TanmayT
Hello!
Sajjad1994! I needed some help with this passage.
First off, Do passages like these, as in, passages presenting two viewpoints, come on the actual GMAT? This was the first time that I came across a passage like this, and hence I am curious.
Second, Can you please indicate the individual difficult levels for all the questions for this passage?
Third and lastly, can you please provide the OA for the 5th Question? I got all the other questions right but I missed this one completely.
Thank you!
Hello TanmayT
First off, Do passages like these, as in, passages presenting two viewpoints, come on the actual GMAT? This was the first time that I came across a passage like this, and hence I am curious.Until date I came across approx. 100+ Official RCs and I am sure I haven't seen such a passage divided into two different parts, remember this passage belongs to LSAT. If you are looking a very close thing to the official GMAT and your test date is coming soon this RC might not be of your interest. There is no issue practicing such a passage IF you are just starting your RC preparations (But remember that in the start of your preparations the official GMAT material must be your top priority). You will find valid logics when practicing an official LSAT RCs unlike of some 3rd party GMAT material.
Second, Can you please indicate the individual difficult levels for all the questions for this passage? Question #1: Easy to Medium
Question #2: Hard
Question #3: Medium
Question #4: Hard
Question #5: Hard to Very Hard
Question #6: Medium
Difficulty levels some time becomes a personal sort of thing, it varies according to one's level of preparation. A student in the start of his/her preparation might find a question hard or very hard and the same student might think the same question be a medium or easy level if the student has mastered the concepts. So the above difficulty levels are just for a generic purpose. It might be not same for everyone.
Third and lastly, can you please provide the OA for the 5th Question? I got all the other questions right but I missed this one completely. According to the second passage: mention a study of mothers in
lines (Using face-to-face mother-infant interactions filmed at 24 frames per second, researchers have shown that mothers and infants jointly construct mutually improvised interactions in which each partner tracks the actions of the other. Such episodes last from one-half second to three seconds and are composed of musical elements—variations in pitch, rhythm, timbre, volume, and tempo.) And, passage A also mentions this, in
lines (One noteworthy difference, though, is that, generally speaking, people are better at language than music. In music, anyone can listen easily enough, but most people do not perform well, and in many cultures composition is left to specialists. In language, by contrast, nearly everyone actively performs and composes.) They use evidence from modern cultures to show that humans are not universally good at music. This indirectly supports the author’s later point that language, not music, was the dominant feature.
Answer: E