Final answer:
The statement is True; a compound logic statement with two statements joined by 'and' is indeed a conjunction. It is true only when both statements are true, reflecting the structure of English grammar where 'and' connects two independent clauses.
Step-by-step explanation:
The student's question is about whether a compound logical statement made up of two statements joined with the word "and" is a conjunction. The answer is True.
In logic, a conjunction is a compound statement formed by connecting two statements with the logical operator 'and'. For two statements, A and B, the conjunction is expressed as "A and B" and is true only if both A and B are true. This aligns with the sentence structure in English where coordinating conjunctions such as 'and' join two independent clauses to form a compound sentence.