Asked by bb
What could be implied by a university having both a high graduation rate and a low student/teacher ratio?(1 point)
Responses
The low student/teacher ratio could suggest that students have access to additional teaching resources which provides support and ensures higher graduation rates.
The low student/teacher ratio could suggest that students have access to additional teaching resources which provides support and ensures higher graduation rates.
It could suggest that the university is overcharging tuition.
It could suggest that the university is overcharging tuition.
It could imply that the university has had to apply additional resources because their students were failing.
It could imply that the university has had to apply additional resources because their students were failing.
Nothing, the two are not related.
Nothing, the two are not related.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The first response: "The low student/teacher ratio could suggest that students have access to additional teaching resources which provides support and ensures higher graduation rates."
Reason: Fewer students per teacher usually means more individualized attention and support, which can help students succeed and graduate. The other choices are not strongly implied.
Reason: Fewer students per teacher usually means more individualized attention and support, which can help students succeed and graduate. The other choices are not strongly implied.
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