In
my last English test, four of the ten multiple choice questions confused me. I answered each one of them according to my gut feeling, my first instinct. I found out that I had answered all four of them correctly. The popular belief that when stumped by a multiple-choice question on a test,
always trust your first instinct must, therefore, be true.Key idea: The author uses one specific incidence and makes a generalized conclusion based on this singular incident.
The argument is flawed primarily because the author
A.
depends of popular belief rather than documented research findings - Nope.
eliminate (A). B.
does not supply information about rest of the six questions - Even if we have this information, it is not related to the conclusion drawn. Hence,
eliminate (B)C.
uses one specific situation to prove a generalization - This is exactly what the author does - the author uses one specific situation (In my last English test,...) to prove a generalization (The popular belief that when stumped by a multiple-choice question on a test,
always trust your first instinct must, therefore, be true). hence,
(C) is the right answer. D.
does not provide information about the times when this strategy did not work. -This is not stated or implied in the passage. Moreover, the passage fits the description of (C) perfectly. Hence,
eliminate (D)E.
fails to distinguish between myth and reality - Irrelevant. Hence,
eliminate (E)