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Assumption

Comprehensive notes, formulas, and practice questions for Assumption.

Assumption

Assumptions in Statements

What you'll learn

  • An assumption is something unstated but required for the statement to make sense or be argued.
  • To find necessary assumptions vs irrelevant or wrong ones in MCQs.
  • Assumption is not the conclusion — it is taken for granted before the statement.
  • Class 5 intro to statement analysis for reasoning sections.

Key concepts

Level 1 — Statement vs assumption

Verbal: Statement: "Advertisement: Buy brand X soap — it kills 99% germs." Assumption: germs are bad for health; killing them is desirable.

Symbolic: Statement S → hidden premise A must hold for S to be meaningful.

StatementNecessary assumption?Not assumption
"Close the door — it's cold outside"Outside is colder than insideOwner likes blue doors
"Study daily to score well"Study helps scoresTeacher is strict

Test: "If this assumption were false, would the statement still make sense?"

Level 2 — Necessary vs sufficient (intro)

Verbal: Necessary = must be true for argument; extra facts may be true but not assumed.

Real-life: "Take umbrella — it may rain" assumes rain makes umbrella useful.

Option typeAction
Required hidden beliefLikely assumption ✓
Random true factReject
Opposite of statementReject

Worked example

Statement: "The school added more buses so students would reach on time." Assumption?

Step 1 — Link buses → on-time arrival needs: more buses reduce delay/overcrowding.
Step 2 — Assumption: current buses were insufficient or late cause was transport.
Step 3 — NOT assumption: all students live far (may be partial reason only).
Answer: Adding buses will improve punctuality (transport was a bottleneck).

Statement: "Eat fruits for vitamins." Assumption that fruits contain vitamins?

Step 1 — If fruits had no vitamins, advice pointless.
Answer: Yes — fruits provide vitamins (necessary assumption).

Common mistakes

MistakeWhy it happensFix
Pick conclusion as assumptionRole confusionAssumption = background; conclusion = claim
Any true sentence worksNot all facts are assumedMust be required for statement
Too many assumptions listedOverthinkUsually one best necessary option in MCQ
Personal opinion assumedBiasStick to logic of statement

Quick check

  • Statement: "Wear helmet while cycling." One assumption?
  • Assumption or conclusion? "Therefore helmets save lives."
  • Statement: "Shop offers discount today." Assumption about customer behaviour?
  • Stretch: "Read newspaper daily to know current affairs." List two necessary assumptions.

Revision tip: For each advertisement you see, ask: "What must they believe for this ad to work?"

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Assumptions.

Interactive Exploration Suggestions (Drishti Live Worlds)

  • Use the platform-native live simulation or PhET-style tool for this topic (number line, Venn, physics playground, molecule builder, sensor dashboard, etc.).
  • Mirror / body / home activity: physically do the concept (count objects, measure, role-play) and photograph or describe for portfolio.
  • Voice or text reflection with AI Mentor: explain the concept to a younger student or family member.

AI Mentor Prompts (Socratic, Board-Adaptive)

  • "Explain this concept to a Class 6 student using one real example from an Indian home, school, market, or festival."
  • "What is one common mistake students make here, and how would you catch yourself making it?"
  • Stretch: "How does this connect to coding, robotics, money, health, environment, or a future career?"

Gamification, Portfolio & Parent Visibility

  • Complete the core practice + one extension activity (photo, table, short reflection, or mini-project) for base XP + topic badge.
  • 5-7 day streak or family discussion note = multiplier + visible artifact in parent/principal dashboard.
  • Best real-world application stories (anonymised) featured on class or national leaderboard.

Robotics, STEM & Future Skills Bridges

  • One hands-on project or measurement using the Drishti kit or household items that makes the concept physical.
  • Direct link to at least one Future Skill track (Money Management, Green Tech, Cyber Defenders, Micro-Entrepreneurship, AI Mastery, Sustainable Living, Personality Development).
  • Coding extension where relevant (simple script, simulation, or data logging).

NEP 2020 & Full Education OS Alignment

This material emphasises experiential "learning by doing", competency (apply/create/analyse), vocational exposure, critical thinking, and multidisciplinary connections. Designed to feed live worlds, AI Mentor (with memory), gamification, robotics, parent analytics, and future skills — not just exam prep.

Portfolio Evidence Idea: Your photo/table/reflection/project + one sentence on "How this helps me in real life or a possible future path."

Open the Practice tab for aligned questions (easy/medium/hard + case-based) with full AI scaffolding.

See curriculum for cross-links and the full future-skills/robotics chapters.

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What you'll learn
  • Key concepts
  • Worked example
  • Common mistakes

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