpoints is the Author’s, it’s hard for the primary purpose to be to contrast that view with another - the fact that she has a viewpoint suggests the point is to prove it, not compare it to other views!

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