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Re: Being an only child has little to do with a child's social [#permalink]
Very true.
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Re: Being an only child has little to do with a child's social [#permalink]
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All A, B and c can be quickly eliminated because they are out of scope. D is a trap because D concerns with age while arguments is all about the social development. E only weakens a part of conclusion, but E is correct.
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Re: Being an only child has little to do with a child's social [#permalink]
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The key to notice in this argument is that children to the age of three found that the two groups of children behaved very similarly. What if the dissimilarities started after age 3?

A- No. of children isn't what's imperative here.
B- Mothers vs fathers doesn't matter and if it does the intended effect isn't mentioned, so this can't weaken.
C- This is also just implying a bias but we have no information given to suggest so. Incorrect.
D- Yes, this feeds into our reasoning. If second children were born when the first child was 3, then changes in behaviour won't be noted by the study, thereby weakening the conclusion.
E- Other adults don't matter, and if they do, their importance isn't given in the passage.

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Re: Being an only child has little to do with a child's social [#permalink]
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D it is. If the first-born children had no siblings when compared to only-children, then the two cases are practically equivalent to each other. Consequently, this would weaken the author's argument--which is that being an only-child has NO detrimental effects on child development.
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Re: Being an only child has little to do with a child's social [#permalink]
Hello from the GRE Prep Club VerbalBot!

Thanks to another GRE Prep Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).

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Re: Being an only child has little to do with a child's social [#permalink]
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