Library/PT 104/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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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

Summarize the passage arc: problem (mass media makes ignorance among jurors rare) → review of remedies and critics → concluding prescription that courts must rethink how they secure impartiality; choose the answer matching the author’s concluding purpose.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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7.

Of the following, the author's primary purpose in writing the passage most likely is to

Correct Answer
E
The author’s primary aim is prescriptive: to argue that courts should change how they address juror impartiality rather than simply eliminating existing remedies. Support from the passage: "But merely eliminating existing judicial remedies like voir dire does not really provide a solution to the problem of impartiality." The author then states the alternative view: "if a jury is to be truly impartial, it must be composed of informed citizens representative of the community's collective experience; today, this experience includes exposure to mass media." He reinforces the recommended shift in thinking: "Impartiality does not reside in the mind of any one juror; it instead results from a process of deliberation among the many members of a panel of informed, curious, and even opinionated people." These concluding sentences show the author is arguing for a change in how courts address the problem, making (E) the best answer.
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