Browse By Unit
Aly Moosa
Aly Moosa
In the SAT, you will have 4-5 sections on the test (depending on whether you choose to take the essay section or not)! The sections are:
The new SAT reading section tests your reading comprehension while racing against the clock, answering 65 questions in 52 minutes' time. In total, there are 4 passages and 1 paired set (2 passages), each containing around 500-750 words and 10-11 questions. The SAT reading section is scored out of 800 points. If you're feeling overwhelmed already, check out Lisa Wang's SAT Reading and Writing livestream to get started!
Throughout the exam, the passages will cover one or many of the following themes:
Themes are shown in these three passage types:
You can use these tips on any SAT reading passage:
These questions truly test the content on the exam. They focus on one or two pieces of evidence, phrases, words, or themes at a time. These questions ask about main ideas, attention to detail, and relationships throughout the passage.
For the next couple of sections, we will be using this passage.
The College Board vehemently said to read carefully. Here are the concrete descriptions: Reading Closely Descriptions
Question Type | CB Description | Student Terms |
Determining explicit meanings | The student will identify information and ideas explicitly stated in text. | You must find the verbatim answer in the text. |
Determining implicit meanings | The student will draw reasonable inferences and logical conclusions from text. | You must take the text as a whole to create inferences. |
Using analogical reasoning | The student will extrapolate in a reasonable way from the information and ideas in a text or apply information and ideas in a text to a new, analogous situation. | You must do what you did in "Determining implicit meanings" and apply it to a completely different situation. |
🤬 Explicit meaning questions truly test your attention to detail. They test skills such as searching for evidence and understanding the context of the question.
🤫 Implicit meaning questions test whether you understood the passage as a whole and can find evidence to create conclusions.
🧠 Analogical reasoning is more of a skill than a question type. You'll have to connect numerous pieces of evidence at one time. You'll not only use this skill in the two question types above but throughout the section.
Ask yourself these questions:
The SAT Reading section is notorious for these questions. You'll provide evidence for the "previous question," or you'll find evidence that best shows a claim or concept.
😭 Citing evidence questions tend to be tricky as two answer choices seem correct. Use your objective lens to only choose your answer based on what's in the text.
It depends on which of the two citing evidence questions:
Finding Evidence for the Previous Question
Look at the argument you created for the previous question
What pieces of evidence did you use to make your decision?
Are any of those an answer choice?
Is it the best option? Finding Evidence to Support a Claim
What are the key terms in the question?
Where in the text does it reference the terms in the question?
Narrow down the answer choices
Which best answers the question?
Why? Asking yourself these questions justifies your answers and decreases the likelihood for you to second guess yourself. It may seem time-consuming or tedious at first, but the more you go through these questions, the faster you'll be able to answer the question.
Remember that all the passages mention or embody these themes:
🙀 Theme and Idea questions, depending on the answer choices, vary in complexity.
Passages always show some form of discovery. To tackle these questions, you must look for shifts in the passage. These shifts may look like lessons learned or major events that affect the characters altogether. Ask yourself these questions:
For the next couple of sections, we will be using this passage:
📜 Summary questions test whether you were able to fully understand the key elements of the text and piece together the important details of the text.
Summary questions test whether or not you can only objectively look at the text. Here are some tips to tackle these questions:
The questions of the reading section, in essence, are built on cause-effect and compare-contrast relationships.
♥ Relationship questions test whether you're able to sequence events together and identify effects that shape the content.
Ask yourself these questions to narrow down your answer choices:
If it's cause and effect...
What was the direct effect of the event mentioned?
What evidence is present?
Is that evidence specific enough? If it's compare and contrast (paired set)...
What are the main ideas of each passage?
What are the similarities? What are the difference?
What do they agree and disagree on?
How does the concept in question function in both passages? These questions offer you a way to justify your answer.
The College Board tests your ability to understand parts of the text in context.
😊 In-context questions test if you're able to understand how phrases and words function in a sentence, paragraph, and the text as a whole.
Here are some tips to tackle these questions:
These questions test your ability to understand the author's choices and how they shape the text as a whole. These questions tend to focus on examining word choice, text structure, point of view, purpose, and arguments.
In this section, we'll look at what the questions look like and how to tackle them.
Everything the author does in the text is a choice. He/she/they chose to add a detail here or structure a sentence in a certain way on purpose.
🕧 Word-choice analysis questions tend to focus on the phrases and words within the text function or shape the tone of the paragraph.
Table of Tone Words
Tone | Word Definition |
Apologetic | sorry |
Appreciative | grateful, thankful |
Concerned | worried or interested |
Itical | finding fault |
Curious | wanting to find out more |
Defensive | defending |
Direct | straightforward, honest |
Disappointed | discouraged, unhappy |
Encouraging | optimistic |
Enthusiastic | excited, energeric |
Formal | respectful |
Frustrated | angry, dispair |
Hopeful | optimistic |
Humorous | funny |
Informal | not formal, relaxed |
Inspirational | encouraging, reassuring |
Ironic | different than expected |
Judgmental | critical, judging others |
Lighthearted | happy, carefree |
Mocking | scornful, ridiculing |
Negative | unhappy, pessimistic |
Neutral | neither good or bad |
Nostalgic | thinking or wishing from past |
Objective | without justice, discrimination, or opinion |
Optimistic | hopeful, cheerful |
Pessimistic | seeing the bad side |
Sarcastic | scornful, mocking, ridiculing |
Satirical | poking fun to show weakness or to teach |
Sentimental | thinking about feelings |
Sincere | honest, truthful, earnest |
Sympathetic | compassionate |
Urgent | insistent |
The College Board likes to test the how certain parts of the text function overall in the passage. Here are the descriptions for what entails:
Text Structure Descriptions
Name | Description | Student Terms |
Analyzing overall text structure | The student will describe the overall structure of a text. | What are the sequence of events in the passage? |
Analyzing part-whole relationships | The student will analyze the relationship between a particular part of a text (e.g., a sentence) and the whole text. | How does this particular part function overall in the passage? |
👉🏽 👈🏽 Overall text questions test your ability to see shifts in the passage while identifying key details.
🙆🏽 Part-whole questions focus on the significance in the passage.
Beginning to End: How does the passage start? How does it end?
Topic sentences: Read all the topic sentences as they can give you a hint of a shift that occurs.
Rudimentary Summary: In essence, a sequence of events is a summary of the passage.
Best answer: There is only one correct answer. The answer is 100% correct based on the passage and is the best answer to the question. For part-whole questions:
Context: You must read the paragraph before the section to understand its significance.
Themes: Remember the theme list from earlier? What theme is emerging the most throughout the passage? How do these lines play a role in that?
📷 Perspective questions focus on complex and inferential situations.
⚡ Purpose questions focus on value added by the text or some parts of it.
While reading, you must be able to construct the argument the author is making. The College Board tests you on your ability to understand, qualify, and add to an argument. Here are the descriptions:
Analyzing Argument Description
Type | Description | Student Terms |
Analyzing claims and counterclaims | The student will identify claims and counterclaims explicitly stated in text or determine implicit claims and counterclaims from text. | You must pick out the main claims and statements made throughout the passage. |
Assessing reasoning | The student will assess an author’s reasoning for soundness | Is the author's argument logical? |
Analyzing evidence | The student will assess how an author uses or fails to use evidence to support a claim or counterclaim. | You must determine whether the evidence supports the argument. |
💥 Claim questions focus on the value of a statement overall in the passage.
💀 Analyzing evidence questions focus on whether pieces of evidence support the argument in the passage.
These types of questions focus on simplifying information and providing the significance of the information.
Synthesizing information from numerous texts is a skill that the College Board tests through the paired set. Understanding how they relate to one another is crucial when answering related questions.
Quantitative information can come in the form of a table, chart, or graph. Also, questions can ask about quantitative information in the passage.
📈 Quantitative questions show whether you're able to connect the visual representations to the passage.
Questions 1-10 are based on the following passage.
This passage is adapted from Patricia Waldron, “Why Birds Fly in a V Formation.” ©2014 by American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Anyone watching the autumn sky knows that migrating birds fly in a V formation, but scientists have long debated why. A new study of ibises finds that these big-winged birds carefully position their wingtips and sync their flapping, presumably to catch the preceding bird’s updraft—and save energy during flight.
There are two reasons birds might fly in a V formation: It may make flight easier, or they’re simply following the leader. Squadrons of planes can save fuel by flying in a V formation, and many scientists suspect that migrating birds do the same. Models that treated flapping birds like fixed-wing airplanes estimate that they save energy by drafting off each other, but currents created by airplanes are far more stable than the oscillating eddies coming off of a bird. “Air gets pretty unpredictable behind a flapping wing,” says James Usherwood, a locomotor biomechanist at the Royal Veterinary College at the University of London in Hatfield, where the research took place.
The study, published in Nature, took advantage of an existing project to reintroduce endangered northern bald ibises (Geronticus eremita) to Europe. Scientists used a microlight plane to show hand-raised birds their ancestral migration route from Austria to Italy. A flock of 14 juveniles carried data loggers specially built by Usherwood and his lab. The device’s GPS determined each bird’s flight position to within 30 cm, and an accelerometer showed the timing of the wing flaps.
Just as aerodynamic estimates would predict, the birds positioned themselves to fly just behind and to the side of the bird in front, timing their wing beats to catch the uplifting eddies. When a bird flew directly behind another, the timing of the flapping reversed so that it could minimize the effects of the downdraft coming off the back of the bird’s body. “We didn’t think this was possible,” Usherwood says, considering that the feat requires careful flight and incredible awareness of one’s neighbors. “Perhaps these big V formation birds can be thought of quite like an airplane with wings that go up and down.”
The findings likely apply to other long-winged birds, such as pelicans, storks, and geese, Usherwood says. Smaller birds create more complex wakes that would make drafting too difficult. The researchers did not attempt to calculate the bird’s energy savings because the necessary physiological measurements would be too invasive for an endangered species. Previous studies estimate that birds can use 20 percent to 30 percent less energy while flying in a V.
“From a behavioral perspective it’s really a breakthrough,” says David Lentink, a mechanical engineer at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, who was not involved in the work. “Showing that birds care about syncing their wing beats is definitely an important insight that we didn’t have before.”
Scientists do not know how the birds find that aerodynamic sweet spot, but they suspect that the animals align themselves either by sight or by sensing air currents through their feathers. Alternatively, they may move around until they find the location with the least resistance. In future studies, the researchers will switch to more common birds, such as pigeons or geese. They plan to investigate how the animals decide who sets the course and the pace, and whether a mistake made by the leader can ripple through the rest of the flock to cause traffic jams.
“It’s a pretty impressive piece of work as it is, but it does suggest that there’s a lot more to learn,” says Ty Hedrick, a biologist at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who studies flight aerodynamics in birds and insects. However they do it, he says, “birds are awfully good hang-glider pilots.”
1**.) The main purpose of the passage is to**
A) describe how squadrons of planes can save fuel by flying in a V formation.
B) discuss the effects of downdrafts on birds and airplanes.
C) explain research conducted to study why some birds fly in a V formation.
D) illustrate how birds sense air currents through their feathers.
2.) The author includes the quotation “Air gets pretty unpredictable behind a flapping wing” (lines 17-18) to
A) explain that the current created by a bird differs from that of an airplane.
B) stress the amount of control exerted by birds flying in a V formation.
C) indicate that wind movement is continuously changing.
D) emphasize that the flapping of a bird’s wings is powerful.
3**.) What can reasonably be inferred about the reason Usherwood used northern bald ibises as the subjects of his study?**
A) The ibises were well acquainted with their migration route.
B) Usherwood knew the ibises were familiar with carrying data loggers during migration.
C) The ibises have a body design that is similar to that of a modern airplane.
D) The ibises were easily accessible for Usherwood and his team to track and observe.
4**.) Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the previous question?**
A) Lines 3-7 (“A new . . . flight”)
B) Lines 10-12 (“Squadrons... same”)
C) Lines 22-24 (“The study... Europe”)
D) Lines 29-31 (“The device’s... flaps”)
5**.) What is the most likely reason the author includes the 30 cm measurement in line 30?**
A) To demonstrate the accuracy with which the data loggers collected the data
B) To present recorded data about how far an ibis flies between successive wing flaps
C) To provide the wingspan length of a juvenile ibis
D) To show how far behind the microlight plane each ibis flew
6**.) What does the author imply about pelicans, storks, and geese flying in a V formation?**
A) They communicate with each other in the same way as do ibises.
B) They have the same migration routes as those of ibises.
C) They create a similar wake to that of ibises.
D) They expend more energy than do ibises.
7**.) Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the previous question?**
A) Lines 35-38 (“When... body”)
B) Lines 47-48 (“Smaller... difficult”)
C) Lines 52-54 (“Previous . . . a V”)
D) Lines 66-67 (“Alternatively... resistance”)
8**.) What is a main idea of the seventh paragraph (lines 62-73)?**
A) Different types of hierarchies exist in each flock of birds.
B) Mistakes can happen when long-winged birds create a V formation.
C) Future research will help scientists to better understand V formations.
D) Long-winged birds watch the lead bird closely to keep a V formation intact.
9**.) The author uses the phrase “aerodynamic sweet spot” in line 63 most likely to**
A) describe how the proper structural design of an airplane helps to save fuel.
B) show that flying can be an exhilarating experience.
C) describe the birds’ synchronized wing movement.
D) suggest that a certain position in a V formation has the least amount of wind resistance.
10.) As used in line 72, “ripple” most nearly means
A) fluctuate.
B) spread.
C) wave.
D) undulate.
And that's it! You have successfully acquired the skills to improve your SAT score and get an 800 on the reading section. Make sure to keep on practicing and using the strategies stated in this guide.
Need more resources? Check out our 5 best resources for PSAT/SAT English sections. Pressed on time? Learn how to cram to get an 800 on SAT humanities and watch the Night Before the SAT cram session. You got this 🥳.
<< Hide Menu
Aly Moosa
Aly Moosa
In the SAT, you will have 4-5 sections on the test (depending on whether you choose to take the essay section or not)! The sections are:
The new SAT reading section tests your reading comprehension while racing against the clock, answering 65 questions in 52 minutes' time. In total, there are 4 passages and 1 paired set (2 passages), each containing around 500-750 words and 10-11 questions. The SAT reading section is scored out of 800 points. If you're feeling overwhelmed already, check out Lisa Wang's SAT Reading and Writing livestream to get started!
Throughout the exam, the passages will cover one or many of the following themes:
Themes are shown in these three passage types:
You can use these tips on any SAT reading passage:
These questions truly test the content on the exam. They focus on one or two pieces of evidence, phrases, words, or themes at a time. These questions ask about main ideas, attention to detail, and relationships throughout the passage.
For the next couple of sections, we will be using this passage.
The College Board vehemently said to read carefully. Here are the concrete descriptions: Reading Closely Descriptions
Question Type | CB Description | Student Terms |
Determining explicit meanings | The student will identify information and ideas explicitly stated in text. | You must find the verbatim answer in the text. |
Determining implicit meanings | The student will draw reasonable inferences and logical conclusions from text. | You must take the text as a whole to create inferences. |
Using analogical reasoning | The student will extrapolate in a reasonable way from the information and ideas in a text or apply information and ideas in a text to a new, analogous situation. | You must do what you did in "Determining implicit meanings" and apply it to a completely different situation. |
🤬 Explicit meaning questions truly test your attention to detail. They test skills such as searching for evidence and understanding the context of the question.
🤫 Implicit meaning questions test whether you understood the passage as a whole and can find evidence to create conclusions.
🧠 Analogical reasoning is more of a skill than a question type. You'll have to connect numerous pieces of evidence at one time. You'll not only use this skill in the two question types above but throughout the section.
Ask yourself these questions:
The SAT Reading section is notorious for these questions. You'll provide evidence for the "previous question," or you'll find evidence that best shows a claim or concept.
😭 Citing evidence questions tend to be tricky as two answer choices seem correct. Use your objective lens to only choose your answer based on what's in the text.
It depends on which of the two citing evidence questions:
Finding Evidence for the Previous Question
Look at the argument you created for the previous question
What pieces of evidence did you use to make your decision?
Are any of those an answer choice?
Is it the best option? Finding Evidence to Support a Claim
What are the key terms in the question?
Where in the text does it reference the terms in the question?
Narrow down the answer choices
Which best answers the question?
Why? Asking yourself these questions justifies your answers and decreases the likelihood for you to second guess yourself. It may seem time-consuming or tedious at first, but the more you go through these questions, the faster you'll be able to answer the question.
Remember that all the passages mention or embody these themes:
🙀 Theme and Idea questions, depending on the answer choices, vary in complexity.
Passages always show some form of discovery. To tackle these questions, you must look for shifts in the passage. These shifts may look like lessons learned or major events that affect the characters altogether. Ask yourself these questions:
For the next couple of sections, we will be using this passage:
📜 Summary questions test whether you were able to fully understand the key elements of the text and piece together the important details of the text.
Summary questions test whether or not you can only objectively look at the text. Here are some tips to tackle these questions:
The questions of the reading section, in essence, are built on cause-effect and compare-contrast relationships.
♥ Relationship questions test whether you're able to sequence events together and identify effects that shape the content.
Ask yourself these questions to narrow down your answer choices:
If it's cause and effect...
What was the direct effect of the event mentioned?
What evidence is present?
Is that evidence specific enough? If it's compare and contrast (paired set)...
What are the main ideas of each passage?
What are the similarities? What are the difference?
What do they agree and disagree on?
How does the concept in question function in both passages? These questions offer you a way to justify your answer.
The College Board tests your ability to understand parts of the text in context.
😊 In-context questions test if you're able to understand how phrases and words function in a sentence, paragraph, and the text as a whole.
Here are some tips to tackle these questions:
These questions test your ability to understand the author's choices and how they shape the text as a whole. These questions tend to focus on examining word choice, text structure, point of view, purpose, and arguments.
In this section, we'll look at what the questions look like and how to tackle them.
Everything the author does in the text is a choice. He/she/they chose to add a detail here or structure a sentence in a certain way on purpose.
🕧 Word-choice analysis questions tend to focus on the phrases and words within the text function or shape the tone of the paragraph.
Table of Tone Words
Tone | Word Definition |
Apologetic | sorry |
Appreciative | grateful, thankful |
Concerned | worried or interested |
Itical | finding fault |
Curious | wanting to find out more |
Defensive | defending |
Direct | straightforward, honest |
Disappointed | discouraged, unhappy |
Encouraging | optimistic |
Enthusiastic | excited, energeric |
Formal | respectful |
Frustrated | angry, dispair |
Hopeful | optimistic |
Humorous | funny |
Informal | not formal, relaxed |
Inspirational | encouraging, reassuring |
Ironic | different than expected |
Judgmental | critical, judging others |
Lighthearted | happy, carefree |
Mocking | scornful, ridiculing |
Negative | unhappy, pessimistic |
Neutral | neither good or bad |
Nostalgic | thinking or wishing from past |
Objective | without justice, discrimination, or opinion |
Optimistic | hopeful, cheerful |
Pessimistic | seeing the bad side |
Sarcastic | scornful, mocking, ridiculing |
Satirical | poking fun to show weakness or to teach |
Sentimental | thinking about feelings |
Sincere | honest, truthful, earnest |
Sympathetic | compassionate |
Urgent | insistent |
The College Board likes to test the how certain parts of the text function overall in the passage. Here are the descriptions for what entails:
Text Structure Descriptions
Name | Description | Student Terms |
Analyzing overall text structure | The student will describe the overall structure of a text. | What are the sequence of events in the passage? |
Analyzing part-whole relationships | The student will analyze the relationship between a particular part of a text (e.g., a sentence) and the whole text. | How does this particular part function overall in the passage? |
👉🏽 👈🏽 Overall text questions test your ability to see shifts in the passage while identifying key details.
🙆🏽 Part-whole questions focus on the significance in the passage.
Beginning to End: How does the passage start? How does it end?
Topic sentences: Read all the topic sentences as they can give you a hint of a shift that occurs.
Rudimentary Summary: In essence, a sequence of events is a summary of the passage.
Best answer: There is only one correct answer. The answer is 100% correct based on the passage and is the best answer to the question. For part-whole questions:
Context: You must read the paragraph before the section to understand its significance.
Themes: Remember the theme list from earlier? What theme is emerging the most throughout the passage? How do these lines play a role in that?
📷 Perspective questions focus on complex and inferential situations.
⚡ Purpose questions focus on value added by the text or some parts of it.
While reading, you must be able to construct the argument the author is making. The College Board tests you on your ability to understand, qualify, and add to an argument. Here are the descriptions:
Analyzing Argument Description
Type | Description | Student Terms |
Analyzing claims and counterclaims | The student will identify claims and counterclaims explicitly stated in text or determine implicit claims and counterclaims from text. | You must pick out the main claims and statements made throughout the passage. |
Assessing reasoning | The student will assess an author’s reasoning for soundness | Is the author's argument logical? |
Analyzing evidence | The student will assess how an author uses or fails to use evidence to support a claim or counterclaim. | You must determine whether the evidence supports the argument. |
💥 Claim questions focus on the value of a statement overall in the passage.
💀 Analyzing evidence questions focus on whether pieces of evidence support the argument in the passage.
These types of questions focus on simplifying information and providing the significance of the information.
Synthesizing information from numerous texts is a skill that the College Board tests through the paired set. Understanding how they relate to one another is crucial when answering related questions.
Quantitative information can come in the form of a table, chart, or graph. Also, questions can ask about quantitative information in the passage.
📈 Quantitative questions show whether you're able to connect the visual representations to the passage.
Questions 1-10 are based on the following passage.
This passage is adapted from Patricia Waldron, “Why Birds Fly in a V Formation.” ©2014 by American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Anyone watching the autumn sky knows that migrating birds fly in a V formation, but scientists have long debated why. A new study of ibises finds that these big-winged birds carefully position their wingtips and sync their flapping, presumably to catch the preceding bird’s updraft—and save energy during flight.
There are two reasons birds might fly in a V formation: It may make flight easier, or they’re simply following the leader. Squadrons of planes can save fuel by flying in a V formation, and many scientists suspect that migrating birds do the same. Models that treated flapping birds like fixed-wing airplanes estimate that they save energy by drafting off each other, but currents created by airplanes are far more stable than the oscillating eddies coming off of a bird. “Air gets pretty unpredictable behind a flapping wing,” says James Usherwood, a locomotor biomechanist at the Royal Veterinary College at the University of London in Hatfield, where the research took place.
The study, published in Nature, took advantage of an existing project to reintroduce endangered northern bald ibises (Geronticus eremita) to Europe. Scientists used a microlight plane to show hand-raised birds their ancestral migration route from Austria to Italy. A flock of 14 juveniles carried data loggers specially built by Usherwood and his lab. The device’s GPS determined each bird’s flight position to within 30 cm, and an accelerometer showed the timing of the wing flaps.
Just as aerodynamic estimates would predict, the birds positioned themselves to fly just behind and to the side of the bird in front, timing their wing beats to catch the uplifting eddies. When a bird flew directly behind another, the timing of the flapping reversed so that it could minimize the effects of the downdraft coming off the back of the bird’s body. “We didn’t think this was possible,” Usherwood says, considering that the feat requires careful flight and incredible awareness of one’s neighbors. “Perhaps these big V formation birds can be thought of quite like an airplane with wings that go up and down.”
The findings likely apply to other long-winged birds, such as pelicans, storks, and geese, Usherwood says. Smaller birds create more complex wakes that would make drafting too difficult. The researchers did not attempt to calculate the bird’s energy savings because the necessary physiological measurements would be too invasive for an endangered species. Previous studies estimate that birds can use 20 percent to 30 percent less energy while flying in a V.
“From a behavioral perspective it’s really a breakthrough,” says David Lentink, a mechanical engineer at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, who was not involved in the work. “Showing that birds care about syncing their wing beats is definitely an important insight that we didn’t have before.”
Scientists do not know how the birds find that aerodynamic sweet spot, but they suspect that the animals align themselves either by sight or by sensing air currents through their feathers. Alternatively, they may move around until they find the location with the least resistance. In future studies, the researchers will switch to more common birds, such as pigeons or geese. They plan to investigate how the animals decide who sets the course and the pace, and whether a mistake made by the leader can ripple through the rest of the flock to cause traffic jams.
“It’s a pretty impressive piece of work as it is, but it does suggest that there’s a lot more to learn,” says Ty Hedrick, a biologist at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who studies flight aerodynamics in birds and insects. However they do it, he says, “birds are awfully good hang-glider pilots.”
1**.) The main purpose of the passage is to**
A) describe how squadrons of planes can save fuel by flying in a V formation.
B) discuss the effects of downdrafts on birds and airplanes.
C) explain research conducted to study why some birds fly in a V formation.
D) illustrate how birds sense air currents through their feathers.
2.) The author includes the quotation “Air gets pretty unpredictable behind a flapping wing” (lines 17-18) to
A) explain that the current created by a bird differs from that of an airplane.
B) stress the amount of control exerted by birds flying in a V formation.
C) indicate that wind movement is continuously changing.
D) emphasize that the flapping of a bird’s wings is powerful.
3**.) What can reasonably be inferred about the reason Usherwood used northern bald ibises as the subjects of his study?**
A) The ibises were well acquainted with their migration route.
B) Usherwood knew the ibises were familiar with carrying data loggers during migration.
C) The ibises have a body design that is similar to that of a modern airplane.
D) The ibises were easily accessible for Usherwood and his team to track and observe.
4**.) Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the previous question?**
A) Lines 3-7 (“A new . . . flight”)
B) Lines 10-12 (“Squadrons... same”)
C) Lines 22-24 (“The study... Europe”)
D) Lines 29-31 (“The device’s... flaps”)
5**.) What is the most likely reason the author includes the 30 cm measurement in line 30?**
A) To demonstrate the accuracy with which the data loggers collected the data
B) To present recorded data about how far an ibis flies between successive wing flaps
C) To provide the wingspan length of a juvenile ibis
D) To show how far behind the microlight plane each ibis flew
6**.) What does the author imply about pelicans, storks, and geese flying in a V formation?**
A) They communicate with each other in the same way as do ibises.
B) They have the same migration routes as those of ibises.
C) They create a similar wake to that of ibises.
D) They expend more energy than do ibises.
7**.) Which choice provides the best evidence for the answer to the previous question?**
A) Lines 35-38 (“When... body”)
B) Lines 47-48 (“Smaller... difficult”)
C) Lines 52-54 (“Previous . . . a V”)
D) Lines 66-67 (“Alternatively... resistance”)
8**.) What is a main idea of the seventh paragraph (lines 62-73)?**
A) Different types of hierarchies exist in each flock of birds.
B) Mistakes can happen when long-winged birds create a V formation.
C) Future research will help scientists to better understand V formations.
D) Long-winged birds watch the lead bird closely to keep a V formation intact.
9**.) The author uses the phrase “aerodynamic sweet spot” in line 63 most likely to**
A) describe how the proper structural design of an airplane helps to save fuel.
B) show that flying can be an exhilarating experience.
C) describe the birds’ synchronized wing movement.
D) suggest that a certain position in a V formation has the least amount of wind resistance.
10.) As used in line 72, “ripple” most nearly means
A) fluctuate.
B) spread.
C) wave.
D) undulate.
And that's it! You have successfully acquired the skills to improve your SAT score and get an 800 on the reading section. Make sure to keep on practicing and using the strategies stated in this guide.
Need more resources? Check out our 5 best resources for PSAT/SAT English sections. Pressed on time? Learn how to cram to get an 800 on SAT humanities and watch the Night Before the SAT cram session. You got this 🥳.
© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.