Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
New Urbanists say suburban sprawl — where homes, shops, and schools are far apart so people must drive — weakens community. They argue that similar-looking, similar-priced houses separate people by income, that driving replaces everyday social contact, and that children therefore miss out on living around diverse people. To fix this, they want older-style, walkable neighborhoods with mixed housing, shops, parks, and small schools close together so neighbors meet and learn to respect each other. Critics say people choose suburbs for car freedom, but the New Urbanists say we should think about the long-term social costs of valuing mobility and wealth over community.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the unstated premise that links uniformly priced homes to "de facto economic segregation" and to children being "ill prepared for life in a diverse society" — i.e., that buyers' purchases reflect their economic means.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage7.The second paragraph most strongly supports the inference that the New Urbanists make which one of the following assumptions?
Correct Answer
A
The paragraph asserts that "Suburban housing subdivisions... usually contain homes identical not only in appearance but also in price, resulting in a de facto economic segregation of residential neighborhoods" and that "Children growing up in these neighborhoods... are certain to be ill prepared for life in a diverse society." For uniformly priced homes to produce economic segregation, buyers must tend to buy homes at or near their economic means; otherwise similarly priced houses could still be occupied by people of widely different incomes. Option A ("Most of those who buy houses in sprawling suburbs do not pay drastically less than they can afford") states exactly that necessary premise and thus is required for the New Urbanists' inference to hold.
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