surya.nair
If the 75% in immersive group and 60% in the other group have a particular personality trait, then it means that it's the personality that helped the learning process.
Won't that make A the right answer?
surya.nair You're absolutely right that personality could influence language learning success. However, choice (A) asks about personality differences between
successful and unsuccessful students - this means comparing the 75% who succeeded to the 25% who didn't within the immersive group, and the 60% who succeeded to the 40% who didn't within the traditional group.
Why This Doesn't Help Evaluate the Argument:The researchers' conclusion is about the
difference between groups (75% vs 60% success rates). For personality to explain this difference, we'd need to know that the
immersive group had more students with success-promoting personalities than the traditional group. But choice (A) only tells us about personality patterns
within each group, not
between groups.
Think of it this way: Even if outgoing students do better in both groups, that doesn't explain why the immersive group had a 15% higher success rate - unless the immersive group happened to have more outgoing students to begin with (which (A) doesn't tell us).
Why (B) is Correct:Choice (B) asks about prior language learning attempts - this
could vary between groups. If the immersive group had more students with prior experience, that would provide an alternative explanation for their higher success rate, weakening the researchers' conclusion that it was the method itself.
I am sharing with you a framework for Evaluation questions:When GMAT asks what would help evaluate an argument, look for information that:
- Provides alternative explanations for the observed difference
- Tests whether groups were comparable at the start
- Addresses confounding variables between groups (not within groups)
Remember:
Within-group patterns ≠ Between-group explanations