Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Mass media means most people already know about crimes, so it’s hard to find jurors who haven’t formed opinions. Judges try moving trials, telling jurors to ignore outside news, and asking questions (voir dire), but critics say these methods fail because people still hear publicity, can’t simply forget it, may lie or hide their biases, or answer the way they think the judge wants. Some countries stopped using voir dire, but that doesn’t fix the problem. The passage says a fair jury should be made of informed community members who can discuss their views together—impartiality comes from group deliberation, not from each juror being completely uninformed.
Logic Breakdown
Read paragraph 3 for its main point: it introduces voir dire and then lists critics' objections to it. Choose the answer that says the paragraph describes criticisms of one traditional method.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage3.The primary purpose of the third paragraph is to
Correct Answer
B
B is correct. Paragraph 3 introduces voir dire as "The remedy for partiality most favored by judges" and immediately reports critics' objections: "But critics charge that this method, too, is unreliable for a number of reasons." The paragraph then lists those criticisms: "Some potential jurors... do not speak out during voir dire... because they are afraid to admit their prejudices, while others confess untruthfully..."; "some potential jurors underestimate their own knowledge, claiming ignorance of a case when they have read about it in newspapers or discussed it with friends."; and "judges sometimes phrase questions in ways that indicate a desired response, and potential jurors simply answer accordingly." These lines show the paragraph's primary purpose is to describe criticisms of one traditional method (voir dire).
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