Digital SAT Information and Ideas: central ideas, evidence and inferences quiz quiz
12questions. Pick an answer and you'll see why right away.
What should you write in your own words before viewing the choices on a central-idea question?
A choice on a detail question states a true real-world fact that the passage never mentions. It is:
A claim is that a bird sings at dawn to defend its territory. Which is the strongest support?
When a stem says 'Which finding, if true, would most strongly support the claim?', you should:
On a quantitative-evidence question, what should you read first?
A line graph rises to a peak at hour 6, then falls. A text says the value 'peaked before declining.' Which is supported?
Which best describes a good inference on the Digital SAT?
Absolute words like 'always,' 'never,' 'all,' and 'only' in an inference choice usually signal:
For a 'Which choice most logically completes the text?' question, the final connective ('therefore,' 'however,' 'because'):
Why read the whole short passage rather than skim it?
When two choices both seem partly right, the most reliable way to decide is to:
A passage links a new dam to a yearly decline in a town's fishing catch and ends 'This suggests the dam ___.' Which completion is safest?