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
Identify the author's central claim that law schools should teach statutory law because statutory proficiency and synthesis skills are essential and transferable; pick the option that most undercuts the need for teaching those skills in law school.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage11.Which one of the following would, if true, most weaken the author's argument as expressed in the passage?
Correct Answer
B
Choice B directly weakens the author's central claim by denying the necessity of law-school statutory training: the author argues that "A proficiency in understanding, applying, and even formulating statutes ... is a vital aspect of the practice of law" and that "the ability to interpret them accurately is an essential skill for law students to learn," and he concludes that "the skills acquired in mastering a particular set of statutes are [transferable], making the study of statutory law an important undertaking." If most lawyers "easily and quickly develop proficiency in statutory law through their work experiences after law school," then the main reason the author gives for requiring statutory training in law school (that students need these skills and cannot reliably acquire them otherwise) is undermined, so B most weakens the argument.
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