2 comments

  • Sunday, Apr 18 2021

    @dimakyure869 I won't steal the opportunity to work on this question, but just saying "out of scope" usually mean's we're stopping short of fully articulating our understanding of the answer. At best, it limits our potential improvement, at worst, it can cause us to get the question wrong. Not to mention, simply "out of scope" is not always an AC killer... if we believe this then we probably could stand to refine our conceptual understanding of the different ways each qtype asks us to engage with the argument.

    @jordanjohnsonjr282 is pointing you in the right direction, and while I am just as guilty of this as anyone else, I wish more people didn't just come right out and provide a full explanation/answer to every #help post... the work is what helps you improve. Also thanks @dimakyure869 for not just being like "I don't get it. Someone explain."

    1
  • Saturday, Apr 17 2021

    @dimakyure869 What information do you consider out of scope about A? And why do you consider D to be in scope?

    0

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