Ananabanana wrote:
Hi
GMATNinja,
I followed your explanation and still I couldn't understand why D is wrong. Please help!
in D: What is the problem with the meaning of "the enrollment" when it can refer to
the number of people enrolled in universities?
Isn't it supposed to be:
"Companies are providing job training for nearly 8 million people, as many as the number of people enrolled in 4-year universities"?
or
"... as many as those enrolled in the 4-year universities"?
How about: "... 8 million people, equal to the number of people who are enrolled in 4-year universities"? Is this the correct usage of "equal" - compare the mathematic numbers?
Thank a lot!
THIS9 wrote:
Ninja, I know the definition of enrollment was mentioned in a previous post directed to you, but that was for an explanation for choice A.
My question is that given the definition 'An enrolment is the
number of people who are enrolled at an institution or on a course.', choice D also makes the comparison between
"8MM people" vs. "number of people".
Curious about your thoughts on why is choice D wrong,
or why is it undesirable vs. Choice E?
GMATNinjaFair questions!
Even though "enrollment"
can refer to the number of people enrolled at a school, it can also be used in a more general or abstract way (i.e. "Enrollment starts on May 1." or "Enrollment at Burrito University dropped 10% last year."). We touched on this point in our
original explanation.
But even if we assume that "enrollment" refers to the number of people enrolled at a school, that means that the enrollment should equal some
number (10,000, for example). In other words, enrollment is a statistic.
If you put all of a school's students in a room, you wouldn't say, "Here is the enrollment of Burrito University." Instead, you would say, "Here are all the people (who are) enrolled at Burrito University." Why? Because "enrollment" is a figure
describing the human students, but it doesn't directly refer to the humans themselves. So (D) literally compares eight million
people to
a statistical figure.
Choice (E), on the other hand, compares eight million
people to the number
of people who are enrolled in the nation’s four-year colleges and universities. Sure, the "number of" part is implied, but since "being enrolled" is something that only a human student can be, "as many as are enrolled" MUST refer to the people who ARE enrolled at those schools.
So (E) does a better job comparing a number of humans to a number of humans. For the same reason, the first of these examples works better than the second:
- "Eight million people are enrolled in the nation’s four-year colleges and universities."
- "Eight million people are the enrollment of the nation’s four-year colleges and universities."
Also, what is "
the enrollment of the nation’s four-year colleges and universities"? Do those schools share one single enrollment? Of course not, so I don't love using "enrollment" as a singular entity here. Something like "total enrollment" would probably be better.
I hope that helps!
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