Library/PT 117/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

The passage describes a prepaid legal plan started by the Canadian Auto Workers that gives members cheaper legal help—either from plan lawyers whose fees are covered by the plan or from outside lawyers who either accept the plan’s low fee or charge the client extra. Many members joined and other companies copied the idea, but many lawyers worry the plan pushes fees down and reduces quality. Plan leaders say it brings new clients who might later pay full price, but the author says that’s unlikely because the plan mainly helps newer, less-experienced lawyers and low fees discourage careful work on hard cases, so clients and firms probably won’t gain much in the long run.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Locate the sentence in the final paragraph where the author calls the plans 'marketing devices' and read the immediately following sentences to see whether the author is praising or criticizing that aspect. Supporting passage quotes: 'Since lawyers with established reputations and client bases can benefit little, if at all, from participation, the plans function largely as marketing devices for lawyers who have yet to establish themselves.' Follow-up: 'While many of these lawyers are no doubt very able and conscientious, they will tend to have less expertise and to provide less satisfaction to clients.' Also: 'And since lowered fees provide little incentive for lawyers to devote more than minimal effort to cases, a 'volume discount' approach toward the practice of law will mean less time devoted to complex cases and a general lowering of quality for clients.'

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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7.

Which one of the following most accurately represents the primary function of the author's mention of marketing devices (second sentence of the last paragraph)?

Correct Answer
A
The author uses 'marketing devices' to highlight a harmful aspect of the plans: they primarily serve to promote less-established lawyers, which the author then ties to reduced expertise and lowered quality for clients. Evidence: 'the plans function largely as marketing devices for lawyers who have yet to establish themselves.' The next sentences make the negative consequence explicit: these lawyers 'will tend to have less expertise and to provide less satisfaction to clients' and a 'volume discount' approach will bring 'a general lowering of quality for clients.' Thus the phrase is used to point out an aspect the author believes will be detrimental to service quality.
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