SAT Reading section techniques, strategies & approaches: Difference between revisions

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== Preview strategy ==
== Preview strategy ==
=== Purpose and theory of preview strategy ===
''' Purpose'''
* The Preview strategy is designed to help students:
# to know as much about the passage as possible in advance of reading it;
# to identify what is expected of the student to know about the passage
'''Background'''
* all learning of new knowledge is built upon application of prior knowledge
** therefore the more we know about something new to us, the better we will comprehend it
*** ex., we learn about and see more in a movie that we watch multiple times than we did the first time we say it
**** watching it again, we already know what will happen, so we can focus on details and plot intricacies, as opposed to trying to figure it out
** see [[Prior Knowledge|Prior Knowledge}}
* similarly, when taking a test, it is helpful to know what we are expected to know about it in advance
** by previewing questions, we can
** furthermore, all questions have information in them
*** ex. "Why is the sky blue" tells us that "the sky is blue"

Revision as of 18:23, 15 April 2021

SAT Reading section

Overview[edit | edit source]

  • SAT Reading Section Test Directions:
    • Students are to answer questions based upon:
      • what is stated" in the text or graphs (explicit meanings, textual and direct comprehension)
      • what is "implied" in the text or graphs (implicit meanings, inference, deduction, identification of author purpose and techniques)
  • SAT Reading Test Structure
    • Students have 65 minutes to answer 52 questions
    • Reading test has five readings with 10 or 11 questions each
      • = average 13:00 min per reading passage
      • note: two readings contain 11 questions so may take longer

Difficulty level[edit | edit source]

  • difficulty level is based on the passage and not the questions
    • there can be difficult questions on easy passages, but the bulk of "hard" questions will coincide with difficult passages

Strategies & Techniques[edit | edit source]

  • The test "Directions" instruct students, "After reading each passage or pair, choose the best answer to each question"
  • Other approaches include:
    • read carefully and annotate
      • might include summarizing each paragraph
    • previewing questions, then reading and/or skimming
    • "cherry picking" questions and finding them in the text by skimming

Preview strategy[edit | edit source]

Purpose and theory of preview strategy[edit | edit source]

Purpose

  • The Preview strategy is designed to help students:
  1. to know as much about the passage as possible in advance of reading it;
  2. to identify what is expected of the student to know about the passage

Background

  • all learning of new knowledge is built upon application of prior knowledge
    • therefore the more we know about something new to us, the better we will comprehend it
      • ex., we learn about and see more in a movie that we watch multiple times than we did the first time we say it
        • watching it again, we already know what will happen, so we can focus on details and plot intricacies, as opposed to trying to figure it out
    • see [[Prior Knowledge|Prior Knowledge}}
  • similarly, when taking a test, it is helpful to know what we are expected to know about it in advance
    • by previewing questions, we can
    • furthermore, all questions have information in them
      • ex. "Why is the sky blue" tells us that "the sky is blue"