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yyy yyy yyy yyy yy yy yy yy SAT/ACT/ PSAT>> he ACT Reading Test is made up of 4 dif-ferent passages, each with 10 questions after it.. One of the best ways to ensure efficient use of tim

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SAT/ACT/

PSAT>>

he ACT Reading Test is made up of 4 dif-ferent passages, each with 10 questions after it Students are given 35 minutes to complete the entire section, which makes timing a crucial aspect of scoring well on this test One of the best ways to ensure efficient use of time on test day is to memorize

the directions for this section of the test Do not waste a

second even glancing at the directions on test day; jump

straight into the passages

Every ACT includes four different kinds of passages:

Prose Fiction, Social Science, Humanities, and Science

Prose Fiction passages are excerpts from novels or

sto-ries Humanities passages cover cultural topics, such as

art and literature, and can be written in the first person

Neither of these types of passages appears on the SAT,

and they each require a slightly different approach than

the straightforward Science and Social Science passages

The Questions

The ACT Reading Test gauges your ability to:

>Identify the main idea of a section or passage

>Identify details and facts

>Identify the author’s point of view and/or tone

>Draw inferences from given information

>Determine the meaning of words through context

>Make comparisons and analogies

>Identify cause-effect relationships

>Understand character development and

motivation (Prose Fiction only)

Unlike the SAT, the questions are not arranged in

order of difficulty If you find yourself up against a tough question at the very beginning and are taking too much time to answer, skip it If you have extra time at the end

of the section, you can come back

THE STRATEGY Test-prep gurus have suggested all sorts of complicated ways to approach the reading test, but a simple, common-sense approach works best

1Read the passage first Then, answer the questions.

The most popular advice for reading comprehension recommends reading the questions first It’s a bad idea You end up reading the questions twice, which wastes time It’s also confusing to digest an unfamiliar passage while simultaneously trying to hold 10 questions in your mind and look for their answers

2Mark the passage As you read, keep your pencil at

the ready to underline significant details and facts Doing so keeps your mind alert and active while you read,

so you retain more information Your marks will also act

as a map for you when you refer to the passage

3Keep moving The time constraints on the ACT

Reading Test are tight, so every second counts You will need to balance time spent reading the passage with time spent answering the questions But beware of reading too quickly—

you won’t retain enough information to answer the questions

T

Demonstrating Comprehension

The ACT

Reading Test

A CLOSE COUSIN TO SAT READING

COMPREHENSION, THE ACT READING

TEST MEASURES ALL THE SAME SKILLS

AS THE SAT, WITH A FEW VARIATIONS

LC SHOWS YOU HOW TO TACKLE THE

NEW TERRITORY

By Sarah Montante

GO ON TO THE NEXT PAGE

> THE QUESTIONS

> THE STRATEGY

Literary Cavalcade APRIL 2004 27

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Prose Fiction

The following sample is excerpted from Tillie Olsen’s short story “Tell Me a Riddle.”

For forty-seven years they had been married How deep back the stubborn, gnarled roots of the quarrel reached, no one could say—but only now, when tending to the needs of others no

longer shackled them together, the roots swelled up visible, split the earth between them, and

the tearing shook even to the children, long since grown.

Why now, why now? wailed Hannah

Lennie wrote to Clara: They’ve lived over so much together; what could possibly tear them apart?

Something tangible enough

Arthritic hands, and such work as he got, occasional Poverty all his life, and there was little breath left for running He could not, could not turn away from this desire: to have the troubling

of responsibility, the fretting with money, over and done with; to be free, to be carefree where

success was not measured by accumulation, and there was use for the vitality still in him.

There was a way They could sell the house, and with the money join his lodge’s Haven, cooperative for the aged Happy communal life, and was he not already an official; had he not

helped organize it, raised funds, served as a trustee?

But she—would not consider it.

“What do we need all this for?” he would ask loudly, for her hearing aid was turned down and the vacuum was shrilling “Five rooms” (pushing the sofa so she could get into the corner)

“furniture” (smoothing down the rug) “floors and surfaces to make work Tell me, why do we

need it?” And he was glad he could ask in a scream.

Over the dishes, coaxingly: “For once in your life, to be free, to have everything done for you, like a queen.”

“I never liked queens.”

“No dishes, no garbage, no towel to sop, no worry what to buy, what to eat.”

“And what else would I do with my empty hands? Better to eat at my own table when I want, and to cook and eat how I want.”

“In the cottages they buy what you ask, and cook it how you like You are the one who

always used to say: better mankind born without mouths and stomachs than always to worry for money to buy, to shop, to fix, to cook, to wash, to clean.”

“How cleverly you hid that you heard I said it then because eighteen hours a day I ran And you never scraped a carrot or knew a dish towel sops Now—for you and

me—who cares? A herring out of a jar is enough But when I want, and nobody to

bother.” And she turned off her ear button, so she would not have to hear.

ACT READING TEST PRACTICE

WE’VE SAID IT BEFORE AND WE’LL SAY IT AGAIN: PRACTICE MAKES

PERFECT TEST YOUR READING COMPREHENSION ON OUR SAMPLE

PASSAGE BELOW.

ACT >>

GO ON TO THE NEXT PAGE

Directions: Read the passage and then answer the questions, selecting the best answer

from among those offered You will have eight minutes to complete the exercise.

28 APRIL 2004 Literary Cavalcade

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Practice Questions

1 The opening paragraph suggests that

the couple’s marriage is characterized

primarily by:

A love

B animosity

C sadness

D poverty

2 How many children does the couple have?

A 1

B 4

C 3

D at least 3

3 The line, “Something tangible enough” serves

mainly as:

A a pause in the narrative

B foreshadowing

C a transition sentence

D a topic sentence

4 The passage suggests that the husband’s

desire to move to the Haven is at least

partially motivated by:

A his arthritis

B wanting to relieve his wife of housework

C fear of bills

D his love of fishing

5 The narrator’s point of view is that of:

A a detached observer

B the wife

C the husband

D a biased observer

6 It can be reasonably inferred from the

passage that the wife resents the husband

because:

A he didn’t earn enough money

B his tastes are too fancy

C he did not help with the work of raising

children

D he was unfaithful

7. The woman’s attitude toward her house could best be characterized as:

A affectionate

B stubborn

C proprietary

D cozy

8 The husband’s primary desire is:

A to be free from work and worry

B to play cards with his friends

C to claim his position as a trustee of the lodge

D to escape his wife and children

9 The woman in the passage turns off her

hearing aid because:

A she has made up her mind

B her husband is talking too loudly

C she doesn’t want to hear him argue anymore

D her husband has stopped talking

10 The passage implies that the outcome of this

disagreement between husband and wife will lead to:

A reconciliation

B counseling

C an intervention by their children

D a separation

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

A B C D

Note: The passage and questions are exactly like the ones that appear on the real ACT.

Practice will help you get used to the dry writing and the odd way questions are posed.

>>

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