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Strategy
When I am taking a reading test like this one I look over the questions
that go with each passage before I read it so I can decide which
questions to do first.
I do not,
however, read the question choices, because it takes too long and doesn't
seem to be very helpful.
I like to
know what kinds of question there are so I can do the easiest ones first
after I've read the passage.
For example,
I look for vocabulary questions, with words underlined in the passage,
or detail questions containing the words "The passage states that..."
Next, I
look for questions that ask for the main idea; I will do these after the
easier ones.
I then go
ahead and read the passage. Sometines when I see that there is a vocabulary
word underlined in the text, I glance over to the appropriate question
and try to answer it while (rather than after) I read the passage.
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After I have
read the passage and answered the detail and vocabulary questions, I then
do the more difficult "inference" questions, which begin with
phrases such as "You can conclude that..." or "The passage
suggests that... These questions take more thought.
Finally,
I answer the questions that ask the reader to choose the best the main
idea statement.
Often, doing
the questions like this helps me pick up information that may give me
a better idea of what the main point of the passage is. I am, after all,
re-reading parts of the text as I scan for details, etc.
If you use
this strategy, be sure to answer all the questions right after you read
the the passge, and be careful to put the answers with the correct choice
on your answer sheet. Good luck!
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