Library/PT 131/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Law schools mainly teach students to study court cases but often ignore statutes—the actual written laws. In real legal work, lawyers often solve client problems simply by reading statutes and figuring out what they mean, and studying statutes also helps students see how different laws connect. Even though specific laws can differ by region, the skills learned from studying statutes are useful everywhere.

Logic Breakdown

Approach: Read the final paragraph where the passage discusses objections to adding statutory training. The passage states: 'One possible argument ... many statutes vary from region to region within a nation, so that the mastery of a set of statutes would usually not be generally applicable.' It also states: 'the knowledge of a particular region's statutory law is not generally transferable to other regions.' These lines point directly to choice E.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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10.

Which one of the following is cited in the passage as a reason that might be given for not including statutory law training in law school curricula?

Correct Answer
E
Choice E is correct because the passage explicitly cites as a possible objection that statutes 'vary from region to region' and that 'the knowledge of a particular region's statutory law is not generally transferable to other regions,' which matches E's claim about lack of geographic uniformity and nontransferability.
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