The prevailing trend in agriculture toward massive and highly mechanized production, with its heavy dependence on debt and credit as a means of raising capital, has been linked to the growing problem of bankruptcy among small farms. ███
Problem ·Modern agriculture has bankrupted lots of small farms
Instead of loans, get consumers to pay first. Get them to harvest the crops for you. Grow only what your consumers want. Grow it how they want (e.g. pesticide free?).
Supported, because Whatley’s approach, which involves customers traveling to the small farms, “reverses the traditional view of hard-surfaced roads.” This implies that under the traditional approach, farmers would travel on the hard-surfaced roads to sell their products to customers. The “reverse” is that customers would now travel to the farmers.
c
A typical population ██████ ██ ██████ ██████ ██ ████ ██ ███████ ████ ██ ██ █████ █████ ███████ ██████
Not supported, because we have no evidence a 50,000-person center should support 50 25-acre farms. We have no reason to think all 50,000 of those people would be interested in traveling out to a small farm to harvest crops. So we can’t assume all 50,000 people are part of the market of customers who would buy from small farms that use Whatley’s approach.
Not supported, because we have no reason to think consumers prefer hard-surfaced road due to wear and tear issues. It could be due to ease of travel; maybe these roads are easier to drive on.
e
Most roads with ████ ████████ ████ ██████████ █████ █████ ████████ █████████ ███ ███ ████ ██ ████████
Not supported, because we have no evidence about the original purpose of hard surfaces on roads.
Difficulty
68% of people who answer get this correct
This is a difficult question.
It is significantly harder than the average question in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%147
157
75%166
Analysis
Implied
Problem-analysis
Science
Single position
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
12%
159
b
68%
166
c
11%
160
d
5%
159
e
4%
162
Question history
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