Question:

Does intelligence predict the child’s ability to learn? Statement I: Intelligence is unaffected by bad teaching or dull home environment.
Statement II: Children from poor home backgrounds do not do well in their school-work.

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If both statements are only tangentially related to the core question and don't clearly answer it, then the correct option is usually (4) — not sufficient even when combined.
Updated On: Aug 7, 2025
  • Information in the statement I alone are sufficient to answer the questions.
  • Information in the statement II alone are sufficient to answer the questions
  • Information either in the statement I alone or in statement II alone are sufficient to answer the questions.
  • Information even in both statement I and II together are not sufficient to answer the questions.
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The Correct Option is D

Solution and Explanation

We need to determine if intelligence can predict a child’s learning ability. Statement I: This suggests that intelligence remains constant despite bad teaching or environment. However, it does not directly answer whether intelligence determines the child's learning ability. It merely indicates what intelligence is not affected by. Statement II: This links poor home background to poor school performance. But it deals more with environmental factors than intelligence, hence also not sufficient to answer the question. Conclusion: Neither statement individually nor combined provides direct evidence or logical sufficiency to conclude whether intelligence alone predicts the ability to learn.
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