About 20–30% of SAT CR questions are “purpose” questions, such as “The overall purpose of this passage is to . . . .” or “The author refers to the ‘mountaintop’ in line 6 in order to emphasize. . . .” These questions ask why the author wrote the passage or used a particular word, phrase, or reference. You will always be prepared for these questions if you focus on overall purpose as you read.
SAT CR passages are drawn from a wide range of disciplines, but every passage has only one of three possible purposes:
To understand a passage, begin by asking, “Is this passage an analysis, an argument, or a narrative? Is its main purpose to inform to persuade, or to inform?” Knowing this makes answering many SAT questions easier.
Often, the introduction to the passage gives you clues about the purpose. Look for key words such as these:
Often, the first question after an SAT passage is a “central idea” question such as “With which of the following statements would the author most likely agree?” or “This passage is primarily concerned with. . . .” Knowing the central idea is critical to answering these questions. When you are given two “paired” passages, it is particularly important to know how their central ideas compare and contrast.
Although SAT passages contain lots of ideas, each has only one central idea. Find it. Every different type of prose has a different type of central idea.
Once you discover the purpose of the passage, find its central idea—the question, the thesis, or the conflict. Underline it in the passage or jot it down in the margin. To make sure that you really have the central idea, check that it is supported by every paragraph. Often, students mistakenly think that the first idea in the passage must be the central idea. Not necessarily.
For instance, an author may describe an opposing viewpoint before presenting his or her own, so his or her central idea doesn’t appear until the second or third paragraph.
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