Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT116 S4 P2 Q11 Explanation

Multicultural Education

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsMeaning in ContextSociety

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Passage

Many educators in Canada and the United States advocate multicultural education as a means of achieving multicultural understanding. There are, however, a variety of proposals as to what multicultural education should consist of. The most modest of these proposals holds that schools and colleges should promote multicultural understanding by teaching about other the majority culture. These values are typically those of liberalism: democracy, tolerance, and equality of persons.

Critics of this first proposal have argued that genuine understanding of other cultures is impossible if the study of other cultures is refracted through the distorting lens of the majority culture’s perspective. Not all cultures share liberal values. Their value systems have arisen in often radically different social and historical circumstances, and one insists on approaching them solely from within the majority culture’s perspective.

In response to this objection, a second version of multicultural education has developed that differs from the first in holding that multicultural education ought to adopt a neutral stance with respect to the value differences among cultures. The values of one culture should not be standards by which others are judged; each and sociology. They are, that is, methods which derive from the Western scientific perspective and heritage.

Critics of this second form of multicultural education argue as follows: The Western scientific heritage is founded upon an epistemological system that prizes the objective over the subjective, the logical over the intuitive, and the empirically verifiable over the mystical. The methods of social-scientific examination of cultures are thus already value laden; the (often nonscientific) perspectives and methods of the cultures studied that real understanding can be achieved.

What this question is testing

Meaning in Context

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
11.

The version of multicultural education discussed in the first paragraph is described as “modest” (first paragraph) most

Answer choices

  1. Out of Scope: speculation9% picked this

    relies on the least amount of speculation about

    We could say "it relies on the least amount of ditching our Western values and methods", but the passage isn't talking about how much speculation we doing / not-doing.

  2. Correct67% picked this

    calls for the least amount of change in the

    Why this is right

    This ends up being our best match for "retain our values and our methods". We are doing the least about of ditching our values and methods, so it's not asking us to do much.

    Skill tested: Meaning in Context · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  3. Opposite3% picked this

    involves the least amount of Eurocentric

    It actually involves the greatest amount, since we're not ditching our values or methods.

  4. Opposite, if anything5% picked this

    is the least distorting since it employs several

    It potentially involves the most distorting, because we're refracting everything through our lens (our values / our methods).

  5. Opposite, if anything17% picked this

    deviates least from a neutral stance with respect to differences

    A neutral stance would be one that doesn't have the biases of Western values and methods, but this "most-modest approach" would be the one that does still retain those biases.

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