Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many people think kids who break the law will become adult criminals unless locked up early, but some researchers say prison can make youngsters keep offending by turning them into “criminals” in their own minds. Research shows many youths do illegal things for fun and usually stop by age 18 if not caught (only 8% stopped because they feared getting caught), so locking them up may be counterproductive. Instead of incarceration, we should try punishments and programs that help them grow up and learn society’s values—for example, returning stolen items and apologizing—so they’re rehabilitated rather than labeled as criminals.
Logic Breakdown
Look for the choice in which an intended remedy or intervention actually produces or worsens the very problem it is meant to cure—match that causal/perverse-effect relation to the passage.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.Which one of the following is most closely analogous to the purported relationship in the passage between incarceration and criminologists' research findings?
Correct Answer
D
"research by these criminologists suggests that incarceration may have the perverse effect of ensuring that the young offenders will continue to perform delinquent acts." This states that incarceration—the intended intervention—may cause or perpetuate the very delinquent behavior it is supposed to prevent. Option D similarly says that antacids often lead to rebound acidity, causing the very condition they treat; thus D is the closest analogy.
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