Library/PT 108/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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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

Identify the author's thesis: incarceration may perpetuate delinquency and the author advocates rehabilitation that encourages maturation and can be achieved without resorting to incarceration; pick the answer that expresses that policy recommendation.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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8.

Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main idea of the passage?

Correct Answer
E
The passage's central claim is a policy recommendation that youthful offenders be rehabilitated without routine incarceration. Support: "research by these criminologists suggests that incarceration may have the perverse effect of ensuring that the young offenders will continue to perform delinquent acts." The author then states, "Perhaps a policy that encourages maturation, rather than routinely imposing incarceration, may be the most effective form of rehabilitation for young offenders," and concludes that the goal "can be achieved without either inflicting incarceration or allowing young offenders to escape penalty." Choice E accurately paraphrases this main idea.
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