Vaishbab
Hi, I don't understand what this question is asking and hence, not sure how to approach it.
Understanding Critical Reasoning "Conclusion" Questions
I completely understand your confusion - Critical Reasoning questions can seem overwhelming when you're not sure what they're asking for! Let me break this down for you.
What This Question Is Really Asking: When you see "Which one of the following most accurately expresses the
overall conclusion," the question is asking you to identify the
main point the author is trying to prove. Think of it as: "What is the author's main claim that they want you to believe?"
How to Approach Conclusion Questions - A Simple 3-Step Method:
Step 1: Look for Conclusion Indicators Words/phrases that signal a conclusion:
- "Therefore," "Hence," "Thus," "So"
- "Suggests that," "Indicates that"
- "Must be," "Probably," "It follows that"
- In this passage, notice: [b]"these facts suggest that" - this is your golden signal! What comes after this phrase is the conclusion.[/b]
Step 2: Distinguish Facts from ConclusionsFacts/Premises (given information):
- 3 of 4 language subfamilies found only in Taiwan
- 4th subfamily spread across huge area
- All originated from same language
Conclusion (what the author argues based on these facts): Taiwan is the homeland → Austronesian peoples originated there and migrated
Step 3: Match the Conclusion to Answer Choices The passage concludes:
"these facts suggest that Taiwan is the homeland where Austronesian languages have been spoken longest and, hence, that Austronesian-speaking peoples originated in Taiwan and later migrated to other islands."
This matches perfectly with
Choice E: "Austronesian-speaking peoples probably originated in Taiwan and later migrated to other islands."
Why Other Choices Are Wrong:- Option A: Just restates a fact/premise - not the conclusion
- Option B: Too general - doesn't mention Taiwan specifically
- Option C: Only partial - misses the "peoples originated and migrated" part
- Option D: Too general - doesn't mention Taiwan
Key Takeaway: For ANY conclusion question, always:
- Find conclusion indicator words
- Identify what the author is trying to prove (not just stating as fact)
- Pick the answer that captures the complete main point
The conclusion is always what the author
argues or
infers, not what they simply
state as given.
Hope this clarifies the approach! With practice, you'll start spotting conclusions quickly.