GMAT考试写作指导:Argument范文三五
35.        The financial-planning office at Fern Valley University concludes that it is 
necessary to initiate a fund-raising campaign among alumni that will enable the 
university to expand the range of subjects it offers and increase the size of its library 
facilities. It: argument is based on a five-year decline in enrollments and admission 
applications together with the claim that students cite poor teaching and inadequate 
library resources as their chief sources of dissatisfaction with Fern Valley. The 
conclusion of the financial-planning office is not strongly supported by the reasons 
given.
      To begin with, this argument depends on the assumption that providing a greater 
range of subjects and a larger library will alleviate the students' chief sources of 
dissatisfaction. However, the students have not complained about inadequate course 
offerings or about the size of the library; their complaint is that the existing courses are 
poorly taught and that library resources are inadequate. Offering more kinds of classes 
does not improve teaching quality, and increasing a library's size does nothing to 
enhance its holdings, or resources. Accordingly, the recommendation does not bear 
directly on the problem as stated.
      Secondly, the proposal unfairly assumes that the recent enrollment and application 
decline was caused by poor teaching and inadequate library resources. It is equally 
possible that all colleges, regardless of teaching quality and library resources, have 
experienced similar declines. These declines may have been due to unrelated factors, 
such as unfavorable economic conditions, or an increase in high-paying computer jobs 
not requiring a college education.
      Thirdly, the author provides no support for the claim that students are dissatisfied 
with the teaching and library resources at Fern Valley. It is possible that the claim is 
based on hearsay or on scant anecdotal evidence. Without more information about the 
basis of the claim, we cannot be sure that the financial-planning office is addressing the 
real problems.
      In conclusion, the advice of the financial planning office is not well supported. To 
strengthen the argument, the planning office must provide evidence that students are 
dissatisfied with the range of subjects and with the library's size, and that this 
dissatisfaction is the cause of the recent decline in enrollment and the number of 
admission applications. To better assess the argument as it stands, we would need to 
know whether the students' attitudes were measured in a reliable, scientific manner