In an argument, the conclusion is the main claim that the author wants the reader to accept on the basis of supporting reasons. Here, the factual observation about students who attend regularly and score high functions as the evidence. From this observation, the writer infers a general statement about the role of regular attendance in academic success. That generalised statement is what the premises are intended to support, so it is the conclusion.
Option A:
Option A presents the general claim that is being supported by the preceding observation, not the observation itself. It captures the βthereforeβ part of the reasoning and summarises the main point the argument is trying to establish.
Option B:
Option B reports the empirical basis of the argument and therefore functions as a premise, not the final point to be proved.
Option C:
Option C adds the stronger claim that success always requires attendance, which goes beyond the stated conclusion and is not actually asserted.
Option D:
Option D introduces a claim about marks being the only sign of success, which is not mentioned in the argument and cannot be its conclusion.
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