{"id":6052,"date":"2016-03-16t10:06:40","date_gmt":"2016-03-16t17:06:40","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/?p=6052"},"modified":"2016-11-13t07:30:02","modified_gmt":"2016-11-13t15:30:02","slug":"sat-multiple-choice-strategies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/sat\/sat-multiple-choice-strategies\/","title":{"rendered":"sat multiple choice strategies"},"content":{"rendered":"
sat multiple choice questions have a number of predictable characteristics and are structured in a way that\u2019s unique to the exam. by understanding how sat multiple choice questions work, you can develop good effective approaches for answering them. the trick with sat multiple choice questions is knowing where the answers come from.<\/p>\n
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very often throughout the sat, the answers will come from the information given in a reading passage, question prompt, graph, chart, or other visuals. these kinds of \u201cstated information\u201d questions can appear in any section of the sat.<\/p>\n
in sat reading<\/a>, a question may ask you to correctly identify information this is directly stated or clearly implied by a reading, and you may also be asked to interpret a chart. similarly, the sat writing and language<\/a> will sometimes ask you to correctly interpret a chart so that you can incorporate information from the chart into a reading passage. the writing\/language section also sometimes asks you to select and add sentences to a paragraph based on how closely these sentences match to the information already given in the passage. finally, in sat math, you\u2019ll often get questions that focus primarily in interpreting the information in a story problem, chart, or geometric figure, rather than actually making a complex calculation.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n the sat is a very vocabulary-oriented exam and vocabulary is an important part throughout this test\u2019s three multiple choice sections. you\u2019ll be expected to directly identify the meanings of vocabulary words in context in sat reading multiple choice. questions in sat writing and language may ask you to select a word that matches not only the appropriate meaning of a passage, but also the appropriate tone. this means you\u2019ll need to know both the definitions of vocabulary words and the words\u2019 connotations<\/em>, the suggested tone and attitude behind a word\u2019s literal dictionary meaning.<\/p>\nanswers based on vocabulary<\/h2>\n