Friday, June 12, 2020
Primary Purpose Questions in SAT Reading
Your SAT reading comp sections will include a few questions that look something like this: The primary purpose of this passage is to Or this: The authors overall tone could best be described as And in order pick the right answers for these big-picture questions, you need to zoom out. There are a lot of details in SAT reading passages, of course, and not being clear on which are the more important ones can really throw you off. There will be a couple of wrong answers which focus too closely on specific details in the passage that just arenââ¬â¢t universal enough in scope. Itââ¬â¢s pretty easy to get tricked by answer choices like that unless you have a method. Sketching the big picture If you take one thing away from this post, it should be this: take notes about the big picture while you read. Besides keeping you focused, notes also help by giving you a zoomed out picture. Youââ¬â¢re only going to put the most important details and how they relate to each other in your notesââ¬âthinking about their function in the overall passageââ¬âso when you look at those, later, youââ¬â¢re not going to get distracted by the little details. Why zooming out is important Imagine I have a picture of a river. I took the picture while sitting on the bank, skipping stones and eating a sandwich. Whatââ¬â¢s in the picture? Water, trees, rocks, sky, moss, bugsâ⬠¦lots of stuff. Then I ask you what shape the river is. Is it curvy? Straight? While you might see a curve in the picture, youââ¬â¢d have a pretty hard time sketching its overall shape. Any one little section of an SAT reading passage is like that. Even if I gave you a whole bunch of pictures, itââ¬â¢d be pretty hard to decide, just like using the whole text without notes would be. You donââ¬â¢t want that; you want a satellite image to see the riverââ¬â¢s shape. Sure, it wonââ¬â¢t show the bugs, the rocks, or my sandwich, but itââ¬â¢ll show the big picture. And thatââ¬â¢s what the question was asking for. Making sure youââ¬â¢re ready for the main point Taking the right kind of margin-notes on your SAT is a skill that takes practice. You have to remember to ask yourself those questions for staying focused: ââ¬Å"Whatââ¬â¢s the main idea of this paragraph?â⬠ââ¬Å"How does this paragraph relate to the next one?â⬠Practice that, and these big-picture questions will be a cinch.
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