I would describe MSS questions as when the stimulus provides either all premises or a combination of premises and a conclusion, and then you have to identify the answer choice that is most strongly supported by the information given. I hope this helps.
I like to summarize the stimulus before I go answer keys. So basically, for example,
if you go to PT1 Q11
So in this problem, my summary would be something like " so you are saying there will be more Oxygen-18 concentration in ocean during ice age or less oxygen-16 concentration in ocean during ice age"
Then, you go to the answer key and first look for something that is similar to your summary or if you can't at first glance, eliminate anything that has a conditional format "if, then" or strong language " always, must".
Comments
I would describe MSS questions as when the stimulus provides either all premises or a combination of premises and a conclusion, and then you have to identify the answer choice that is most strongly supported by the information given. I hope this helps.
I like to summarize the stimulus before I go answer keys. So basically, for example,
if you go to PT1 Q11
So in this problem, my summary would be something like " so you are saying there will be more Oxygen-18 concentration in ocean during ice age or less oxygen-16 concentration in ocean during ice age"
Then, you go to the answer key and first look for something that is similar to your summary or if you can't at first glance, eliminate anything that has a conditional format "if, then" or strong language " always, must".
Hope this helped!