aarkay87
GMATNinja
Pooja1991
Hi,
I am extremely confused between A and E. Why cant E be true? And especially usage of 'light bulbs' instead of CFL got me confused in option A. I though the author was being generic in terminology.
(E) could be true. In real life, (E) probably IS true. But our task isn't to determine what can or cannot be true -- take another look at the exact language of the question:
Quote:
The information in the passage above most supports which of the following conclusions?
The passage tells us what LED light bulbs cost now but there's no information
in the passage that could lead to the conclusion that the price of LED bulbs will drop in the future.
This means (E) cannot be the correct answer.
(A) tells us:
Quote:
A) LED bulbs are most likely to be used in locations where light bulbs would be difficult or costly to replace.
The author is using generic terminology when they say
light bulbs in (A). They're using this generic terminology to emphasize that any light bulb (incandescent, CFL, or LED) could be used in these places.
The passage tells us that LED bulbs last around five times as long as a CFL bulb. So if someone wanted a light in a place where replacing the bulb was going to be difficult, dangerous, or costly, then using an LED bulb means they would have to replace the bulb far less frequently. The cost savings from not replacing the bulbs so frequently would balance out the LED bulb's greater cost.
The information in the passage
most supports the conclusion given in (A), so (A) is the answer to this one.
I hope that helps!
Hi
@GMATNinjaWhat is the right approach to solve the Conclusion type question? Like in other question types that you've answered , you start with sharing the right approach, for example:
Assumption Qs: "we want something that must be true for the argument to make sense"
Boldface Qs: "When dealing with boldfaced questions, start by COMPLETELY IGNORING the boldface and finding the conclusion"
In general, it's best to have a simple, flexible approach that will help you answer
any CR question accurately. This is because while some questions fall neatly into "types," many other questions don't. So, you want to just take each question at face value instead of forcing it into a box that may or may not be a good fit. This overall approach is outlined in
this article.
In regards to this particular question: we're asked to find a conclusion that is most supported by the information in the passage. Like with any CR question, you want to think about the structure of the argument. The only difference is that
we already know what role is played by the information in the passage -- namely, the stuff in the passage MUST be support/evidence for one of the conclusions written in the answer choices.
With that in mind, take stock of the evidence presented in the passage:
- CFL's are replacing incandescent light bulbs
- However, there's a new game in town: LED's
- There is a similarity between LED's and CFL's: "they are energy efficient"
- There is a reason why LED's are better than CFL's: "they can last around fifty thousand hours, about five times as long as most CFL bulbs."
- There is a reason why LED's are worse than CFL's: "a single LED bulb costs much more than five CFL bulbs."
So, which answer choice is best supported by the evidence above? Let's look at (A) and (B):
Quote:
A) LED bulbs are most likely to be used in locations where light bulbs would be difficult or costly to replace.
This plays right into the evidence in the passage! The reason that LED's are
better than CFL's is because they last much longer. So, you wouldn't have to replace LED's as frequently as you would have to replace CFL's. It follows that you'd want to use LED's in spots that are difficult/costly to reach, even if the LED's are more expensive.
(A) is looking good.
Quote:
B) CFL bulbs will need to come down further in price in order to compete with LED bulbs.
Hmm... this doesn't follow from the evidence presented. First, CFL's are
already much cheaper than LED's, so it doesn't make sense to conclude that CFL's must become
even cheaper in order to compete.
Furthermore, we don't know that CFL's are currently NOT competitive -- maybe a bunch of consumers prefer the cheaper option, even if LED's last much longer. So, we can't conclude that CFL's need to change in any way to be competitive.
Eliminate (B).
And, just like any other CR question, you should continue with POE to get to four wrong answers. The remaining answer -- (A), in this case -- is correct.
I hope that helps!