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READING COMPREHENSION
Answer the Reading Comprehension questions last.
Tackle passages with familiar subjects before those with unfamiliar
ones. Just as it is common sense for you to tackle quick-to-answer
questions before you tackle time-consuming ones, it is also common sense
for you to tackle reading passages with familiar subjects before you
tackle reading passages with unfamiliar ones. There is nothing wrong
with skipping questions. Just remember to check the numbering on your
answer sheet.
First read the passage, then read the questions. Reading the questions
before you read the passage will not save you time. It will cost you
time. If you read the questions first, when you turn to the passage you
will have a number of question words and phrases swimming around in your
head. These phrases won’t focus you; they’ll distract you. You will be
so involved in trying to spot the places they occur in the passage that
you’ll be unable to concentrate on comprehending the passage as a whole.
Why increase your anxiety and decrease your capacity to think? If you
feel you cannot read the passage in its entirety, SKIM; try to get a
general sense of the selection. Use this as a gauge: never stop reading
or skimming until you find the main idea.
Learn to spot the major reading questions first. There are five major
categories of reading comprehension questions. These are: main idea,
noting details, drawing inferences, tone/type of passage, and context
clues.
When asked to find the main idea, be sure to check the opening and
summary sentence of each paragraph. The opening and closing sentences of
a paragraph are key sentences for you to read. They can serve as
guideposts for you, pointing to the author’s main idea. Note the impact
of words like, again, also, as well as, furthermore, moreover, and
significantly in the passage. These signal words may call your attention
to the main idea.
Familiarize yourself with the technical terms to describe a passage’s
organization.
When asked to choose an appropriate title, watch for titles that are
too specific or too broad. A paragraph is defined as a group of
sentences revolving around a central theme. An appropriate title for the
paragraph, therefore, must include this central theme that each of the
sentences in the paragraph is developing.
When asked about specific details in the passage, spot key words in
the question and scan the passage to find them. In developing the main
idea of a passage, writers will make statements to support their point.
To answer questions about such supporting details, you must find a word
or group of words in the passage which supports your choice of answer.
The words according to the passage and according to the author should
focus your attention on what the passage explicitly states. Do not be
misled into choosing an answer if you can not find it supported in the
text.
When asked to make inferences, base your answers on what the passage
implies, not on what it states directly. In Language Thought and Action,
S.I. Hayakawa defines an inference as “a statement about the unknown
made on the basis of the known”. Inference questions require you to use
your own judgment. You must not take anything directly stated by the
author as an inference. Instead you must look for clues in the passage
that you can use in coming up with your own conclusion. You should
choose as your answer a statement which is a logical development of the
information the author has provided.
When asked about an attitude, mood, or tone, look for words that
convey emotion, express values, or paint pictures.
When asked to give the meaning of an unfamiliar word, look for the
nearby context clues. |
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