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SAT Workbook 2011-2012 For AVID Students © Study Smart Tutors 2011 0 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Table of Contents Section I-SAT Overview Chapter I: SAT Introduction 1 Section II-SAT Writing Chapter II: Grammar 1 13 Chapter III: Grammar 2 37 Chapter IV: The Essay 51 Section III-SAT Critical Reading Chapter V: Sentence Completions 65 Chapter VI: Long Passages 84 Chapter VII: Short Passages and Fiction 104 Section IV-SAT Mathematics Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals 109 Chapter IX-Avoiding Algebra 134 Chapter X-Geometry and Grid-Ins 149 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 1 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Mini Lesson #1-Setting Goals SAT Course Goal Sheet Colleges that I want to apply to: 1. ____________________ Average 2009 Freshman SAT Score: ____________________ Math________________Reading___________________Writing___________________ 2. ____________________ Average 2009 Freshman SAT Score: ____________________ Math________________Reading___________________Writing___________________ 3. ____________________ Average 2009 Freshman SAT Score: ___________________ Math________________Reading___________________Writing___________________ 4. ____________________ Average 2009 Freshman SAT Score: ____________________ Math________________Reading___________________Writing___________________ 5. ____________________ Average 2009 Freshman SAT Score: ___________________ Math________________Reading___________________Writing___________________ Math Raw Score Target:________ Reading Raw Score Target:________ Writing Raw Score Target:________ Why are you preparing for the SAT? ______________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ Goals for SAT Prep 1._____________________________________________________________________________ 2._____________________________________________________________________________ 3. ____________________________________________________________________________ © Study Smart Tutors 2011 2 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Scaled vs. Raw The following table outlines how the SAT converts from “raw scores” in each section to scaled scores (out of 800). Take note of the scaled scores in each section that you need to receive to achieve their goals, and then work backwards to figure out the “Raw Score” equivalents. Circle the approximate Raw Score that you will be striving to achieve in each section. Raw Score 67 65 60 55 54 50 49 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 Critical Reading (67 Questions) 800 740-800 660-760 630-710 620-700 600-660 590-650 560-620 530-590 500-560 470-530 440-500 410-470 380-440 340-400 270-370 200-290 200-210 Math (54 Questions) 800 690-770 680-740 630-690 580-660 540-620 510-570 470-530 430-490 400-460 340-420 280-380 210-310 200-210 Writing (49 questions + essay) 780-800 700-800 640-740 590-690 540-640 490-590 450-550 400-500 350-450 300-400 240-340 200-230 Definition of Raw Scores: The SAT is not scored in the same way as most tests. For every question you answer correctly you will receive 1 raw point. For each question that you answer incorrectly, you will lose ¼ of a raw point. Every question that you leave blank will not count towards your score. To compute your raw scores, add the total number of correct answers and subtract a ¼ point for every incorrect answer. Example: If my target math score is around 600, then my raw score goal is somewhere between 45 and 50. To get that raw score, I would need to answer about 48 correct and miss 6, assuming that I leave no questions blanks. (48-(.25(6)) = 46.5. However, depending on the number of questions that I leave blank, different combinations of correct and incorrect answers can yield the same raw score. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 3 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Mini SAT Lesson #2-SAT Basics SAT Introduction: Before we get into any specifics on how to prepare for the SAT, it‘s important to understand exactly what the SAT is, what material will be tested and so on. Take a few minutes and try to digest these facts about the SAT, because some of them may be surprising. What does the SAT measure? The SAT features many types of questions including math, writing and vocabulary. However, you could be the best writer in the world or have received A+‘s on all of your high school math tests and not do well on the SAT. The SAT claims to measure your reasoning ability in these subject areas, but really the SAT simply measures your knowledge of the SAT itself. Sound silly? It is! What’s on the SAT? The SAT will be divided into 10 sections and will take a total of 3 hours and 45 minutes. Only 9 of these 10 sections will be counted to your score - one section will be used as an experimental section and will be used to collect data for future tests. The 25-minute essay question will always come first and the 10-minute writing section always comes last. The other seven sections and the experimental section can come in any order. Sections Writing Math Critical Reading Writing Math Time 25 minutes 25 minutes 25 minutes 25 minutes 25 minutes Experimental Critical Reading Math Critical Reading Writing 25 minutes 25 minutes 20 minutes 20 minutes 10 minutes © Study Smart Tutors 2011 Number of Questions 1 essay 20 multiple choice 24 multiple choice 35 multiple choice 8 multiple choice/10 grid in ??? 24 multiple choice 16 multiple choice 19 multiple choice 14 multiple choice 4 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Who writes the SAT? You may think that a bunch of college presidents get together each year to write the SAT. Just because they are the ones who use the test doesn‘t mean that they write it! The SAT is written by the Educational Testing Service, (ETS) a company that also writes many other standardized tests. Why did the SAT change? In 2005, ETS added an essay, took away analogies and made the exam almost an hour longer than before, why? The University of California became increasingly concerned that the SAT did not provide an accurate prediction of a student‘s success in college. The UC Regents even threatened to remove the SAT from their admission requirements. Because the SAT is most popular on the west coast where students apply to the UC system, ETS was forced to accommodate the UC Regents and change the test. Does this mean that the test is now a perfect predictor of college success? Of course not! How is the SAT scored? Each subject area of the test, math, reading and writing, are scored on a scale between 200 and 800. The three sub-scores are then added together for a total score of between 600 and 2400. The SAT is graded on a curve and each section is scaled so that the average score is approximately 500. When is the test offered? The 2011 test dates and registration deadlines can be found by visiting the College Board‘s website, http://www.collegeboard.com/student/testing/sat/calenfees.html Make sure to check the schedule so that you do not have to pay an extra fee for late registration. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 5 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Test-Taking Tips How to think about the SAT: Here‘s the big secret to learn for standardized tests. They are standardized! This means that they are basically the same each year and that they always test certain concepts in the same way. If you can learn and begin to understand the way that ETS expects you to think, you can begin to outsmart them and spot the traps that will be laid for you. How is the SAT scored? The SAT is not scored in the same way as most tests. For every question you answer correctly you will receive 1 raw point. For each question that you answer incorrectly, you will lose ¼ of a raw point. Every question that you leave blank will not count towards your score. Scaled vs. Raw The following table outlines how the SAT converts from ―raw scores‖ in each section to scaled scores (out of 800). Take note of the scaled scores in each section that you need to receive to achieve your goals, then work backwards to figure out how many questions you need to get correct in order to achieve your goal! Raw Score Critical Reading (67 Questions) 67 65 60 55 54 50 49 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 800 740-800 660-760 630-710 620-700 600-660 590-650 560-620 530-590 500-560 470-530 440-500 410-470 380-440 340-400 270-370 200-290 200-210 Math (54 Questions) Writing (49 questions + essay) 800 690-770 680-740 630-690 580-660 540-620 510-570 470-530 430-490 400-460 340-420 280-380 210-310 200-210 78-80 70-80 64-74 59-69 54-64 49-59 45-55 40-50 35-45 30-40 24-34 20-23 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 6 Chapter I: SAT Introduction The Test Booklet: Your answer sheet will be the only thing that will be graded. Make sure to mark up your test booklet. Physically cross out wrong answers, draw diagrams, and don‘t be afraid to show your work. On the reading sections, underline key parts of the passages and make notes in the margins as you go. Process of Elimination: Every multiple choice question on the SAT has four wrong answers and only one correct answer. By looking for the wrong answers instead of the correct ones, you will often be left with just a few answer choices from which you can make an educated guess. The Guessing Penalty: To compute your raw score on each section, the SAT takes the number of questions that you get right and subtracts a fourth of a point for each question that you get wrong. This penalty exists to supposedly prevent blind guessing. Let‘s think a little bit more about how this penalty actually works. Think about a new way of playing blackjack. What if every time you win a hand that you win $1 and that every time you lose a hand, you lose a quarter. If you assume that you have equal chances of winning and losing each hand, would this be a game that you would want to play? This essentially means that if you can eliminate one answer choice that you know is incorrect, it is always in your best interest to guess. Try to use process of elimination to solve the following question. Don‘t worry, there won‘t be any questions like this on the actual SAT. What is the capital of North Dakota? (A) Billings (B) Dallas (C) Bismarck (D) Fargo (E) Boston Which answers can you eliminate? Probably (B) and (E). If you have no idea from there, should you guess or leave it blank? © Study Smart Tutors 2011 7 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Order of Difficulty: ETS orders most sections from easy to difficult. Why do they do this? ETS orders the sections this way partially to give you a false sense of security so that when they start throwing traps at you, you will already be lulled to sleep. Also, ETS puts hard questions at the end in hopes that you will run out of time or feel pressured by the time and make careless errors. Further, they hope that you will rush through the easy questions to get to the hard ones. Which Sections have a specific order of difficulty? Question types with order of difficulty: 1. Sentence completions 2. All math questions 3. Error IDs 4. Improving sentences Question types with NO order of difficulty: 1. Essay 2. Reading comprehension questions 3. Improving paragraphs Be quick but don’t hurry: Famous UCLA basketball coach John Wooden told this to his players on the basketball court, but it applies to the SAT as well. The SAT isn‘t scored like a typical test where the hard questions are worth more points than the easy ones. On the SAT, every question is worth the same amount. How does this help you? Since all the questions are worth the same amount, don‘t rush through the easy and medium questions to get to the hard ones. Concentrate on the easy and medium questions so that you won‘t lose points on questions that you know the answer to. Most test-takers hurt their scores by trying to answer every question. The only people who should make sure to try to answer every question are those looking to score over 700 in each section. Since this is rare, focus your attention on easy and medium questions and don‘t worry too much about the hard ones. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 8 Chapter I: SAT Introduction Mini SAT Lesson #3-John Q. Public John Q. Public What number question is this? What type of student does the SAT want to answer this question correctly? Where are the trap answers? Why are the answers that John will likely pick be wrong? John Q. Public Think about the type of student that ETS, the test writers, want you to be. In this guide, we will refer to the average student as John Q. Public. John is the average student in both test scores and high school grades. He surely isn’t brilliant, but he isn’t completely dumb either. John is the type of student who will fall for all of ETS’s traps. Take a look at the following question. The goal for now is not to solve this question correctly but to look for the trap answers. Ex: 19. Cindy walked to work at an average speed of 6 miles an hour and biked back along the same route at 10 miles per hour. If her total traveling time was 2 hours, how many miles were in the round trip? (A) 6 (B) 6.25 (C) 7.5 (D) 8 (E) 10 Remember, John can only do very simple math and he does not understand difficult math concepts. He trusts his hunch and chooses the answer that jumps out at him. Are these types of answers going to be correct on difficult questions? John Q. Public Summary: On easy questions, John trusts his hunches, and he gets those problems right. On medium questions, John trusts his hunches, and they are sometimes right and sometimes wrong. On difficult questions, John trusts his hunches and they are never correct! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 9 Chapter I: SAT Introduction SAT Intro Summary Next Steps Key Intro Section Notes: My goals for SAT prep _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What‘s on the SAT? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ The Guessing Penalty _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ Order of Difficulty _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ John Q Public: _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 10 Chapter I: SAT Introduction © Study Smart Tutors 2011 11 SAT Writing © Study Smart Tutors 2011 12 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Writing Lesson #1-Intro to SAT grammar Introduction to SAT Writing The SAT Writing Section contains three basic sections: The Essay Long grammar section (35 questions) Short grammar section (14 questions) There will be one essay question at the beginning of the SAT and two other grammar sections distributed throughout the test. Note: there may be one additional grammar section which will be the experimental section and not count in your score. However, you will not know what section this is. SAT Grammar: There will be two grammar sections on the SAT to test your knowledge of grammar, style, and rules. One will be short and one will be long. Don‘t worry, although there are thousands of grammar rules, you will only be tested on the main few, most of which you already know. What is tested in the Grammar Section? 1. Punctuation 2. Sentence Structure 3. Nouns 4. Verbs 5. Pronouns 6. Prepositions 7. Other Stuff To Guess or not to Guess? If you can eliminate ONE answer, it pays to guess! You don‘t have to answer every question to get a good score! Quick facts: 1. Within each grammar section, generally the problems have an order of difficulty. They start easy and end hard! 2. Remember, they are all worth the same amount so make sure you get the easy questions correct! 3. Improving Paragraphs sections have NO order of difficulty. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 13 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Grammar Traps Many students use the ―sounds good method‖ to solve SAT Grammar sections. ETS knows this and will try to trick you! They will make things that sound wrong correct and make things that sound fine to you and me incorrect. Because we often Do not speak using proper grammar, these are easy traps to fall for. Thinking about tricks: ETS is trying to fool you… Easy questions usually have simple answers - trust your hunches Double-check hunches on medium questions POE (Process of Elimination): Remember, every question will have four WRONG answers and only one CORRECT answer! Use Order of Difficulty to eliminate ―trap‖ answers Don‘t Forget: Easy questions = Easy answers Hard Questions = Hard Answers © Study Smart Tutors 2011 14 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Error ID’s Here is an error ID question that does not A B C contain an error. No error D E Error ID‘s will give you a sentence that will have four underlined words or phrases with the letters A-D underneath. At the end of each sentence, a fifth choice (E) No error, will be given. Quick Error ID Facts: There is never more than one error in a sentence. You should always be able to eliminate at least one answer choice as being correct. Therefore, never leave any of these blank. The non-underlined portion of the sentence is always correct. Don‘t be afraid to pick choice (E). 20% of error ID‘s will be ―no error.‖ Error ID questions can usually be answered very quickly. Do these first. How to Approach These Questions: How to approach these questions: 1. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ 2. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ 3. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 15 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Improving Sentences: Improving sentence questions ask you not only to spot the error, but also to correct the sentence and choose between multiple choices that will be grammatically correct. Improving sentence questions will always have an underlined portion that will be repeated without change in choice (A). When you read the underlined portion, if any part looks or feels incorrect, eliminate choice (A) immediately. Remember that about one in every five questions will be correct as written, so don‘t fear choice (A). Things to Remember: Improving Sentence Questions test the same grammatical categories as error ID‘s The non-underlined portion of the sentence will always be correct and can serve as a guide There can be MORE THAN ONE error per sentence Watch out for answer choices that change the meaning of the sentence Multiple answer choices can be grammatically correct, so choose the ―best‖ answer If choosing between two correct ways to revise the sentence, remember that SHORTER IS BETTER How to approach these questions: 1. ______________________________________________________________________ 2. ______________________________________________________________________ 3. ______________________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 16 Chapter II: Grammar 1 What if you don’t spot the error right away or if you don’t know is being tested? Unlike Error ID questions where you actually have to recognize what grammatical error is being tested, improving sentences questions tell you exactly what concept they test! Use the answer choices as clues! Sometimes, you will not spot the error or errors immediately, or you won‘t be sure exactly what error they might be testing. If this happens, do not panic, because this happens to everyone. How do the answer choices tell me what is being tested? Look down the list of answer choices from (A) to (E) and see where the differences lie. For example, if the verb tense is different in three of the answers, then that‘s probably what they are testing. (A)…has…. (B)….are… (C)…has had… (D)…is having… (E)…have… Treat these like your roadmap! If you look at the sentence and then look at these answer choices, you can probably guess that they are testing verb tense and subject verb agreement. To find the correct form of the verb, go back to the sentence and look for the subject to see what verb is correct. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 17 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Using the answers as clues drill: Remember, if you don‘t know what grammar issue the question is testing, simply look down the answers to see where the choices differ. On the following sentences, use the answer choice differences to ascertain what error(s) are being tested on each question and what part of the underlined portion you will need to correct to eliminate answer choices that repeat the errors. 1. (A) finishing (B) finished (C) has finished (D) having finished (E) will finish 3. (A) Joe, because he (B) Joe, therefore he (C) Joe, and he (D) Joe; however he (E) Joe; he What error(s) are being tested? What error(s) are being tested? 2. (A) meeting as it (B) meeting as they (C) meeting, it (D) meeting will (E) meeting, even though 4. (A) night, it was moving (B) night by moving (C) night, and it moves (D) night, for it moves (E) night because of moving What error(s) are being tested? What error(s) are being tested? © Study Smart Tutors 2011 18 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Best Grammar Tip: Cut out the Fat! Error ID sentences will often contain unnecessary words or phrases that are meant to confuse and distract you and cause you to miss the error. As you read the sentence, cross out any ―fatty‖ or unneeded phrases. These include prepositional phrases, comma phrases, appositive phrases and anything between two commas. This will help prevent you from making careless errors, and will allow you to see the important parts of the sentence more clearly. For instance, a prepositional phrase is anything that goes in the phrase: The bird flew the cloud. For instance: over, under, across, through, before, of, after, etc… A comma phrase: Dr. Phil, an English scholar and author of many books, went for a run with his new puppy. The entire phrase between the commas should be crossed out: Dr. Phil, an English scholar and author of many books, went for a run with his new puppy. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 19 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #2: Punctuation Punctuation: The SAT will test you in numerous ways when it comes to punctuation. Obviously, there are thousands of punctuation rules, but we‘ll only discuss a few of them here. Punctuation on the SAT 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Commas Semicolons Apostrophes Periods Colons Which of these do you think is the most important for the purposes of the SAT? The Period Periods should be used only at the end of complete sentences. Be careful that there is an independent clause used before the period The Comma Commas are often stylistic, but we will talk about how the SAT tests the use of commas in the next section. The Semicolon A semicolon is used to link two complete sentences without a conjunction such as and or but. You can also use a period and start a new sentence instead of using a semicolon, but when your sentences are closely related or continue the same thought, it helps the reader to have a semicolon. Example: I‘m going to the grocery store; I need to buy food for the party. You should also use a semicolon when you link two complete sentences with a conjunctive adverb such as however, therefore, or nevertheless. Notice that the semicolon comes before the conjunctive adverb, and a comma follows the conjunctive adverb. Example: I wanted to go play golf today; however, I have to go to school. Semicolons can also be used in a list where commas are already present. Example: My road trip will take me to the following destinations: Istanbul, Turkey; Rome, Italy; Paris, France; and Berlin, Germany. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 20 Chapter II: Grammar 1 The Colon There are two main uses for the colon in everyday writing. Both require an independent clause, also known as a complete sentence, before the colon. The first use is when introducing a list, and the second is when introducing an explanation or example. Example: After four days of deliberation, the jury made its decision: the defendant was guilty. Incorrect example: My favorite places to eat are: Burger Pit, Pizza Palace, and my mom’s house. This example is wrong because the colon was not preceded by a complete sentence. In this case, no punctuation is needed. Just write the list. Colons can also be used to separate a book title from its subtitle (Baseball: A Useful Guide), as part of a business letter salutation (To Whom It May Concern:), and of course between the hour and minute in time notation (1:40 a.m.) The Apostrophe Apostrophes are used to signify possession or contraction. Use the apostrophe with contractions. The apostrophe is always placed at the spot where the letter(s) has been removed. Example: Don‘t, let‘s, wouldn‘t…etc Use the apostrophe to signify possession. The apostrophe is placed at the end of the subject‘s name and then an s is added. Example: Jeff‘s hat is very ugly. Sarah‘s paper is quite interesting. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 21 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Sentence Structure: Sentence structure questions test your knowledge of how sentences and ideas should be joined, separated, or put together. These errors will typically be tested through clauses. Clauses There are two types of clauses that will be tested on the Grammar Section of the SAT: Independent Clauses (main) - Can stand on their own as sentences, every sentence must have at least one independent clause Dependent Clauses (Subordinate) – Cannot stand alone, needs to be joined to an independent clause Independent Clause will be tested in two ways: 1. The run-on sentence The run-on is usually pretty easy to spot because it will be immediately clear that the sentence is long and confusing. The run-on sentence occurs when independent clauses are joined without any punctuation. Tim wanted to go to the mall he wanted to see a movie. 2. The Comma Splice The comma splice error is incredibly common and also often difficult for students to spot because it ―sounds‖ fine. EX: Tim wanted to go to the mall, he wanted to see a movie. This is NOT CORRECT. Independent clauses cannot be separated by using a comma. The corrections: Tim wanted to go to the mall, and he wanted to see a movie or Tim wanted to go to the mall; he wanted to see a movie. Independent clauses must be joined by a semicolon or a comma with a conjunction. 1. Pollack‘s most intriguing impressionist works have been produced at his garden in Madrid, he moved there from his native France in the 1890s. (A) Madrid, he moved there (B) Madrid; he moved there (C) Madrid, but he moved there (D) Madrid and he moved there (E) Madrid and he moved their © Study Smart Tutors 2011 22 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Subordinate (Dependent) Clauses: Subordinate clauses cannot stand on their own because they do not contain both a subject and verb. Every sentence must have an independent clause, but only some sentences will have dependent clauses. Subordinate Clauses will be tested in one way: The Fragment: Ex: When the customers entered the store, much to their confusion, and following the sale. Fragment errors are usually easy to spot because they usually sound wrong and confusing. This is a fragment because three subordinate clauses are joined together without an independent clause. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 23 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Lesson #3-Noun Agreement Nouns: When it comes to nouns, the only thing that you really have to worry about is noun agreement. Nouns must agree with other nouns and pronouns must agree with the nouns that they modify. When you see an underlined noun in the error ID section, check to make sure it agrees with the other nouns in the sentence. 7. Many students suffer from a guilty conscience immediately after cheating on a difficult final exam. (A) Many students suffer from a guilty conscience (B) Many student suffer from a guilty conscience (C) Many students suffer from guilty conscious‘ (D) Many students suffer from guilty consciences (E) Many students suffer from guilty conscience‘s 4. High school students who play sports are more likely to become a successful college student. (A) are more likely to become a successful college student. (B) are more likely to become successful college students (C) is more likely to be a successful college student (D) is more likely to be successful in college (E) are more likely to succeed when going to college. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 24 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #4-Subject/Verb Agreement Subject-Verb Agreement: Singular subjects must take singular verbs and plural subjects must take plural verbs. This sounds pretty easy, but ETS makes this difficult by attempting to hide the subject and verbs in the sentence. The tests, given by the school, strives to A B examine the knowledge of its students. No error C D E When you first read this question, does anything pop out at you as wrong? Probably not. That‘s why it‘s best to CUT THE FAT! The tests, given by the school, strives to A B examine the knowledge of its students. No error C D E Now read the sentence again without the unnecessary comma phrase separating the subject and the verb. Can you spot the error now? Take a look at the subject, ―tests,‖ and take a look at the verb ―strives.‖ Do those agree? No, tests is plural and strives is singular. The answer is (B). It seems like only yesterday that the baseball A playoffs finally ended, but the new season has started B C today. No error. D E 2. Driver error, rather than engine failure, A were responsible for causing the fatal crash. B C D No error. E 3. Tom, Chuck and Larry was seriously A B sunburned from not wearing sunscreen all C D day at the beach. No error. E © Study Smart Tutors 2011 25 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Singular or Plural: Sometimes, ETS will try to confuse you about whether a subject should have a singular or plural verb. These tricky ones are called collective nouns and are always singular. Collective Nouns The team is The family is The group is The country is The jury is The audience is Collective Pronouns: Everyone is Anyone is Each is None is Either is Neither is No one is © Study Smart Tutors 2011 26 Chapter II: Grammar 1 And vs. Or: Subjects joined by and are plural: Joe and Mary are going to dinner. However, nouns that are joined by or can be either singular or plural. If the last noun is singular, it takes a singular verb. If the last noun is plural, it takes a plural verb. And/Or Drill: Which of the following is correct? 1. The cheerleaders or the football team is/are getting off the bus. 2. The football team or the cheerleaders is/are getting off the bus. Error ID Example: Julius Erving and Magic Johnson, each A of whom is an accomplished basketball B player, is still well-known today. No error C D E First off, let‘s cut some fat and make this sentence easier to understand. That whole phrase between the commas is fat, let‘s get rid of it. Now read the sentence again. Julius Erving and Magic Johnson, each A of whom is an accomplished basketball B player, is still well-known today. No error C D E We know the subject is plural because we see the word and. That must mean we must have a plural verb, are, instead of is. The answer is (D). © Study Smart Tutors 2011 27 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #6-Parallel Structure of Verbs Parallelism simply means that all the verbs in a given sentence must be in the same form. For example, Chris will attend the university, major in biology and to become a doctor. This is an incorrect sentence because all the verbs are not in the same form. ―To become‖ is not the same form of verb as ―will…‖ As a pledge in the fraternity, Trevor A was required to clean the house, to B C dress in a funny outfit, and never D speaking to anyone outside the fraternity. No error. E On error ID questions that contain a series of underlined verbs, check to see if they are parallel in form. In this question Trevor is required to clean, to dress and never speaking. What‘s the problem? Never speaking should be ―to never speak.‖ (D) is the answer. 6. Pau thought that the coach was not only A trying to motivate the players to win, but also B C educating them. No error. D E © Study Smart Tutors 2011 28 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #6- Verb Tense: Verbs come in many different tenses. Fortunately, you will not have to find and identify the name of the tense that is being used in the sentence. You will simply have to ensure that the correct tense is being used throughout the sentence. Often, you will be given clues as to what the proper tense for the sentence should be. Take a look at some common clues that will tell you the time frame of the sentence. Time Frame Clues In 1978… In today‘s world… In the future… Tomorrow… Yesterday… In 2013… About 5 years ago… Nowadays… In the early 1900‘s many Russian immigrants A B C travel west to the United States. No error D E Is there a clue in this sentence to tell you what tense you should be using? Yes. That first phrase ―In the early 1900‘s‖ tells us that past tense is needed. The correct answer is (D). 11. Lewis and Clark, based on their journey A across the United States, can be credited with B C mapped much of the territory surrounding the D Missouri River. No error. E © Study Smart Tutors 2011 29 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #7-Pronoun Agreement: As with many other parts of speech, pronouns must agree with the nouns that they stand for. Singular subjects must be replaced by singular pronouns, and plural nouns must be replaced by plural pronouns. Everyone on the team who played with Audrey A B personally congratulated her on making the C all-star team and told her how much they enjoyed D being her teammate. No error. E First, let‘s trim the fat. Get rid of the phrases ―on the team who played with Audrey,‖ and ―on making the all-star team.‖ Now, where is the underlined pronoun in the sentence? They. What is they referring to? Everyone, which is a singular noun. This is a very common error because it ―sounds good.‖ Remember that everyone is a collective noun. The answer is (D). Examples: A sports book earns most of their money from the commission taken on each bet, not on the bets themselves. (A) earn most of their money (B) earn most of it‘s money (C) earns most of its money (D) earn more of their money (E) are earning most of their money When you first taste halva, a bread made from sesame, one may think one is eating a completely new food group. (A) one may think one is (B) people may think they are (C) you may think you are (D) one may be thinking of (E) you may think that you have been © Study Smart Tutors 2011 30 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #8-Pronoun Ambiguity When it comes to pronouns, ambiguity refers to cases when you are unsure of what a pronoun refers to. On the SAT, if you are ever confused about who or what the pronoun is referring to, it‘s wrong! Example: After looking over the paint samples, Jim agreed with Cody that his truck should be painted white. Whose truck are we talking about? Could it be Jim‘s truck? Could it be Cody‘s truck? Because the truck could belong to either of them, the pronoun is ambiguous. Here‘s an Error ID example: The actor told the director that he was A B an integral part of the show and could C not be easily replaced. No error. D E Take a look at answer choice (B). Who is he referring to? He could represent either the actor or the director, because the pronoun is ambiguous, it is wrong. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 31 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #9-Pronoun Case Pronouns come in two cases, subject pronouns and object pronouns. Subject pronouns refer to subjects that perform the action of the sentence. Object pronouns refer to the person or thing that receives the action. Mostly, you will be able to spot errors in case because the sentence will appear funny. When in doubt, cut the fat and follow the guidelines below. Simply use this guideline to remember which pronouns go where… Subject Pronouns Object Pronouns laughed at Take a Look at the Subject and Object pronouns below Subject Object Singular He She It Singular Him Her Whom Plural We They You Who Plural You Us Them Whom © Study Smart Tutors 2011 32 Chapter II: Grammar 1 I vs. Me If you are having trouble remembering when to use I (subject pronoun) or me (object pronoun) it often helps to cut the fat. In many cases this means removing the other person from the sentence. I vs. Me Drill: The apartment belongs to Lauren and me The apartment belongs to Lauren and I Lauren is the fat, get rid of her… The apartment belongs to (I or me) Me is the object and apartment is the subject, therefore the correct answer is me. Try another: Angie is more athletic than me Angie is more athletic than I What are you actually saying in this sentence? You are actually saying that Angie is more athletic than I am. However, the am is implied. If you in doubt about I or me, add am to the end to see which is correct. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 33 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Pronoun Usage Drill: Circle the correct Pronoun in each sentence; refer back to the previous page if necessary. 1. Alice gave (he/him) advice on what to wear to his big date. 2. To (who/whom) should Jeremy give the leftovers? 3. Together you and (I/me) will rule the school with an iron fist. 4. (We/Us) football players are planning to burn our jerseys if we don‘t win a game soon. 5. Between you and (I/me), the SAT is really boring 6. If Andrew built the website (himself/him), the company could save lots of money. 7. (Our/we) son is (who/whom) we would like to inherit the family business. 8. Helen likes chocolate much more than (me/I) 9. Mariah told (us/we) that her next album will be her best yet. 10. (He/Him) easily solved the mystery of (who/whom) failed to flush the toilet. 11. You can have that disgusting liver and onions; (she/her) doesn‘t want it! 12. Posh is going to find (her/herself) a new hairstyle. 13. Don‘t worry, it‘s (me/I). 14. You can count on LeAnn and (I/me) to save the concert. 15. To (whom/who) should I address the letter? 16. Michael can break-dance better than (he/him) 17. It was (he/him) who tagged the bridge and the overpass with graffiti. 18. Kobe bought the necklace for (him/himself) © Study Smart Tutors 2011 34 Chapter II: Grammar 1 Mini Grammar Lesson #10-Preposition Use We talked briefly about prepositions earlier in this text. Remember that prepositions are any word that fits in the phrase The bird flew the cloud. Sometimes the SAT will trick you and use the wrong preposition. Preposition use is often dictated by idioms. Most of them you will spot because they will sound wrong, but a few of them will be more difficult to spot. Preposition Usage Drill: circle the correct preposition(s) I am resentful (of/to/for) her I am happy (about/for) Joe I am jealous (of/from) my sister I am worried (for/about) my daughter The couple had an argument (over/about) the election You have a responsibility (to/for) take care of your younger brother My life is not so different (from/of) your life She is indebted (to/about/for) her husband I am grateful (of/for/to) you © Study Smart Tutors 2011 35 Chapter II: Grammar 1 SAT Grammar 1 Summary Key Grammar I Notes: The Most Important Grammar Errors Are _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Grammar questions become tricky because? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ ―Trimming the Fat‖ Notes _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ Verbs Questions Notes _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Pronouns Questions Notes _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 36 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Mini Grammar Lesson #11-Diction Errors: ETS will occasionally throw a diction error at you just to throw you off. Diction means word choice, and diction errors are often difficult to spot because the incorrect word and the correct word sound exactly the same. Many vs. Much and Less vs. Fewer: ETS will occasionally throw errors at you that misuse many, much, less and fewer. Just remember, if it CAN BE COUNTED you need to use many or fewer. If the amount CANNOT BE COUNTED, you need to use much or less. Ex: With many people working, there is much less work. Two People or Things Between Between you and me, Mom is a bad cook. More I like chicken more than I like steak Less I am less likely to lose than you are Better I am a better skateboarder than Kimberly Three People or Things Among Alice is the best athlete among the three of us. Most Of all the dogs I know, Spike is the most smelly Least Of all the people at the table, Sarah is the least intelligent. Best Tony is the best skateboarder that I know. If you eat fewer buffalo wings, you will use less ranch dressing. 2. Between Phil, Mike and Joe, I think that Joe A is best for the coaching job because of his vast B C experience in the field. No error. D E 1. Trevor put his half-empty glass of milk besides A B the refrigerator and then left it there, allowing it C to sour. No error. D E © Study Smart Tutors 2011 37 Chapter III: Grammar 2 The most common diction errors: Take a look at the following sets of words. Make sure you know when to use each of the words within the group. Common Diction Errors To/too/two They‘re/there/their Your/you‘re principal/principle Accept/except Affect/effect 3. I told my sociology professor that the best part A of Macbeth was where the protagonist finally B C triumphed over evil. No error. D E Diction Drill: Occasionally ETS will throw the wrong word at you, take a look at the pairs of words and their differing meanings. Irritated- Aggravated- Stationary- Stationery- Intelligent- Intelligible- Illicit- Elicit- Proscribe- Prescribe- Imminent- Eminent- Allusion- Illusion- Perspective- Prospective- Conscious- Conscience- Elude- Allude- Compliment- Complement- © Study Smart Tutors 2011 38 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Mini Grammar Lesson #12-The Faulty Comparison When you are comparing things, make sure that they can actually be compared. This seems pretty obvious but in conversation this is a very common mistake. Ex: Marc goes to Quiznos because the sandwiches are better than Subway. This sounds fine and we know exactly what Marc means. However, this sentence is incorrect. Take a look at what is actually being compared. This sentence compares sandwiches to a store. That is a faulty comparison. Sandwiches must be compared to sandwiches and stores must be compared to stores. Correctly Written: Marc goes to Quiznos because the sandwiches are better than the sandwiches at Subway. The Faulty Comparison: When you are comparing a number of people or things, the comparison word differs depending on how many people or things you are talking about. Kelly was overjoyed because her chili was far better than Joe. (A) was far better than Joe (B) was far better than Joe‘s chili (C) was far better than the chili of Joe (D) did seem better to Joe (E) did far better than Joe What is being compared in this sentence? Kelly‘s chili should be compared to Joe‘s chili. But take a look at what the sentence actually compares. It compares Kelly‘s chili to Joe. Can we compare chili to person? Of course not, so the answer is (B). 5. Scholars have long debated whether it is a more A B difficult task to box for twelve rounds or C completing a triathlon. No error. D E 6. Jogging develops much better cardiovascular A health than bowling, but it can also be very B C boring in nature. No error. D E © Study Smart Tutors 2011 39 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Mini Grammar Lesson #13-Adjectives and Adverbs ETS will try to trick you by using adjectives when adverbs should be used and vice versa. Adjectives modify nouns, while adverbs modify verbs, adjectives and other adverbs. Here‘s an example of how this will be tested: Although it may not grow at all for a period of months, fertilizing the plant will increase its growth enormous. (A) will increase the its growth enormous (B) will enormously increase its growth (C) increase enormous growth of it (D) enormously cause the growth to increase (E) increase the growth in an enormous way. What is the error in the original sentence? Enormous is an adjective and it is attempting to modify the verb phrase ―will increase.‖ However, only adverbs can modify verbs, leaving us with just answers (B) and (D). Because (B) uses active voice without distorting the meaning of the original sentence, it is the correct answer. 11. Phil rummaged frantic through his car A B while he tried to find his misplaced wallet. C D No error. E 9. The snow fell so quick that the road A crews could not do anything to clear the B C D roads. No error. E Adverbs are typically easy to spot because they often end in –ly. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 40 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Mini Grammar Lesson #14-Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers Modifiers are descriptive words of phrases that are used to add depth or dimension to the phrase that they modify. Modifiers are misplaced if they do not actually refer to what they are modifying. Modifiers are dangling if you are unsure of what they modify. Ex: Because he was tall, Carmelo was a great basketball player. ―Because he was tall‖ is the modifying phrase in the sentence. It gives dimension to the sentence and tells you why Carmelo was a great basketball player. Modifying phrases generally must be placed directly next to the phrase it is modifying. Ex: Every time he urinates on the lawn, Alec praises his new dog by giving him a cookie. In this sentence, who is urinating on the lawn? Alec is. Of course, we are trying to say that the dog is urinating on the lawn. This modifying phrase needs to be placed near the dog in order for the sentence to say what it means. Watch out for sentences that start with a descriptive phrase, often this question will contain a misplaced or dangling modifier. Misplaced Modifiers Examples: Even though it has been proven to cause skin cancer, many young people still visit tanning beds. (A) Even though it has been proven to cause skin cancer, many young people still visit tanning beds. (B) Even though it was proving to cause skin cancer, many young people still visit tanning beds. (C) Even though it was proven to cause skin cancer, many young people still visit tanning beds. (D) Even though the tanning beds are proven to cause skin cancer, many people still enjoy it. (E) Even though the tanning beds have been proven to cause cancer, many young people still enjoy them. The noun and the modifier need to be closer, which answer choice makes the most sense? Only (E) corrects the error. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 41 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Extra Practice Added to the signing bonus and new record contract, Marshall demanded a Bentley from his new record label. (A) Added to the signing bonus and new record contract (B) In addition to the signing bonus and new record contract, (C) Not only a signing bonus and new record contract (D) In adding a signing bonus and new record contract (E) In addition to the signing bonus and wanting a new record contract 6. When they took in karate, the instructor made them do 10 push-ups for every minute that they were late. (A) the instructor made them do 10 push-ups (B) the instructor made we do 10 push-ups (C) the instructor made us do push-ups (D) the kids were forced to do 10 push-ups (E) the kids, he would make them do push-ups © Study Smart Tutors 2011 42 Chapter III: Grammar 2 SAT Grammar Lesson #14-Improving Paragraphs After you complete all of the improving sentences and error ID questions, one grammar section will also ask you to tackle a poorly written ―first draft‖ of a short essay. Don‘t worry - these questions are almost always easy or medium difficulty. You will be asked three types of questions within this section: 1) Revision Questions- These are just like improving sentences questions and ask you to revise a sentence or a part of a sentence Ex: How could you revise the following the sentence? 2) Combination Questions- Here you will be asked to combine two or more sentences to improve the flow and clarity of the paragraph Ex: How could you revise and combine sentences 5 and 6? 3) Content Questions- These questions will ask you about the passage subject matter, often by asking you to add a new sentence or paragraph or reorder the paragraphs. Ex: Which of the following sentences would be most appropriate to be added at the end of paragraph three? Improving Paragraphs Tips: 1. Don’t waste your time by reading the passage! Go straight to the questions; revision and combination questions will contain the sentences that you need to correct right there in the question, so there is no need to go back to the passage! 2. Think about the order that you will answer the questions Revision Questions FIRST-these can be solved quickly and you will not need the passage to answer these questions Combination Questions should be completed SECOND, as many of these also do not require you to look at the paragraph Content Questions should be answered LAST because they require you to actually think about the paragraph and take up the most time © Study Smart Tutors 2011 43 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Improving Paragraphs - Going Beyond Grammar: Think about the most logical way to order the author’s thoughts Many questions will either imply or directly ask about the order of sentences or paragraphs; you want to be sure that you follow the most logical progression possible based on the theme, story, character introduction, and basic idea of the passage. What is the author’s point? Because your job is to improve the paragraph, think about the ways in which you could make the author‘s point clearer or more effective. Avoid wordiness and remember that shorter is usually better! The most effective writers get their points across with the most clear and precise words possible. Remember to think about repetition as you improve this essay. Questions 1-5 are based on the following passage: (1) I guess that fixing vintage car engines is not a very common hobby for a teenage girl, but that has never really bothered me. (2) I have been helping my dad restore old cars since I was 7 years old, and my dad would let me lie under the car, hand him tools, and helped change the oil. (3) By the time I was 11, I was sifting through old car part catalogues to help my dad find spare parts. (4) A lot of it has to do with experience: how you instinctively begin to know what‘s wrong with the engine, just by hearing an old car wheezing its way into the shop. (5) It takes quite a while to really get the hang of fixing vintage cars. (6) Once one gains an understanding of the basic engine platforms of the Big Three car makers, you can begin to have the ability to diagnose the problem in any car. (7) I will readily admit that I have had some spectacular failures, like attempting to fit some Ford Mustang parts into a Dodge Charger. (8) Some skills have been easier to acquire than others. (9) However, my father has been very supportive through the ups and downs of my learning to fix and restore vintage cars. (10) He has bravely taken the progress with the setbacks. (11) My friends may laugh at my hobby now, but some day when I open up my own car shop, they‘ll all wish they knew their way around a car‘s engine like I do. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 44 Chapter III: Grammar 2 1. Which of the following is the best version of the underlined portion of sentence 2? (reproduced below) I have been helping my dad restore old cars since I was 7 years old, and my dad would let me lie under the car, hand him tools, and helped change the oil. (A) (as it is now) (B) lie under the car, hand him tools and change the oil (C) me to lie under the car, to hand him tools and to help change the oil (D) me lie under the car, hand him tools, and help change the oil (E) me lie under the car, hand him tools and helping change the oil. 2. In context, which of the following could best replace ―you‖ in sentence 6? (A) people (B) they (C) I (D) mechanics (E) one 3. Which of the following sentences could most easily be omitted from the passage without changing its meaning? (A) Sentence 8 (B) Sentence 4 (C) Sentence 9 (D) Sentence 5 (E) Sentence 6 4. Which two sentences, if the order was reversed, would best improve the organization of the paper? (A) Sentence 3 and Sentence 4 (B) Sentence 4 and Sentence 5 (C) Sentence 6 and Sentence 7 (D) Sentence 8 and Sentence 9 (E) Sentence 10 and Sentence 11 5. How could the author best revise and combine the underlined portions of sentences 9 and 10? (reproduced below) However, my father has been very supportive through the ups and downs of my learning to fix and restore vintage cars. He has bravely taken the progress with the set backs. (A) cars, taking bravely (B) cars; having bravely taken (C) cars, bravely taking (D) cars: he has been brave and taken (E) cars and taking bravely © Study Smart Tutors 2011 45 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Mini SAT Grammar Lesson #15-Error ID Practice Drill 1. Emma soon realized that she and Noah A B were the only people at the school to get over C D 2250 on the SAT. No error. E 7. If you invite Matt to the poker game, you A will have no choice but to invite his B C girlfriend as well. No error. D E 4. Many new soldiers in the military find it A B very difficult to abide with the rules set forth C by their commanding officer. No error. D E 8. Trevor is so fond of milk that he drinks A B at least five glasses a day or more. No error. C D E 5. Many young stars in Hollywood feel that A the rules of society does not pertain to them. B C D No error. E spectacular for Pam because she now worked B C at the same time as Jim. No error. E 8. Because Ben did not study for his A history test, he knew that he would do B C much worse than Sheldon. No error. D E 8. According to the principal spokeswoman A for the oil company, there is much oil to be B C D found in the Alaskan wilderness. No error. E 9. The new schedule worked out 10. The question of whether to break up or A B stay together were difficult for Brad and Jen C D to discuss. No error. E 12. Because we were so busy with finals, we A B have not barely thought about our upcoming C D cruise. No error. E 10. Preparing salmon is slightly more difficult A B C than halibut, but not as difficult as many might D think. No error. E © Study Smart Tutors 2011 46 Chapter III: Grammar 2 Mini SAT Grammar Lesson #16-Improving Sentences Practice Drill 1. The healthful benefits of drinking pomegranate juice is being increasing popularized. (A) is being increasing popularized (B) is more and more popularized (C) are being increasingly popularized (D) are being popularized increasing (E) has increased in popularity 3. The Los Angeles area, although not famous for its agriculture, they produce some of the best avocados in the world. (A) agriculture, they produce (B) agriculture, produces (C) agriculture though producing (D) agriculture, produce (E) agriculture, it produces 2. Giants among mere mortals, the sumo wrestlers head and shoulders above the rest of the crowd. (A) head and shoulders above (B) were head and shoulders above (C) were head and shoulders (D) towered head and shoulder above (E) towered head and shoulders above 4. The jury has deliberated for three hours before convicting an innocent man. (A) has deliberated for three hours before convicting (B) deliberated for three hours before it convicted (C) have deliberated for three hours before they convicted (D) deliberated for three hours before convicting (E) deliberated for three hours before they convicted 5. My sister and I went to the game, because we want to see the new players in their first game. (A) My sister and I went to the game, (B) My sister and me went to the game (C) We had gone to the game (D) We are going to the game (E) My sister and me are going to the game 5. The teachers that I had in college had a greater impact on me than any other time of my life. (A) any other time of my life (B) that of any other time of my life (C) has any other time of my life (D) those from any other time in my life (E) any other time of my life has 6. Added to the signing bonus and new record contract, Marshall demanded a Bentley from his new record label. (A) Added to the signing bonus and new record contract (B) In addition to the signing bonus and new record contract, (C) Not only a signing bonus and new record contract (D) In adding a signing bonus and new record contract (E) In addition to the signing bonus and wanting a new record contract 7. In cities throughout New Mexico, one can taste literally thousands of different salsas, each with a distinct flavor of their own. (A) each with a distinct flavor of their own (B) each with a distinct flavor of its own (C) each with a distinct flavor of it‘s own (D) each which has a distinct flavor of its own (E) they each have their own distinct flavor 8. James has been planning to attend Notre Dame, but after visiting Indiana during the winter, he changed his mind. (A) has been planning to attend (B) has been planning on attending (C) would have planned to attend (D) had planned to attend (E) was to have planned to attend The SAT Essay: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 47 Chapter III: Grammar 2 SAT Grammar II Summary Key Grammar I Notes: Diction Notes _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Faulty Comparison Notes _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ ―Misplaced Modifiers Notes _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ Improving Paragraphs Notes _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ ―Take-Aways‖ From Practice Drills _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 48 Chapter IV: The Essay Mini SAT Essay Lesson #1-How to Impress SAT Graders The SAT essay is not your typical essay that you would expect for your English class. However, because we know what the scorers want you to do, it‘s very predictable. You will have 25 minutes to plan and write an essay responding to a very broad question. The essay will always be the first section of the test so you will get it out of the way while your mind is still fresh. How the Essay is Graded The SAT essay is graded ―holistically‖ - there is no rubric for the graders to follow. SAT graders do not give you points for your thesis, your examples, or your conclusion. Instead, they simply read your essay and pull a number out of thin air. The SAT is graded by two graders on a scale between 1 and 6. These two scores are added together and combine to a scaled score from 2-12. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 49 Chapter IV: The Essay What This Means for You Because the SAT graders will only be spending about 150 seconds grading your essay, you don‘t need to focus on being perfect. Instead of worrying about every little thing, you just need to worry about the BIG THINGS that will make your essay seem great. The Big Five Part I: ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ The Big Five Part II: ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ Your essay should convince the graders of two things… 1. I AM SMART 2. I CARE ABOUT THE SAT ESSAY Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 50 Chapter IV: The Essay Well Organized: There is a single BEST way to organize your SAT Essay. o Introduction o Body Paragraph #1 o Body Paragraph #2 o Conclusion Why did we make this page so big? No, we did not do this by accident. If you learn nothing else but to follow this structure, you‘ll already have avoided some of the key SAT essay errors! If you structure your essay in this way, the graders will think that you are well organized and that you have taken care in planning your thoughts. We will talk about each of these paragraphs in detail later, but all your essays should be structured in this fashion. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 51 Chapter IV: The Essay SAT Essay Mini Lesson #2- The Introductory and Concluding Paragraphs The introduction to your essay should be simple and ―hook‖ the reader into your topic. Because your essay is graded holistically, a strong first impression is very important. The introduction should contain three simple parts 1. Interest Creating Device (hook) - this will draw the reader into your topic 2. Preview of Coming Attractions 3. Thesis The three types of hooks: 1. The Rhetorical Question 2. The Anecdote 3. The Quote Which of these three works best on the SAT essay? The Fake Quote: An easy way to add depth to your examples and make your details more vivid is to employ the fake quote. The fake quote simply means to make some analytic or clichéd statement and attribute it to whomever you see fit. The fake quote can be used as a great hook and you can attribute it to your dad, your mom, or someone famous. The fake quote can also be added to your body paragraph as either from the protagonist of the book that you are referencing or from the historical figure that you are using. The fake quote can also be added to your body paragraph as either from the protagonist of the book that you are referencing or from the historical figure that you are using. Practice with the Fake Quote: Example question: “Is creativity necessary for success?” Your Job: Come up with a fake quote that applies to this question that could be used as the first sentence of your essay. It should be specific to the question and tell the reader what side of the issue your essay will take. My Fake Quote: ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ © Study Smart Tutors 2011 52 Chapter IV: The Essay The Rest of the intro Paragraph Preview of Coming Attractions: This should be a few sentences describing your body paragraphs Thesis: This should always be the last sentence of your introductory paragraph and in one sentence illustrate your main point. The thesis should be stated in active voice and must ―take a stand‖ on the posed essay question. Example Thesis: Here is a thesis statement that will work regardless of what the question asks. Is it the greatest thesis statement ever? No. But it clearly states your position in one active voice sentence, and gives you one less thing to think about! ______(example 1)__________ and _______(example 2)________ demonstrate that…. Your Job: Take the following question above and write a sample thesis to go with it. The question: “Is creativity necessary for success? My thesis: ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Conclusion: Your conclusion does not have to be long, but you must have one. The ideal concluding paragraph on the SAT essay summarizes your two examples, relates the two examples together, and adds a general analytic point. Note: If you don‘t have a conclusion, the SAT graders will view you as disorganized. If you‘re running out of time, make sure to indent your last sentence, and there‘s your conclusion! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 53 Chapter IV: The Essay SAT Essay Lesson #3- The Two Body Paragraphs Your two body paragraphs do not need to be long or complicated, but they should use examples and analysis to prove your thesis statement. Each of your body paragraphs should prove a slightly different side of your thesis. Avoid repetition. Address the Prompt: This simply means answer the question that they ask you! The only to way to get a score of zero on the SAT Essay is to not answer the question. Examples: One of the most important aspects of your essays will be the examples that you choose to support your thesis. These examples can be taken from history, literature, science, or current events. Each essay should include two distinct examples preferably in two separate categories. Note: Do not use an event from your own life as an example! It will be difficult to tell a story and make a clear and coherent point at the same time. Avoid using any examples that could be deemed ―controversial.‖ You do not want the grader to take into account personal feelings about an event or person. The Two Most Important Words to Remember: Concrete examples: Your examples must be real. You should be talking about real books, events, and people. Your examples should not be hypothetical and should not include the words ―should,‖ ―if,‖ or ―you.‖ Vivid details: Your examples should include names of people and characters, places and settings, and dates of occurrence. The beauty of supplying vivid details is…THEY DO NOT HAVE TO BE TRUE! Vivid details are easy to fudge and they cannot mark you down for it. For instance, if you think that the story of Paul Revere fits perfectly into your thesis but you can‘t remember the year and the place that he made his famous ride, just make your best guess and move on. It‘s better to use wrong VIVID DETAILS THAN NO DETAILS AT ALL! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 54 Chapter IV: The Essay Body Paragraph Structure: For many students, structuring the body paragraphs most effectively in the shortest amount of time represents the biggest SAT essay challenge. Your goal when writing the SAT essay is to make your analytic point in the simplest and most straightforward manner. Example SAT Essay Question: ―Does questioning authority make society stronger? Body Paragraph Structure: If you can answer the following questions in approximately the order below, your body paragraph will avoid repetition and specifically answer the question being asked. 1. Who questioned authority? __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ 2. Who was the authority? __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ 3. How did this person question? __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ 4. What was the result? __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ 5. How was society made/not made stronger as a result? __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ The answer to the last question is the most important aspect of your analysis, as well as the one that most students forget. Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 55 Chapter IV: The Essay SAT Essay Mini Lesson #4- Using Examples The following list provides common and useful examples from history and literature that reference thematic situations in everyday life. These examples should serve as a starting point for your own research and are not for you to quote directly. Remember, if you don‘t have details to back up your example, you will lose points for failing to develop your ideas. Note that this list is in no way a complete summary of all important literature and history; feel free to use your imagination! Literature: A Streetcar Named Desire – Tennessee Williams Living life without love can drive someone to insanity Grapes of Wrath – John Steinbeck Friends and family can allow one to endure almost anything The Jungle – Upton Sinclair Corruption of the American dream 1984- George Orwell Technological advances in the hands of government can be dangerous Animal Farm – George Orwell Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald The cost of keeping up appearances The Crucible – Arthur Miller Mob Mentality inhibits justice and devalues the importance of truth The Lottery – Shirley Jackson Winning is not always a good thing The Catcher in the Rye – J.D. Salinger The grass is always greener… Lord of the Flies – William Golding Absolute freedom often leads to chaos 12 Angry Men – Reginald Rose One determined individual can alter the way a whole society thinks To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee Never judge a book by its cover © Study Smart Tutors 2011 56 Chapter IV: The Essay Tell Tale Heart- Edgar Allen Poe Guilt eventually prevails The Odyssey – Homer The cost of returning home, the honor of friendship A Tale of Two Cities – Charles Dickens The suppressed will rise The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – Mark Twain A man‘s only true value is his character Brave New World – Aldus Huxley Technology impedes man‘s free will On the Road – Jack Kerouac Life is a journey History: Martin Luther King Jr. Peaceful protest can lead to great success without violence Richard Nixon The cover-up is often worse than the crime JFK and the Cuban Missile Crisis Admitting your mistakes can lead to great admiration Stock Market Crash of 1929 Unregulated capitalism can create chaos Treaty of Versailles An incomplete settlement can lead to even more conflict The Alamo Determination can often overcome even the longest odds Lewis and Clark Exploring and risk-taking can lead to great discoveries The Constitutional Convention Freedom and the rights of man above all The Fall of the Roman Empire Even the greatest of powers will eventually crumble if ruled ineffectively © Study Smart Tutors 2011 57 Chapter IV: The Essay George Washington Leadership in pressure can make a man a hero Revolutionary War Freedom is a cause worth dying for, sometimes the most determined man can win Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet True love is worth dying for Hamlet Fear and uncertainty are the great flaws of human nature Macbeth Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely Julius Caesar Your closest friend is often your most dangerous enemy Othello Jealousy blurs man‘s morals © Study Smart Tutors 2011 58 Chapter IV: The Essay Your Job: Books I know well (or will know well) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Moments/People/Wars I know: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 59 Chapter IV: The Essay SAT Essay Lesson #5-Grammar and Vocabulary Treat the SAT essay as you would any other…use correct grammar! Just because you only have 25 minutes does not mean you should get sloppy with your grammar. Incorrect grammar can make you look like you did not take time and care while writing your essay and could lead to a lower score. Vocabulary: For your essay, try to incorporate the best vocabulary that you are COMFORTABLE using. Do not simply look up a few big words and include them randomly in your essay. The graders will know whether or not you understand the vocabulary that you use. But, that does not mean to use slang. Vocabulary II: An easy way to improve your vocabulary on the SAT essay without much effort is to simply memorize and include a few analytic transitions. Include these words between your ideas and your writing will become more analytical with a more formal tone. These transitions often come in two forms depending on whether your sentences are moving in the same direction or if they are moving in opposite directions. Same Direction Change of Direction Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 60 Chapter IV: The Essay A Note about Passive Voice: When learning to write, many of us focus on the adjectives that we use. We often think these adjectives make us sound smarter and make our writing more advanced. The truth of the matter is that it is the VERBS that we use that determine our level of writing. Take a look at any novel lying around and notice the verbs that the author uses. Specific verbs make writing more concise and allow the reader to see a clear picture of the scene being described. The following is a list of passive voice verbs that should be avoided at all costs. Breaking the habit of these verbs can be difficult, but it is the surest way to improve your writing. The List: 1. 13. 2. 14. 3. 15. 4. 16. 5. 17. 6. 18. 7. 19. 8. 20. 9. 21. 10. 22. 11. 23. 12. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 61 Chapter IV: The Essay Mini SAT Essay Lesson #6-Identifying Buzzwords in SAT Questions Example Essay Questions: 1. Is persistence all that is needed to be successful? 2. Does history repeat itself? 3. Should one sacrifice life for liberty? 4. Are people unwise to pursue love even when it will cause them pain? 5. Can the actions of average people have a significant impact in the course of history? 6. Is it more important to understand ideas or facts? 7. Does questioning authority make society stronger? 8. Is the world changing for the better? 9. Do we need other people to understand ourselves? 10. Is creativity necessary for success? SAT Buzzwords: Take a look at the essay questions above. They are all from past SAT exams since 2005. What do you notice about some of the questions? Certain questions have words in there that are vague and have multiple meanings. These words are called ―buzzwords,‖ and you must identify and define them if and when they appear. For instance, in essay question #1, ―successful‖ is a buzzword because success could mean happiness, financial success, emotional success, physical success, etc. It‘s not important HOW you define success, but it is important that YOU BRIEFLY TELL THE READER WHAT YOU MEAN by success. Your Job: Circle the “buzzwords” in the above ten real SAT essay questions. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 62 Chapter IV: The Essay SAT Essay Summary SAT Essay Notes: What do SAT graders look for? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What do I need to do to impress the SAT essay graders? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ How should I structure my essay? _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ What should I include in my body paragraphs? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What are my ―next steps‖ in order to improve? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary © Study Smart Tutors 2011 63 SAT Critical Reading © Study Smart Tutors 2011 64 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Mini SAT Reading Lesson #1- Introduction to SAT reading A note about critical reading sections: Everybody hates critical reading! The passages vary from boring to so boring you will want to fall asleep. The critical reading sections take by far the most concentration and focus and therefore the curve for these sections is often significantly lower than in the math and writing sections. Why is this good for you? Imagine looking around your SAT testing room in a few weeks. Pretend it‘s about 11:00 and everyone is tired, bored and on edge. Now imagine that the section you and many others around you are completing is a critical reading section. Do you think that most people are at their best or are their brains slowly melting from exhaustion? Think about all the people that will be making stupid mistakes at this point in the test? Imagine how many people will be lazily falling for all of the SAT‘s reading traps. If you can avoid these errors, just think about how many points you can make up against the competition. Remember, the SAT is a CURVED TEST! Critical Reading Questions: Unlike in the math sections and writing sections, critical reading questions don‘t ask you to pick the correct answer, but rather they ask you for the ―best‖ answer. This applies to both questions based on reading passages on sentence completions. What is being tested in the Critical Reading Sections? There will be three scored reading sections and possibly an additional experimental reading section. Each of the reading sections will begin with 6-10 sentence completions and will be followed by a total of 9 reading passages. What kinds of reading passages? There will be 2 short passages of one paragraph in length that have no relationship to each other, 2 medium-sized passages that are each about 2/3 of a page in length and have no relationship to each other. Furthermore, there will be 2 short one-paragraph ―paired‖ passages as well as one full-page long passage and 2 long passages that are paired together. Paired passages, both short and long, typically support two opposing sides of an argument and ask you to differentiate between the arguments. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 65 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Min SAT Reading Lesson #2- Sentence Completion Strategy Sentence Completions: Sentence Completions ask you to fill in the correct word or words into the blank spaces in a given sentence. These questions always go from EASY to DIFFICULT, so it‘s important to remember that easy questions have easy answers and hard questions have hard answers. What ETS wants you to do: ETS wants you to fall for all their traps on sentence completions. They want you to quickly read the sentence and then plug each answer choice into the blank and see what sounds best. This is the WORST strategy for solving sentence completions. Here is the best strategy for sentence completion questions: A Better Way: Step 1. ____________________________________________ If you don‘t look at the answer choices given to you, you can‘t possibly fall into the ―sounds good‖ trap. Use your hand to physically cover the answers and then read the sentence to get an idea of its meaning. Step 2. ____________________________________________ Once you have a grasp on what the sentence is about, the next step is to use your brain to choose a word or group of words that fit in the sentence. Get in the habit of physically writing your prediction in the blank so that you won‘t forget it when you start to look at the answer choices. Don‘t worry about trying to come up with a $150 word when a $3 word will do. Your goal is simply to have the meaning correct. Step 3. ____________________________________________ Once you have decided on your word or words, simply uncover the answer choices and choose the word that is closest in meaning to your prediction. Start by eliminating answer choices that are absurd and have nothing to do with your prediction and narrow the answer down from there. Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 66 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Sentence Completion Practice #1 1. Since Jason had a tendency to lie about everything, I expected his story to be_______. Your Word: ________ 4. Allie loves hiking so much because she can get away from the noisy city and relax in the ______ outdoors. Your Word: ________ 4. The rabbi has been officiating Jewish weddings for 25 years and has therefore become very _________. Your Word: ________ 5. Tania hadn‘t slept in 2 nights, which is probably why she seemed so ______ at school today. Your Word: ________ © Study Smart Tutors 2011 67 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Now take a look at the same questions, this time with the answer choices. Match your words to the correct answer choice. 1. Since Jason had a tendency to lie about everything, I expected his story to be_______. (A) a fib (B) exacerbated (C) accurate (D) humorous (E) true 4. Allie loves hiking so much because she can get away from the noisy city and relax in the ______ outdoors. (A) precluded (B) frightful (C) tranquil (D) great (E) diplomatic 4. The rabbi has been officiating Jewish weddings for 25 years and has therefore become very _________. (A) pious (B) proficient (C) appropriate (D) famous (E) religious 5. Tania hadn‘t slept in 2 nights, which is probably why she seemed so ______ at school today. (A) energetic (B) cognizant (C) angry (D) lackadaisical (E) malleable Note: If your prediction does not fit any of the answer choices, don‘t fear! Simply go back to the sentence and predict again! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 68 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Mini SAT Reading Lesson #3-Finding Clues to Help Make Predictions Each sentence will have at least one word or words that will ―clue‖ you into what the correct word should be in the blank. Many times, you will read the sentence and subconsciously know what the clue is. Other times however, it will not come to you automatically. Therefore, UNDERLINE THE CLUES! Take a look at the following question. Where is the clue? 2. The Getty museum has many famous paintings and sculptures, and therefore many students studying _______ visit as part of the class. (A) science (B) business (C) music (D) art (E) religion Your Word: _________ If you change the clue, the meaning of the entire sentence will change. 2. The Vatican museum has many famous church writings and artifacts, and therefore many students studying _______ visit as part of the class. (A) science (B) business (C) music (D) art (E) religion Your Word: _________ © Study Smart Tutors 2011 69 Chapter V: Sentence Completions What if you can’t find the Clue? If you are struggling to find the clue ask yourself a few simple questions 1. What/who is the subject of the sentence? 2. What is the author saying about this subject, in other words, what info is the author giving you about the subject? If you can answer the second question, you have found the clue! 3. Beyonce was so gifted as a singer that her fans were often amazed by her ______ and failed to recognize her other talents. Who is the subject of the sentence? _______________________________ How is the subject being described? _______________________________ The blank must mean? __________________________________________ 4. Analysts have characterized Carole‘s coaching staff as a ________ different personalities, all thrown together with little thought of a unifying message to the players. Who is the subject of the sentence? _______________________________ How is the subject being described? _______________________________ The blank must mean? __________________________________________ © Study Smart Tutors 2011 70 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Mini SAT Lesson #4-Finding Trigger Words to Help Make Predictions Trigger words exist to tell you whether the blank will agree or disagree with the clue. Other than clues, trigger words will give you the best idea of what direction a sentence is going. Although all sentences will have clues, only some will have triggers. Those that do however, exist for reason! CIRCLE TRIGGERS! Trigger words come in two flavors, SAME DIRECTION or CHANGE DIRECTION Same Direction Change Direction Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 71 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Mini SAT Reading Lesson #5-Sentence Completions Practice #2 Since half of the sentences contain trigger words, let‘s practice putting everything we‘ve learned about sentence completions together. Circle the trigger word, underline the clue and write your word in the blank. 2. Because Judge Judy is impartial, the verdicts she delivers on TV are ______. (A) cynical (B) equitable (C) biased (D) controversial (E) final Your Word: _________ 4. Although the sculptors works are typically _______, they have recently become conventional. (A) complacent (B) palatial (C) awful (D) eccentric (E) gregarious Your Word: _________ 5. Most of Jenna‘s comments were______; they moved the discussion away from the topic of conversation. (A) obtuse (B) tangential (C) pertinent (D) astute (E) focused Your Word: _________ © Study Smart Tutors 2011 72 Chapter V: Sentence Completions 7. After the stock market crash, Leslie became indigent and ________. (A) effectual (B) destitute (C) edacious (D) congenial (E) onerous Your Word: _________ 8. Even though I have a _______ for African tribal masks, I have never wanted them in my office. (A) toleration (B) penchant (C) understanding (D) mediation (E) glutton Your Word: _________ 9. Despite his attempts to persuade Patti to be more diffident, Patti proceeded to be _______. (A) vulnerable (B) imperative (C) pompous (D) humble (E) indigent Your Word: _________ © Study Smart Tutors 2011 73 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Mini SAT Reading Lesson #6-Two-Blank Sentence Completions Does two blanks mean twice as difficult? About half of the sentence completion questions will have two blanks for you to solve for instead of just one. Does this mean that these are more difficult? No. In fact, two-blank questions are often much easier because we can better eliminate answer choices when there are two sets of criteria that must be satisfied. Steps for solving Two Blankers: Step 1. _____________________________________ Step 2. _____________________________________ This could be either blank, whichever one you feel will be easiest to solve Step 3. _____________________________________ Look for trigger words and clue words for this blank that will help you find your word Step 4. _____________________________________ Step 5. _____________________________________ Let‘s take a look at the following examples: 3. The dentist always _________ her patients with the utmost of care, which was why she was _______ ―dentist of the year.‖ (A) treated….engaged (B) absolved….awarded (C) diagnosed….designated (D) prescribed…nominated (E) abdicated….chosen Which blank do you think is easier to solve? Let‘s assume you say the first blank. Where is the clue word? ―Dentist,‖ so underline it. Now predict. Once you have your prediction, eliminate answer choices that do not fit with that prediction and don't waste time by looking at them again. If you predicted correctly for the first blank, you have probably eliminated answers (B), (D) and (E). Now all you have left are choices A and C. Even if you have no idea on how to predict for the second blank, you have a 50% chance of answering this question correctly. Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 74 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Mini SAT Reading Lesson #7-The Tricky Two-Blankers: On some two-blank questions, the clue for the second blank is the first blank. On these questions you will have to determine the relationship between the blanks. 4. It would be ________ of any presidential candidate to ________ such a large group of voters. In this question, it‘s pretty clear that the clue word for the second blank is the first blank. It would be easy to know if the candidates were being smart or not if we knew how the voters were being treated. As the sentence reads, it could go either way. In questions like this, the key is finding whether or not the blanks agree with one another. Think about Positives and Negatives If you can tell if a blank needs a positive word, predict with a (+). If the blank needs a negative word, mark it with a (-). If the two blanks must mean close to the same thing, use = signs in each blank as your prediction. Then look at the answer choices to check what words meet your criteria. Remember, trigger words often provide the best indicator of the type of word needed and the relationship between the blanks. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 75 Chapter V: Sentence Completions Positive/Negative Drill 2. The professor‘s lessons were both _______ and _______, which was probably why the class was so popular each semester. First Blank: (+/-) ______ Second Blank (+/-) ______ (A) corrupt…erroneous (B) obnoxious…arrogant (C) effective…stimulating (D) enlightening…superfluous (E) explicit…efficient 7. The marriage was doomed from the start, as Charles was ________ and ________, while Diana was kind and thoughtful. First Blank: (+/-) ______ Second Blank (+/-) ______ (A) heinous…amiable (B) perverse…apt (C) compassionate…diabolical (D) ruthless…malevolent (E) sinister…sympathetic © Study Smart Tutors 2011 76 Chapter V: Sentence Completions SAT Reading Mini Lesson # 8-Vocabulary Latin Roots Increasing your vocabulary will improve your score dramatically on the SAT Critical Reading sections. However, this does not mean you should spend hours and hours memorizing hundreds of flashcards. It‘s unrealistic to memorize that many words, and you should use your limited SAT study time for other, more important things. The following is a list of common word roots and their definitions. Also included are some common words that contain the root. Remember, it isn‘t important to know the exact meaning of each word in the group, but rather the meaning of the root, which should give you the approximate meaning of the word. 1. AB (away, from) abstract abhor absent abandon absolve abstain abnormal abstruse abrogate abdicate abstemious 2. CAP/CIP/CEPT/CEIT/CEIV/CEIPT (take) intercept precept accept emancipate concept insipient except anticipate capture conceit 3. CIRCU/PERI (around) circumvent Perimeter circumference peripatetic circus circumscribe circular circle circumnavigate 4. CLA/CLO/CLU (shut, close) clap recluse clan preclude closet exclusive enclose claustrophobia conclude disclose cloister include © Study Smart Tutors 2011 77 Chapter V: Sentence Completions 5. CON/CO/COM (together, with) convent conjugal convict conclave comment comply communicate congruent converse collaborate cogent contrition 6. DE (off, down, away) defense defile deter devoid deny deface deliberate decry denounce deplete defraud defame desecrate derogatory 7. DIC/DICT/DIT (say) diction malediction ditto dictionary dictate expedition abdicate predicament indict predict verdict dictum extradite addict 8. DIS/DIF (not) differ distinct distant different dissonance dissect distain dismay dissuade diffident 9. DOC/DAC/DUC (teach, lead) document seduce didactic reduce abduct docile conduct traduce reduce introduction doctrine docile induce © Study Smart Tutors 2011 78 Chapter V: Sentence Completions 10. FRA/FRAC/FRAG (break) fragment refract fracture infraction fraction fractious frail refractory fragile infringe 11. GEN (birth) congenial genre progeny gender genealogy engender genuine heterogeneous 12. GRAD/GRESS (step) graduate gradual digress transgress progress gradual regress retrograde retrogress degrade grade downgrade 13. LOC/LOG/LOQU (speech. word) logic loquacious logarithm dialogue apology circumlocution eloquent philology prologue eulogy 14. MAL (bad) maleficent malady malfunction malign malcontent malevolent malicious maladroit malefactor dismal 15. NAMNOM/NOUN/NOWN/NYM (rule, name, order) name astronomy anonymous misnomer economy nomenclature renounce synonym misnomer ignominious antonym nomination © Study Smart Tutors 2011 79 Chapter V: Sentence Completions 16. OB (against) object obvious obsolete oblique obscure obstinate oblivious obliterate objective obsequious 17. PATHY/PAS/PAT (feeling) apathy sympathy passion compatible pattern dispassionate antipathy impassive paste compassion apathy empathy 18. PRO (much, for, a lot) promote prolific produce prosper professional proclivity product prodigy improvise propensity profuseprofuse provide 19. QUE/QUIS (ask, seek out) question inquire inquire acquire query querulous quest exquisite request acquisition 20. SACR/SANCT/SECR (sacred) sacred consecrate sanction desecrate sanctuary sacrament sanctify sacrosanct sacrifice 21. SCRIB/SCRIP (write) scribble ascribe script inscribe scripture postscript describe circumscribe proscribe scribe prescribe © Study Smart Tutors 2011 80 Chapter V: Sentence Completions 22. SEC/SEQU (follow) second prosecute section consequence secretary subsequent sequel obsequious sequence inconsequential 23. SEN (sense, feel) sense sensory sentence sentiment senate assent resent sentinel sensation dissent sensitive resent sensual consensus sentiment 24. SPEC/SPIC/SPIT (see, look) spectator spectacle suspect circumspect speculate conspicuous perspective spectrum aspect specimen respite perspicacious 25. SUB (under) subject subvert submarine submissive sublimate subtle subliminal subsidiary subjugation subdue subversion subterfuge subordinate sublime 26. SUPER/SUM/SUR (above) superstitious supersede supernova superfluous summary summit survive superlative superficial superimpose surpass supercilious © Study Smart Tutors 2011 81 Chapter V: Sentence Completions 27. TENT/TENS/TEND/TENU (thin, stretched) tentative contention tense retention tension portent extend tenuous tent distend tendon pretend tendency attenuate contend 28. TRANS (across) transfer transgress transcontinental transsexual transaction transparent transitory transient transcendent transport transition intransigent transform 29. VERS/VERT (turn) verticalsubvert versatile controversy transverse aversion convert inadvertent invert adversary divert extrovert diverse introvert 30. VO/VOC/VOW (call) vocabulary avow vociferous revoke vocal invoke voice advocate vomit equivocate vowel convoke provoke vocation © Study Smart Tutors 2011 82 Chapter V: Sentence Completions SAT Sentence Completions Summary Sentence Completions Notes What strategy will I employ when answering these questions? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What are ―clues‖ and how do I identify them? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What are ―trigger words‖ and how do I identify them? _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ How should I improve my SAT vocabulary? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Are ―two-blank‖ questions harder than ―one-blank‖ questions? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 83 Chapter VI: Long Passages Mini Reading Lesson #9- SAT Reading vs. English Class SAT Reading Comprehension…the part everybody hates! Reading passages are almost always the most boring and dreaded part of the SAT. However, with a few simple strategies, you can save lots of time and avoid key errors. The first key to understanding SAT reading passages is to know how reading on the SAT differs from reading for your English class at school. How long do you need to remember things you read? English _____________________ SAT ________________________ What’s being graded and how? English _____________________ SAT ________________________ What happens on a Multiple Choice Test if a student objects to a correct answer? English _____________________ SAT ________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 84 Chapter VI: Long Passages How to read SAT passages: Essentially, there are two ways to read. One of them is how the SAT wants you to read, the other is how you SHOULD be reading SAT passages. Take a look at the following chart: ACTIVE READING You turn your brain on before reading Great for: School reading, research, the SAT/ACT/PSAT/AP Tests You think critically about the author/characters while reading You underline key aspects and make notes as you read PASSIVE READING Brain is off during reading Great for: Magazines, Harry Potter books, brochures, etc You simply read/skim to understand the main point You simply lie on the couch and flip the pages Remember: If you underline everything, it becomes meaningless! Look for key aspects such as characters or key arguments © Study Smart Tutors 2011 85 Chapter VI: Long Passages SAT Reading Mini Lesson #10-Long Passages Basic Strategy: Basic Strategy is a term used by blackjack players to describe the decisions a player should make in all of the possible situations at a blackjack table. By utilizing basic strategy, blackjack players give themselves the best mathematical chance at winning every hand. Basic Strategy does not prevent these gamblers from losing, nor will it guarantee that you get every question correct. However by using basic strategy on the SAT reading passages, who will prevent careless errors and save time! Step 1. ________________________________________ Each long passage will be preceded by an italicized blurb about the passage. Read it! This will give you a general idea about what you are about to read. Step 2. ________________________________________ This doesn‘t mean read the whole thing! Read the first paragraph and skim the passage from there. Remember, you get no points for understanding the passage as a whole. Step 3. ________________________________________ After you have skimmed the passage, head for the questions and start breaking them down. We will discuss specifically the order in which you should answer the questions. Step 4. ________________________________________ You don‘t get extra points for trying to answer the question from memory. All the answers to the questions are right in front of you. Go back to the passage and find the required information. Step 5. ________________________________________ Like they do in other sections of the test, ETS will give you many answers that sound good to trip you up. To avoid these traps, cover the answer choices and predict in the same method as you would for sentence completions. Don‘t plug in the answer choices! Step 6. ________________________________________ Trust your prediction and look for trap answers. Remember, if you can eliminate one answer it pays to guess. Remember, the key to skimming is to learn the author’s argument…..Find the THESIS! Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 86 Chapter VI: Long Passages SAT Reading Mini Lesson #11-Further Explanation of Long Passage Strategy Steps 1 and 2 Sampling SAT-Style Passages Spend ONE MINUTE, skim the passage, and Underline the key “thesis” statement in the passage Now go back and READ the passage 1. Where are some of the other key arguments, and how do those fit in with the thesis? 2. What is the author’s tone? 3. What would a different author disagreeing with the author of the actual passage write about the subject? What would he/she argue? What about an author agreeing with the author of the actual passage? 4. What kind of literary devices does the author use? Although you WILL NOT be reading SAT passages in detail on the test, the goal of this drill is to practice understanding the author’s arguments and to anticipate the types of questions that you might be asked. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 87 Chapter VI: Long Passages Sample “SAT Style” Reading comprehension Passage The following passage has been Adapted from: Eminent Victorians, Lytton Strachey (1918) The name of Florence Nightingale lives in the memory of the world by virtue of the heroic adventure of the Crimea. Had she died - as she nearly did - upon her return to England, her reputation would hardly have been different; her legend would have come down to us almost as we know it today - that gentle vision of female virtue which first took shape before the adoring eyes of the sick soldiers at Scutari. Yet, as a matter of fact, she lived for more than half a century after the Crimean War; and during the greater part of that long period all the energy and all the devotion of her extraordinary nature were working at their highest pitch. What she accomplished in those years of unknown labor could, indeed, hardly have been more glorious than her Crimean triumphs; but it was certainly more important. The true history was far stranger even than the myth. In Miss Nightingale's own eyes the adventure of the Crimea was a mere incident - scarcely more than a useful stepping-stone in her career. It was the fulcrum with which she hoped to move the world; but it was only the fulcrum. For more than a generation she was to sit in secret, working her lever: and her real life began at the very moment when, in popular imagination, it had ended. She arrived in England in a shattered state of health. The hardships and the ceaseless efforts of the last two years had undermined her nervous system; her heart was affected; she suffered constantly from fainting-fits and terrible attacks of utter physical prostration. The doctors declared that one thing alone would save her - a complete and prolonged rest. But that was also the one thing with which she would have nothing to do. She had never been in the habit of resting; why should she begin now? Now, when her opportunity had come at last; now, when the iron was hot, and it was time to strike? No; she had work to do; and, come what might, she would do it. The doctors protested in vain; in vain her family lamented and entreated, in vain her friends pointed out to her the madness of such a course. Madness? Mad-possessed - perhaps she was. A frenzy had seized upon her. As she lay upon her sofa, gasping, she devoured blue-books, dictated letters, and, in the intervals of her palpitations, cracked jokes. For months at a stretch she never left her bed. But she would not rest. At this rate, the doctors assured her, even if she did not die, she would become an invalid for life. She could not help that; there was work to be done; and, as for rest, very likely she might rest ... when she had done it. Wherever she went, to London or in the country, in the hills of Derbyshire, or among the rhododendrons at Embley, she was haunted by a ghost. It was the specter of Scutari - the hideous vision of the organization of a military hospital. She would lay that phantom, or she would perish. The whole system of the Army Medical Department, the education of the Medical Officer, the regulations of hospital procedure ... rest? How could she rest while these things were as they were, while, if the like necessity were to arise again, the like results would follow? And, even in peace and at home, what was the sanitary condition of the Army? The mortality in the barracks, was, she found, nearly double the mortality in civil life. 'You might as well take 1, 100 men every year out upon Salisbury Plain and shoot them,' she said. After inspecting the hospitals at Chatham, she smiled grimly. 'Yes, this is one more symptom of the system which, in the Crimea, put to death 16,000 men.' Scutari had given her knowledge; and it had given her power too: her enormous reputation was at her back - an incalculable force. Other work, other duties, might lie before her; but the most urgent, the most obvious, of all was to look to the health of the Army. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 88 Chapter VI: Long Passages SAT Reading Mini Lesson #12-Further Info of Long passage Strategy Step 3 The reading passage questions will not come in a specific order of difficulty. It will be up to you to decide which questions are easy, medium or difficult. Remember, all the questions are worth the same amount of points, so spend your time to avoid making careless mistakes on easy or medium questions. Essentially, there will be two types of questions to test your knowledge of long passages. The first type of question will ask you to literally comprehend the meaning of the passage. The second type of questions can be described as reasoning questions and will ask you to understand SLIGHTLY beyond the literal meaning of the passage. Comprehension Questions Ask about the passage Usually specific Can be done quickly (do these 1st) Questions include “Vocab in context, line reference, and lead phrase” Worth one point Reasoning Questions Ask about the passage Usually not specific Takes a bit more time (do these 2nd) Questions include “author’s argument, tone, main point, etc…” Worth one point Ordering the Questions Comprehension Questions Reasoning Questions Ask about the passage Ask about the author’s argument © Study Smart Tutors 2011 89 Chapter VI: Long Passages SAT Reading Mini Lesson #13-Comprehension Questions Facts about Comprehension Questions Look to complete literal comprehension questions first! These questions will most likely be the easier of the two question types These questions often contain line numbers that will tell you exactly where in the passage that you need to look to find the answer. These questions include: line reference questions, lead word questions and vocabulary in context questions Line Reference Questions The best way to spot literal comprehension questions is to look for a specific line reference within the question. Examples: The author uses the quote from Smith‘s book (line 67) to demonstrate that In lines 23-24 the main character‘s primary concern is According to paragraph 2 (lines 19-24) archeologists studied the fossils in order to Many times you will be able to solve these questions just by going to those specific lines. However, don‘t be fooled - the answers to the questions often lay just a few lines away from the given lines. These questions are often solved best by going back to the passage, finding the answer and stating it in your own words. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 90 Chapter VI: Long Passages Vocabulary in Context Questions Some line reference questions will be deemed vocabulary questions. For instance a question could ask you about the meaning of the word ―spell‖ in line 45. Be careful because the words that they ask you about will always have multiple meanings. Therefore, it‘s important to treat these questions in the same way that you would treat sentence completions. Even if you don‘t know the exact meaning of the word, you should be able to use the context to get a general idea of what the word means. ****Because Vocabulary in context questions can most always be solved quickly, you should always do these questions first!**** Steps to Solve Vocabulary In Context Questions: Step 1. _________________________________________________________________ Step 2. _________________________________________________________________ Step 3. _________________________________________________________________ Step 4. _________________________________________________________________ Step 5. _________________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 91 Chapter VI: Long Passages Chronological Order and Lead Phrase Questions: Many specific and literal reading comprehension questions do not contain a line number. However, this does not mean that these questions are more difficult or any less straightforward. For instance, if a question asks about the ―Bronze Age‖ you would naturally go to the passage and look for the words ―Bronze Age.‖ This is the lead phrase that will help you find the answer to the question. Circle the lead word/phrase in the following example questions: The author suggests that mystery writers tend to According to the passage, which of the following is unique to Russian literature of the 19th century. The author of the passage suggests that he was able to publish his first book because In the passage, the invention of the wheel is compared to In each question above, a lead word is there to tell you where in the passage to look for the answer. The good news for you is that the questions will come in roughly chronological order. So, you can often use the line reference questions to help you find the correct place in the passage to look for the lead word. Just like with line reference questions, you will usually need to look a few lines before and after the lead word to understand the full context. Use the same strategies to answer the question in your own words and then use process of elimination. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 92 Chapter VI: Long Passages SAT Reading Mini Lesson #14-Reasoning Questions Reasoning Questions Reasoning questions are simply two-step questions. They ask you to find the information in the passage and then figure out how or why the author uses that information. Reasoning questions test what the author says or means while literal comprehension questions test what the passage says or means. These questions are typically harder than literal comprehension questions so it‘s usually a good idea to save these until the end Reasoning questions typically do not ask about the passage itself, but rather the author‘s views and intent Cover the answers and write your own prediction whenever possible When using process of elimination, look out for trap answer choices Extended Reasoning Questions: Below is a list of the type of difficult extended reasoning questions that you will be asked following short passages. 1. Strengthen/Weaken Questions Most short passages that contain an argument of some kind will ask you a question about how to make the author‘s point better or worse. Make sure you know whether ETS wants you to help the author by providing more evidence to support his or her point, or if they want you to provide contradictory information to attack the author‘s position. Here‘s an example of what a question might look like. If true, the author‘s argument would be most weakened by which of the following statements? The author‘s argument would most likely be strengthened if it were true that… Before answering these questions, you must know the main point of the passage and what side you need to take. Then use process of elimination to find your answer. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 93 Chapter VI: Long Passages 2. Inference Questions The definition of an inference is a reasonable conclusion based upon analysis of available evidence. Police investigators, scientists and engineers all must make inferences in their jobs each day…but these are not the type of inferences ETS wants from you. ETS wants you to infer something that MUST be true based on what you have read. Wrong answers will either be directly stated in the passage or go way beyond the level of inference ETS is looking for. When you look at the answer choices, try to find the ―onestep inference,‖ something that is just a small step beyond what is directly stated. Here is an example. Let‘s say the passage stated that… Ms. Nelson came to class this morning with wet hair. What can be inferred from the preceding statement? (A) She ran through the sprinklers (B) She was sweating from the gym (C) She showered before class (D) Her hair is not dry (E) She likes to style his hair that way According to ETS (D) would be the answer. All we can infer is that sometime between when she woke up and when she came to class, Ms. Nelson‘s hair came into contact with liquid and is therefore not currently dry. Would a detective infer that Ms. Nelson probably took a shower before coming to work? Of course, but for the purpose of the SAT, that inference would be wrong. Remember, these types of questions will be asking you to find the best answer, not the right answer. Unfortunately, it is often difficult to write in our own prediction on these types of questions. So be careful and use process of elimination. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 94 Chapter VI: Long Passages 3. Author Agreement/Response Questions These questions expect you to think about how the author would respond to a certain statement. Do they expect you to read the author‘s mind? No, therefore the answers to these questions lie in your main idea statement. Just like inference questions, take care not to go too far with your answers. 4. “Except” Questions ―Except‖ questions are very tedious as they are basically many literal comprehension questions rolled into one. Instead of asking which of the answer choices is supported by the passage, except questions ask you which is NOT supported by the passage. Therefore, to answer these questions correctly, you have to go back to the passage and cross out the four answers that ARE mentioned or that you can find support for. Because these questions are often very time consuming, it is never a bad idea to save these questions until the end. 5. Analogous Reasoning Questions In 2005, when the SAT went through its most major retooling, analogies were removed at the request of the University of California system, which thought them to be pointless and unnecessarily difficult. However, ETS replaced them with something similar rather than eliminating them entirely. When you take the exam, you will be confronted with questions asking for analogous reasoning. In these questions, you will be asked to match the relationship between objects or situations in a given passage with a similar case in the answer choices. Remember, details of the relationship are not important. Focus on the main point of how the people or objects are related. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 95 Chapter VI: Long Passages 6. Literary Device Questions ETS will occasionally throw in some literary terms that they think you should know. Don‘t fear, they don‘t usually ask about the fancy literary devices you learned in 10th grade English class. Here‘s a quick review of terms they might ask you about: Simile:________________________________________________________ Examples: He was mad as a bull seeing red. Her blue eyes were like deep blue pools of tropical ocean water. Metaphor:____________________________________________________ Examples: She is a card. Standardized tests are a joke. Personification:____________________________________________ Examples: Cold clawed at my soul with its sharp nails. Rhetorical Questions: __________ ______________________________ Examples: How much are my SAT scores going to affect my future happiness? Hyperbole: _____________________________________________________________ Examples: I‘m so hungry, I could eat a horse. I feel like the SAT took a million hours. Irony: _____________________________________________________________ Examples: I‘m really excited for the drive, it‘s only going to take 6 hours with all the traffic. Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 96 Chapter VI: Long Passages Big Picture Questions Although there are two main question types for long passage reading comprehension, a third question type also exists. These questions can be called general questions because they ask about the passage as a whole. These questions exist to make sure that you understand the gist and the primary purpose of the passage. Because of this, always save these questions for LAST! By the time you get around to answering these questions, you will have read the passage multiple times and hopefully have a very good idea about the general purpose of the passage. Examples of general questions include: ―The tone of the author can best be described as…‖ ―The main point of the passage is that…‖ The Best way to Predict on Tone Questions: 1. ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ 2. ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 97 Chapter VI: Long Passages Reading Comprehension Question Type Drill Take a look at some examples, which of the following are literal questions and which are reasoning? 1. In line 8, vacuous most nearly means (L/R) 2. Which of the following best describes how the author would feel about nuclear power? (L/R) 3. In lines 13-18, ―scientist argue…facts‖ suggest that Nobel Prize winners (L/R) 4. Which of the following statements best describes the author‘s opinion of baseball at the turn of the 20th century? (L/R) 5. The discussion in lines 34-41 implies that the treatment of children in 19th century Russia (L/R) On reasoning questions, remember that ETS will be trying to trick you! While a question may ask about a particular point in the passage, the reason that the author uses this point could lie elsewhere in the passage. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 98 Chapter VI: Long Passages Reasoning Question Puzzle-Fit If you‘ve ever practiced SAT reading comprehension passages, you‘ve probably noticed that the questions seem repetitive. In fact, they are. The SAT uses long passages to test your ability to identify and comprehend only a FEW key sentences in the passage. Then, all of the REASONING questions surround these few ideas. So What? 1. After you‘ve finished answering all the reasoning questions, go back and look at your answers. The answer choices that you‘ve circled should fit together - they should all agree with one another. These correct answers should seem repetitive and fit within the author’s thesis. 2. If they don‘t, go back and see which ones stand out because they don‘t fit in your puzzle. 3. If you can‘t see a pattern, you‘ve probably misunderstood or failed to identify the key points of the author‘s argument © Study Smart Tutors 2011 99 Chapter VI: Long Passages SAT Reading Mini Lesson #15-Reading Comprehension Traps The key to answering reading comprehension questions correctly is to not fall into ETS traps! There are many ways to trick you on reading comprehension, but these traps are almost always easy to spot if you know what you are looking for. The Big Six Traps 1. ________________________________________ Often ETS will make answer choices deceptive, meaning that the statement may be true or may be related to the passage but does not answer the question that is asked. 2. ________________________________________ This trap is often the easiest to spot because extreme words are difficult to miss. Absolute statements are almost always wrong. If anyone might get offended by an answer choice, it isn‘t correct. Words like, best, never, must, most, worst, totally, always, only, cannot, all…etc signal extreme language and are never correct. When you see these words, eliminate the answer. Example: The author mentions his visit to the store (lines 13-19) primarily to show that… (A) California avocados are better than any other avocado in the world (B) Markets often do not stock the best produce (C) Smaller avocadoes are always more flavorful than larger ones If you narrowed the answers down to these three choices, which would you choose? 3. ________________________________________ This trap really applies to questions that ask about the main idea of the passage. Oftentimes on these general questions, ETS will throw something at you from just one part of the passage or they will give you something so broad that it could not possibly be the main idea. Example: What is the main idea of the passage? Without knowing anything about the passage, which of these look too specific or too vague? (A) Cheese is a great food (B) Different regions are famous for producing different flavors of cheese (C) The cheese made in Asiago, Italy is very expensive © Study Smart Tutors 2011 100 Chapter VI: Long Passages 4. ________________________________________ ETS loves this one! These are statements that are true or that you could infer from the passage but are not explicitly stated. ETS hopes these answers will trigger something you have learned and cause you to pick the wrong answer. 5. ________________________________________ Sometimes, ETS will throw in wrong answers that are the exact opposite of what the passage says about a given subject. To spot this trap, make sure you read the entire answer choice. 6. ________________________________________ With this trap, part of the answer will be correct while another part will be wrong. ETS hopes you will only read the first part, see that it‘s correct and move on. Be sure to read the entire answer before choosing it © Study Smart Tutors 2011 101 Chapter VI: Long Passages SAT Reading Mini Lesson #16-Long Passage Duals Dual long passages scare almost everybody but they do not require any more work than any of the long passages that you have already done. Take a look at the following steps to help you answer these questions most effectively. Step 1. _________________________________________________________________ Step 2. _________________________________________________________________ Step 3. _________________________________________________________________ Remember to answer specific questions first and general questions last, just like you would if there was only one passage Step 4. _________________________________________________________________ Step 5. _________________________________________________________________ Remember to answer specific questions first and general questions last, just like you would if there was only one passage Step 6. ________________________________________________________________ By this time, these questions should not be that difficult because you will have spent a lot of time looking at both passages and recognizing the differences and similarities between them. Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 102 Chapter VI: Long Passages Long Passages Summary Long Passages Notes: How does SAT reading differ than my English class? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Where should I be spending my time? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What is the first thing I do when I look at a long passage? _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ What types of questions will I see? How should I order them? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ How can I use the ―Cover and Predict‖ method on long passages? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What do ―John Q. Public‖ trap answers look like on passage questions? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 103 Chapter VII: Short Passages and Fiction SAT Reading Mini Lesson #17- Short Single Passages The SAT already tests your reading comprehension skills with long passages, so why do they do it again with short passages? We think it‘s because they hate you and they like to waste your time. ETS claims to test you on both short and long reading passages in order to test your ―extended reasoning‖ abilities. Basically, they want to know what conclusions you can draw from your reading. Different Lengths equal different strategies! Because short passages don‘t take much time to read over, make sure you actually read them before heading to the questions. The key when you are reading short passages is underline or write down a MAIN IDEA STATEMENT for each passage. Get in the habit of writing down the main idea of the paragraph before you move to the questions. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 104 Chapter VII: Short Passages and Fiction SAT Reading Mini Lesson #18-Short Paired Passages The SAT will ask you a series of questions based on two short passages that will be paired together. Unlike long passage duals, these passages will likely not include any questions that ask about only one of the passages. Expect that all questions will ask about BOTH passages. Steps to solving these questions: Step 1- _________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Step 2- _________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Step 3- _________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Step 4-_________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Step 5- _________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 105 Chapter VII: Short Passages and Fiction SAT Reading Mini Lesson #19-Fiction Passages There is still one type of reading question that we have not yet discussed. Fiction passages. These are not harder than other types of reading passages but you do have to take a slightly different approach to solving them. Fiction Passages usually ask about: 1. 2. 3. 4. ______________________ ______________________ ______________________ ______________________ Fiction passages usually have three types of characters: The Protagonist: _____________________________________________________ The Antagonist: _____________________________________________________ The Foil:____________________________________________________________ *Note: SAT fiction passages almost always have a foil that you will need to identify Steps to solving questions based on a fiction passage: Step 1. _________________________________________________________________ Step 2. _________________________________________________________________ Step 3. _________________________________________________________________ Step 4. _________________________________________________________________ Step 5. _________________________________________________________________ Fiction passages will ask you about tone, mood and motivation rather than focusing on literal comprehension questions. Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 106 Chapter VII: Short Passages and Fiction Short and Fiction Passages Summary Short and Fiction Passages Notes: How does the strategy for short ingle passages differ than the strategy for long single passages? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What about the difference between short duals and long duals? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ How should I skim a fiction passage? _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ What types of characters will fiction passages typically include? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ How can I use the ―Cover and Predict‖ method on short and fiction passages? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 107 SAT Math © Study Smart Tutors 2011 108 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #1-SAT Math Intro General Strategies, Information, and Tips The Math portion of the SAT Contains Three Sections: o 18 Questions Multiple Choice/Grid-Ins…25 Minutes o 20 Questions Multiple Choice…25 Minutes o 16 Questions Multiple Choice…20 Minutes The SAT Math sections are composed of: Basic Arithmetic (Fundamentals) Ratios and proportions Percents Averages Probability Permutations Other little things Algebra I Algebra II Geometry Other Little Things © Study Smart Tutors 2011 109 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals What about Formulas? The formulas that you will need for the SAT Math test are given to you at the beginning of each section. Do not hesitate to flip back to these formulas throughout the test. Students often make silly mistakes on problems that include "special right triangles" Why are these mistakes silly? Because the formulas for special right triangles are GIVEN to you! To Guess or not to Guess? If you can eliminate ONE answer, it pays to guess! You don‘t have to answer every question to get a good score! There is NO PENALTY for guessing on GRID-INS! Quick facts: 1. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ 2. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 110 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Calculator Quick Facts: o Make sure to bring a calculator to the test! o Your calculator doesn‘t need to be fancy. Just make sure that it doesn‘t beep or have a keyboard. o Be careful when putting numbers in the calculator. Check each number as you input it. Always clear your work after you finish a problem or a step. o Your calculator only does what you tell it. Use the calculator as a tool, not a crutch. o Set up the problem on paper first. By doing this, you will prevent confusion and careless errors. o Don‘t rely on the memory function on your calculator. Scratch paper is here for a reason! o Make sure you are performing equations in the proper order, whether you are using pencil and paper or a calculator. o Make sure your calculator has fresh batteries. It‘s always a good idea to bring extras, just in case. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 111 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Things to Know: There are six arithmetic operations tested on the SAT: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, exponents and square roots. The operations must be performed in PEMDAS order. Apply the distributive property whenever you can. Often this will take you directly to the answer. A fraction is just another way to show division. Let your calculator help you with fractions. Know how to convert from fractions to decimals on your calculator. A ratio can be written as a fraction, but is not a fraction. A ratio compares a part to a part, while a fraction compares a part to a whole. Always use the RATIO BOX to solve ratio questions. Review the differences between direct and indirect variation. (Discussed below) If a problem asks you to find a series of percentage changes, remember that each change is a result of the previous one. To find the average of several values, add them up and divide by the number of items. Use the Average Pizza (discussed below) to solve average problems quickly. The median of a group of numbers is the number in the middle when the group is arranged from smallest to largest. If there is an even number of numbers, the median is the average of the two middle numbers. The mode of a group of numbers is the number that appears most often. Exponents are a way of writing when a number is multiplied by itself multiple times. To multiply exponential expressions with the same base, just ADD the exponents. To divide, simply SUBTRACT the exponents. To raise one exponential expression to another power, multiply the exponent © Study Smart Tutors 2011 112 SAT Math Mini Lesson #2-John Q. Public Math How can John Q. Public help you on SAT Math questions? John Q. Public describes the ―typical student.‖ He is neither dumb nor smart and he has loads of difficulty with SAT Math. John is who ETS, the test makers, want you to be! YOU DO NOT want to be John! Just like in other sections, John Q. Public can be used to your advantage. By understanding John, you will avoid the same simple traps that prevent him from getting a good score! ETS is trying to fool you… Easy questions usually have simple answers, so trust your hunches Double Check hunches on medium questions Eliminate the ―John Q. Public‖ answers on hard questions DON’T THINK LIKE JOHN: 1. John gets easy math questions right, but almost always gets hard questions wrong. You can get the hard questions right. 2. On hard questions, John is drawn to ―easy‖ answers derived from simple arithmetic, math operations he understands. Thus, you should eliminate the ―easy‖ answers on tough questions. 3. On difficult problems that ask you to find least or greatest number that satisfies the conditions in the problem, eliminate the least and greatest answers. (John‘s favorites!) Those are never correct on difficult questions! 4. On difficult questions, you can almost always eliminate any answer choice that says ―it cannot be determined from the information given.‖ 5. The reason to use John is NOT to find the ONE correct answer, but rather to improve your odds when you are forced to guess, and get rid of any answers that will trap you and seem to be correct if you have made a careless mistake. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 113 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals POE (Process of Elimination): Remember, every question will have four WRONG answers and only one CORRECT answer! Use Order of Difficulty to eliminate ―trap‖ answers Don‘t Forget: Easy questions = Easy answers Hard Questions = Hard Answers Take a look at tough problem… 17. A shirt is selling for $100 after a 20% discount. What is the original price? (A) $200 (B) $125 (C) $120 (D) $80 (E) $75 Step 1- Identify the difficulty level of the problem. What type of problem is this one? Step 2-What would John Q. Public do? (Where are the seemingly obvious answers) Step 3- Are John’s answers “trap” answers? Step 4- What else can we eliminate? Why? Step 5- Getting the answer. At this point, you should have eliminated everything except for the correct answer. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 114 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #3-Key Terms in Math Key Term Integer Real number Rational number Prime number Remainder Absolute Value Product Quotient Sum Difference Consecutive Distinct Union Intersection Rules of zero Definition © Study Smart Tutors 2011 Examples 115 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #4-Ratios Ratios A ratio is simply a comparison between two parts of a whole. Ratios can be written in a few different ways. a/b the ratio of a to b a:b Fractions vs. Ratios Ratio: Part/Part Fraction: Part/Whole Whenever you see a ratio problem, you will always make a RATIO BOX! PART PART WHOLE RATIO MULTIPLIER ACTUAL # 10. A jar contains cardinal and gold jelly beans, The ratio of gold jelly beans to cardinal jelly beans Is 5:3. If the jar contains a total of 160 jelly beans, How many of them are cardinal colored? (A) 30 (B) 53 (C) 60 (D) 100 (E) 160 Step 1- Set up a Ratio Box RATIO MULTIPLIER ACTUAL # Step 2: Enter what you know (Ratio and Actual) Step 3: Use what you know to find what you don’t know (Multiplier). Add it to your box Step 4:Use the box to find what the problem is asking. (Actual # of Cardinal) © Study Smart Tutors 2011 116 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Ratios Practice 10. A candy jar has yellow, blue, and green candies in a ratio of 3:2:1 respectively. If the mixture contains 9 yellow candies, how many total candies are in the bowl? (A) 18 (B) 16 (C) 15 (D) 12 (E) 9 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 117 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Mini Lesson #5-Proportions Direct Variation is simply a fancy term for a proportion. As one quantity goes up, so does the other. The formula for direct variation is simple: X1/Y1 = X2/Y2 5. If two packages hold a total of 12 bagels, how many bagels are in five packages? (A) 12 (B) 24 (C) 30 (D) 36 (E) 60 Set up a Proportion and Cross Multiply: Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 118 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Indirect Variation is the exact opposite of direct variation. As one quantity goes up, the one other goes down. The formula is the exact opposite of direct variation… X1Y1 = X2Y2 15. The amount of time it takes to consume a buffalo is inversely proportional to the number of coyotes. If it takes 12 coyotes 3 days to consume a buffalo, how many fewer hours will it take if there are 4 more coyotes? (A) ¼ (B) ¾ (C) 18 (D) 24 (E) 54 Step 1- Make sure all terms are in the same units. If they aren’t, convert them. Step 2- Plug numbers into indirect variation formula and solve for x. Step 3- Is x the answer? Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 119 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Proportions Practice 14. A sports agent’s commission varies directly as the size of the size of the contract the agent’s player receives. If the player signs for $200,000 the agent receives $14,000. What is the agent’s commission if the player signs for $150,000? (A) $7,000 (B) $ 10,500 (C) $14,000 (D) $15,000 (E) $21,000 11. If y varies directly as z2, and y=4 and z=3, then what is the value of y when z=12? (A) 8 (B) 16 (C) 36 (D) 48 (E) 64 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 120 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #6-Exponents Exponents are just a simple way of writing multiplication. When in doubt about exponents, use the rules of MADSPM…… Remember A negative number raised to an even power becomes positive A negative number raised to an odd power stays negative If you square a positive fraction less than one, MADSPM? it gets smaller M_______________ A_______________ Try a few…. D_______________ S_______________ 22 x 25= r6/r2= P_______________ M______________ 7 4 (y ) = Example: 15. If J6 < J3, which of the following could be a value of J? (A) 6 (B) 1 (C) 0 (D) 1/3 (E) -1/3 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 121 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Exponents Practice 4. If the yth term in a sequence is 3x2y, what is the 10th term in the sequence? (A) 60 (B) 1,024 (C) 1,536 (D) 3,072 (E) 6,144 18. If 6412 = 4x, x=? (A) 4 (B) 24 (C) 36 (D) 72 (E) 192 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 122 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #7-Percents Solve percent problems the same way that you solve fraction problems. Percent simply means, ―per 100‖ or ―out of 100.‖ To convert a percentage to a decimal, move the decimal point two places to the left. To convert the other way, just move the decimal two places to the right. What Percent of What? The easy way to solve questions like the one below is to remember this simple trick: Is = what % Of 100 8. If 3/7 of z is 42, what is 5/7 of z? (A) 10 (B) 18 (C) 45 (D) 70 (E) 98 Step 1- What is the first thing we need to solve for? Step 2- What is the value of Z? Step 3- How should we proceed? Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 123 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Percents Practice 11. Jody is picking a movie to watch this evening. Of the movies in her cabinet, 9 are romantic comedies. She will pick one movie at random. If the probability of the selected movie being a romantic comedy is 25%, how many movies are on the shelf? 16. A store owner raises the price of a $50 item 20%. After it does not sell, he reduces the price by 20%. What is the final price of the item? (A) $48 (B) $49 (C) $50 (D) $60 (E) $100 8. In 1950, the populations of town X and town Y were equal. From 1950-1960, the population of town X increased by 60% and the population of town Y decreased by 60%. In 1960, the population of town Y was what % of the population of town X? (A) 25% (B) 36% (C) 40% (D) 60% (E) 120% © Study Smart Tutors 2011 124 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #8-Averages For the SAT, the average, also called the arithmetic mean, is simply the sum of a set of n numbers divided by n. However, just like with many other things, the SAT makes average problems tricky. Thankfully, you will know the easy way to solve any average problem that they could possibly give you. THE AVERGE PIZZA: TOTAL # OF THINGS AVERAGE Take a look at a very difficult problem that can be solved with a few pieces of pizza! 20. If the average (arithmetic mean) of eight numbers is 20 and the average of five of those numbers is 14, what is the average of the other three numbers? (A) 14 (B) 17 (C) 20 (D) 30 (E) 3 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 125 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Step 1: Start by making an average pizza for all eight numbers. ____ __ (X) __ What is the total of those numbers? ________ Step 2-Draw another average pizza for the other five numbers. __ __ (X) __ What is the total of those 5 numbers? ________ What else do you need to solve the problem? How do you find it? Step 3- Draw an average pizza for the final 3 numbers __ __ (X) __ The average is ____ and the answer is ____. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 126 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Averages Practice 10. Xena earns $600 every month except for June and February, when she vacations and earns nothing. What is her average monthly income for the entire year? (A) $275 (B) 300 (C) 500 (D) 600 (E) 720 10. The average speed (arithmetic mean) of 10 drivers on the 405 freeway at 6:00pm is 64 miles per hour. What would the 11th driver’s speed have to be to bring the average of all 11 drivers to 65 miles per hour? (A) 66 (B) 75 (C) 85 (D) 90 (E) 100 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 127 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #9-Median and Mode There will probably be only one question on the SAT that tests your knowledge of median and mode, but because it‘s an easy concept, it‘s a question that you should get right. The MODE of a group of numbers is even easier to find. It‘s simply the number that appears the most. If two numbers tie for the most appearances, that set of data has two modes. The median of a group of numbers is the middle number, just as on the highway, the median is the divider at the center. Steps to finding the median: 1. Put the numbers in order from smallest to largest 2. If there is an ODD number of numbers, the middle number is the median 3. If there is an even number of numbers, take the average of the two middle numbers. Take a look at the following example: 10. If the students in Ms. Prater’s chemistry class scored 90, 91, 83, 85, and 84 on their midterm exams, what is the Median of her class on this test? (A) 90 (B) 88 (C) 86 (D) 85 (E) 84 4. What is the median of the first 5 positive odd integers? (A) 3 (B) 5 (C) 7 (D) 9 (E) 30 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 128 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #10-Probability Probability is the chance that an event will occur. To express the probability of an event you would just count the number of ―successes‖ and count the number of total outcomes and express this as a fraction. Probability of x = __________________________ 12. A bag holds 6 baseballs and 12 other toys. If one item is drawn from the bag at random, what is the probability that the item is a baseball? (A) 1/7 (B) 1/3 (C) 1/2 (D) 2/3 (E) 3/7 Step 1- What is a success in this problem? How many successes are there? Step 2- What is the total number of possible outcomes? Step 3- What is the probability of a success? (Hint: set up a fraction) p = _________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 129 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Probability Practice 17. A basket contains 6 chocolate and 4 mint candies. If two candies are drawn at random, what is the probability that both candies will be chocolate? (A) 2/3 (B) 3/5 (C) 5/9 (D) 1/3 (E) 2/15 3. A basket contains 58 red eggs, 78 green eggs, and the rest are blue. if the probability of choosing a blue egg from this basket at random is 1/5, how many blue eggs are in the basket? (A) 34 (B) 56 (C) 78 (D) 102 (E) 152 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 130 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals SAT Math Mini Lesson #11-Permutations Permutations describe the different ways that items can be arranged in a definite order. For example, they may ask how many different five-letter combinations of the word ROCKY can be made or the way six people can be sat at a dinner party. All permutation questions can be solved quickly using one simple technique. Just make a ―seat‖ for each spot that you have to fill. a sketch might look something like this. In each seat, write how many different ―people‖ can sit down. Remember that people put into previous seats are unavailable. 17. Kimberly wrote 9 papers for her psychology class. She wants to put 7 papers in her portfolio and is deciding on what order to put them in. How many different ways can Kimberly arrange her papers? A) 63 (B) 420 (C) 5,040 (D) 25, 920 (E) 51,840 Step 1- Set up and Fill in Permutation Seats __ x __ x __ x __ x __ x __ x __ Hint: How many papers can go first? How many papers can go second?...Think about this for each ‗seat‘ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 131 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Permutations Practice 19. In a three digit number, all of the digits are different and the units and hundreds digits are prime. How many possible numbers can be made? 15. There are 5 swimmers in a race. If the first place finisher wins a gold medal, the second place finisher wins a silver medal and the third place finisher wins a bronze medal, how many different permutations are possible for the medal winners? (A) 5 (B) 12 (C) 20 (D) 50 (E) 60 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 132 Chapter VIII: Math Fundamentals Math Fundamentals Section Summary Math Fundamentals Notes: Why is it said that SAT math is tricky but not difficult? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ How can the number of the problem help me find the type of answer that the SAT is looking for? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What are the toughest ―fundamentals problems for me to solve? _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ How do I use the ratio box and average pizza? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What types of problems can the ―chair method‖ help me solve? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What do ―John Q. Public‖ trap answers look like math questions? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 133 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra SAT Math Mini Lesson # 12-Avoiding Algebra on the SAT (Part I) THE BEST MATH TACTICS IN THE HISTORY OF HUMAN CIVILIZATION! Best Math Tactics #1 Plug In Your Own Number (Plugging In) What’s So Great about this tactic anyway? Plugging-In our own number allows us to avoid using ALGEBRA to solve SAT math problems. Algebra works great when you are in math class and you have to solve each problem by showing work for each step in order to get full credit. On the SAT, the only thing Algebra is good for is for confusing us and causing us to make stupid mistakes! Remember, you DON‘T get extra points on the SAT for doing the problem ―the right way.‖ As long as you find the answer, the SAT NEVER asks HOW!! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 134 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra BEST MATH TACTIC EVER #1 PLUGGING IN YOUR OWN NUMBER! Plugging-In allows us to take complicated Algebra problems and convert them to simple arithmetic problems. When do I Plug-In My Number? Whenever possible! Look for VARIABLES in the PROBLEM and the ANSWER choices. Look for words such as ―In terms of‖ Steps to Plugging In your own number: Step 1_____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ Step 2_____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ Step 3_____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ Step 4_____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 135 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra Plugging-In Tips: 1. Watch out for Zero and One: These numbers often lead to more than one answer seeming correct—we don‘t recommend plugging in either 2. Don’t use the same number for multiple variables Again, this leads to multiple answers seeming to be correct 3. Remember to check all your answers before moving on Because certain numbers can result in multiple correct answers, make sure to check all answers before moving on. If you find more than one correct answer, don‘t worry. Choose new numbers and plug in again! 4. Pick “Good” Numbers Choose numbers that make the problem as easy as possible. For example, if the problem deals with percents or money, 100 is probably the easiest number to start with. However if the problem has to do with time, numbers such as 60 (seconds to minutes or minutes to hours) 5. Mark your test book with the numbers you choose For example, if you choose 10 for z and 100 for s, cross out the variables and reread the problem with those numbers. When you find the answer (your Target), circle it so you don‘t forget it! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 136 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra Here‘s a moderately difficult problem that becomes very easy when you Plug in: 12. If a store sells a shirt for h dollars, how much would that shirt cost if it was marked down by q% (A) hq (B) 1/4hq (C) h(1-(q/100) (D) q(1-(h/100) (E) 2hq Step 1- Plug your own numbers in for h and q h= qStep 2- Solve the problem using your numbers. Target:________ Step 3- Plug your numbers back into the answer choices and find the choice that matches your target. Try another: 13. If w hats cost z dollars, then how many hats could you buy with $100? (A) 100/w (B) 100wz (C) 100w/z (D) 100z/w (E) wz Follow the same steps that you used on the first problem. What do you do if more than one answer choice works? Read the next section to find out! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 137 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra More Practice with Plugging-In: 16. If the sum of three consecutive odd integers is p, then in terms of p, what is the greatest of the three integers? (A) (p-6)/3 (B) (p-3)/3 (C) p/3 (D) (p+3)/3 (E) (p+6)/3 Think about choosing easy numbers so that the math will work out as quickly as possible! Step 1- Plug your own number in for p Hint: find three consecutive odd integers first Step 2- Solve the problem using your numbers. Target:________ Step 3- Plug your numbers back into the answer choices and find the choice that matches your target. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 138 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra Plugging In Our Own Numbers Practice Again, think about numbers that will make the math on this problem easy… 12. Andrew flies 40 miles in x hours. If he must fly y miles at the same speed, in terms of x and y, how many hours will the trip take? (A) x/(40y) (B) 40/(xy) (C) 40xy (D) (40y)/x (E) (xy)/40 16. If g ≠ 0, which of the following must be true? I. g^2 > g II. 5g > g III. g + 2 >g (A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) I & III only (E) I, II, III 18. At a large bakery, sacks of flour are filled by a machine that weighs each sack to be sure that it holds between 29.75 and 30.25 pounds of flour. Only then is the pack sealed and shipped. If a sack holding j pounds of flour is shipped, which of the following describes all possible values of j? (A) │j - 30│> 1/4 (B) │j + 30│= 1/4 (C) │j - 30│ = 1/4 (D) │j + 30│< 1/4 (E) │j - 30│ < 1/4 Hint: What is the easiest number to plug in on this problem? © Study Smart Tutors 2011 139 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra SAT Math Mini Lesson # 13-Avoiding Algebra on the SAT (Part II) BEST MATH TACTIC EVER #2 PLUG IN THE ANSWER Choices! This tactic allows us to work the problem backwards to solve easy questions quickly and to turn difficult questions into easy ones! When do I use the Answer Choices to solve the problem backwards? When there are numbers in the answer choices or you feel the strong urge to write out a long algebraic expression! (Ex: age problems) Step 1___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ______ Step 2___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ______ Step 3___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ______ Step 4___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________ ______ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 140 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra PRACTICE WITH Plugging in the Answer Choices: Note: If a question asks for a specific amount, Plug In the Answer Choices! 11. Marc is half as old as Tony and three times as old as Ben. If the sum of their ages is 40, how old is Marc? (A) 3 (B) 6 (C) 12 (D) 18 (E) 24 Step 1-Label the answer choices: What are the answers telling us? Step 2-How many columns will we need to label? Step 3-Where should we start? With (C) of course! Marc‘s Age: Sum (A) 3 (B) 6 (C) 12 (D) 18 (E) 24 Tony‘s Age (marc*__): ___ Ben‘s Age(marc/___) ___ ____ Unlike when Plugging-In, when we use PITA we DO NOT need to test all the answers after we have found one that satisfies all the conditions. Remember, when you find the CORRECT ANSWER, then STOP and move on! © Study Smart Tutors 2011 141 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra 17. Chef Emeril has equal amounts flour, sugar and salt. He made pretzels by mixing 1/3 of the flour, ½ of the sugar and ¼ of the salt. If he made 52 pounds of pretzels, how many pounds of sugar did he have to start? (A) 45 (B) 48 (C) 50 (D) 52 (E) 56 Step 1- Are there any trap John Q. Public Answers? Step 2- Label the remaining answer choices Pounds of Sugar: (A) 45 (B) 48 (C) 50 (E) 56 Step 3: Start with (C) and work the steps backwards: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 142 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra More Practice with Plugging in the Answer Choices 6. Serena gives her butler a satin suit and her driver a diamond necklace. If the suit is worth one-fifth of what the necklace is worth, and if the two items together are worth $4800, how much is the necklace worth? (A) $800 (B) $960 (C) $3840 (D) $4000 (E) $4250 7. Jason has twice as many baseballs as Matt. If Jason gives Matt three baseballs, Jason would have one baseball less than Matt. How many baseballs does Jason currently have? (A) 4 (B) 5 (C) 7 (D) 8 (E) 10 12. A private plane pilot flies her plane for two days. The distance she flew on the first day was 150 km less than twice the distance she flew on the second day. If she flew a total of 600 km, what was the distance she flew, in km that she flew on the second day? (A) 250 (B) 275 (C) 350 (D) 375 (E) 450 13. If (q-6)(q-6) = 169, then one Possible value of q is? (A) √7 (B) √13 (C) 7 (D) 19 (E) 49 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 143 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra SAT Math Mini Lesson #15-More Avoiding SAT Algebra Practice 8. If the average (arithmetic mean) of g an q is 20, then the average of (g+7) and (q+17) is? (A) 21 (B) 22 (C) 30 (D) 32 (E) 37 9. A number h, is increased by 5 and the result is multiplied by 5. The result is decreased by 5. Finally, that number is divided by 5. In terms of h, what is the final result? (A) h-5 (B) h-1 (C) h (D) h+4 (E) 5(h+5) 9. If it costs w dollars to buy v tacos, how much will it cost, in dollars, to buy g tacos at the same rate? (A) (wg)/v (B) g/(wv) (C) (vg)/w (D) (wv)/g (E) wvg © Study Smart Tutors 2011 144 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra 14. A group of travelers are equally sharing the $30 cost of a taxi to dinner. If an additional person joins the party, each person will owe $1 less. How many people are currently in the group? (A) 15 (B) 12 (C) 10 (D) 6 (E) 5 7. Let c be an integer greater than 1, let f= the average (arithmetic mean) of the integers from 1 to c. Let g = the average (arithmetic mean) of the integers from o to c. which of the following can be true? I. f = g II. f<g III. f>g (A) I only (B) II only (C) III only (D) II & III only (E) I, II & III 12. 160 students went on a trip to Washington D.C. If there were 28 more girls than boys on the trip, how many boys went on the trip? (A) 52 (B) 66 (C) 80 (D) 94 (E) 132 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 145 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra Mini SAT Math Lesson #16-Functions and Weird Symbols Functions Treat functions like you‘re reading directions on a map. Follow them, and you‘ll end up at your destination. Most function questions will give you a specific value to plug in for x or a given variable, and ask you the value of the function for the given variable. 6. If f(x) = x2 + 2x -3 f(5)= (A) 12 (B) 17 (C) 32 (D) 35 (E) 38 12. Leonard’s band charges by performance. Leonard’s share H, in dollars, for performance y is given by the function H(y) =12y-6. If Leonard earned $42 playing for the band during the month of October, how many performances did the band give? (A) 3 (B) 4 (C) 5 (D) 6 (E) 7 Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 146 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra Weird Symbol Problems If you see a strange symbol on the SAT, such as #,@,$,&, treat the problem like a regular function. For instance: If &y = 2y+2, what is the value of &4? Simply rewrite this problem as f(y)=2y+2, and plug in 4 for y. Notice that nothing is difficult about the problem unless you absolutely don‘t know what to do with the weird symbol. 5. If x @ y = 4x+y, what is the value of 3@4? (A) 8 (B) 10 (C) 12 (D) 14 (E) 16 Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 147 Chapter IX: Avoiding Algebra Avoiding Algebra Summary Avoiding Algebra Notes: Why does algebra suck on the SAT? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What in the problem tells me I can plug in my own number? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ What in the problem tells me I can plug in the answer choices? _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ What do weird symbols always mean? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary © Study Smart Tutors 2011 148 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Mini SAT Math Lesson #17-Geometry Introduction Geometry Facts Revealed: o When you find a geometry problem, see if you can solve it with a logical guess before you actually try to figure it out o Be familiar with the size of common angles o Most shapes will be drawn to scale - use your eyes to eliminate illogical answers o When a diagram is not given or is not drawn to scale, redraw it o Fill in any missing info in the figure before solving the problem © Study Smart Tutors 2011 149 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Types of Geometry Problems Include: ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ Steps to solve ANY GEOMETRY PROBLEM Step 1` __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ Step 2__________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ Step 3__________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ Step 4__________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 150 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Mini SAT Math Lesson #18-Triangles Triangles All Triangles are ______ degrees. The area of any triangle is equal to 1/2 (______)(_______) The height must always form a right angle with the base An equilateral triangle has 3 equal sides and three equal angles. The angles all equal _____ degrees. An isosceles triangle has two equal sides and two opposite equal angles. Right triangles contain one ninety degree ―right angle‖ The Pythagorean Theorem states that in any right triangle the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides. Remember popular Pythagorean ―triples‖ such as 3-4-5 or 5-12-13. You don‘t need to remember the formulas for ―special right triangles.‖ the formulas for 45-45-90 and 30-60-90 triangles are printed at the beginning of each section. The length of a side of any triangle must be less than the sum of the other two sides and greater than their difference Example: E F Third Side Rule D G 13. Figure DEFG is a square. If EG= 4, what is the area of the square? (A) 4 (B) 4√2 (C) 8 (D) 16 (E) 32 Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 151 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Triangles Practice 16. An equilateral triangle has a side with a length of 10. What is the area of the triangle? (A) 5√2 (B) 25 (C) 25√3 (D) 50√3 (E) 100√2 19. The lengths of two sides of a triangle are 10 and 14. If the length of the third side is an integer, what is the least possible perimeter of the triangle. (A) 24 (B) 26 (C) 28 (D) 30 (E) 34 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 152 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins SAT Math Mini Lesson #19-Circles Circles The circumference of a circle is equal to ____ or _____. The area of a circle is equal to ____, where __ is the radius. tangent lines touch a circle at exactly one point and form a ninety degree angle. Circles have 360 degrees. Some Circles Formulas that aren’t given to you! 1. Arc Length= 2. Arc Area= Cwhole Circle (Degrees of arc/360) Awhole Circle (Degrees shaded/360) The SAT feels students can ―logic‖ their way to figuring out these formulas by simply understanding proportions. Remember, if the question is talking about arc length, that means that it wants to know about the distance on the outside of the circle, meaning you need to start with the circumference formula. If the problem asks about arc area, that means it wants to know about the size of the inside of the circle, meaning you need to start with the area formula. 10. Points Y and Z lie on the circle (not pictured) with center O such that YOZ is equilateral. What is the probability that a randomly selected point in the circle lies on minor arc YZ? (A) 1/360 (B) 1/60 (C) 1/6 (D) 6/10 (E) It cannot be determined from the information given. Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 153 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Circles Practice 7. Two spheres, one with radius 14 and one with radius 8, are tangent to each other. If T is any point on one sphere and W is any point on the other sphere, what is the maximum possible length of TW? (A) 14 (B) 22 (C) 28 (D) 36 (E) 44 10. If the length of a minor arc formed by two radii in a circle is 1/40 of the circumference, what is the arc’s measurement in degrees? (A) 3 (B) 6 (C) 9 (D) 12 (E) 15 16. If the point (8,6) lies on a circle with a center at (0,0) what is the area of the circle? (A) 18 π (B) 36 π (C) 48 π (D) 64 π (E) 100 π © Study Smart Tutors 2011 154 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins SAT Math Mini Lesson #20-Lines, Degrees, and Angles Lines, Angles and Degrees: The equation for a line is y=mx+b. M is the slope and b is the y-intercept Parallel lines always have the same slope, perpendicular lines always have negative reciprocal slopes The slope of any line is equal to (y2-y1)/(x2-x1) When you think angles, think about a circle Every line is a 180 degree angle Four angles are formed when two lines cross. The sum of these four angles measures 360 degrees. When third line cuts across two parallel lines, the small angles are all equal and the large angles are all equal. The sum of a small angle and a big angle is equal to 180 degrees. 7. In an xy-plane, what is the distance from (10,6) to (4,14)? (A) 6 (B) 8 (C) 10 (D) 12 (E) 14 Remember the distance formula? Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 155 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins SAT Math Mini Lesson #21-4-Sided Figures Four-Sided Shapes A square is a rectangle whose sides are equal The perimeter of any quadrilateral is simply the sum of its sides. The area of a rectangle is equal to the base (x) height Remember that any polygon can be divided into triangles The volume of a rectangular solid is equal to the length x width x height Remember how to plot and locate points on a coordinate plane B C 8 A D E 4 14. In the figure above, ABCD is a rectangle. If the area of triangle ABE is 40, what is the area of the rectangle? (A) 20 (B) 28 (C) 40 (D) 80 (E) 112 4-Sided Figures Practice 14. In square ABCD (not pictured) CD=3, what is the length of diagonal BD? (A) 3√2 (B) 3√3 (C) 6 (D) 6√2 (E) 9 © Study Smart Tutors 2011 156 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Geometry Practice: 12. Two lines, q and l, which never intersect, are both tangent to circle T. If the smallest distance between any point on q and any point on l is four less than triple that distance, what is the area of circle T? (A) π (B) π/4 (C) 2π (D) 4π (E) 9π Step 1- Draw the Figure! Step 2- Write all other information given: Step 3- What formulas will I need? d=? r=? A=? © Study Smart Tutors 2011 157 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins SAT Math Mini Lesson #22- Avoiding Algebra Tactics to Solve Geometry Problems Just because problems include geometry doesn‘t mean that our two avoiding algebra tactics don‘t work. Both plugging in our own numbers and plugging in the answer choices work well on with triangles. circles, angles, etc. Take a look at the following problems and see what avoiding algebra tactic can be used… 20. The base of triangle G is 40% less than the length of rectangle W. The height of triangle G is 50% greater than the width of rectangle W. The area of triangle G is what percent of the area of rectangle W? (A) 10 (B) 45 (C) 90 (D) 100 (E) 125 What strategy can you use to solve this difficult problem? (Hint: you can use this strategy for any problem that uses percents) 16. If a circle has an area that is half the circumference, what is its radius? (A) 1/2 (B) 1 (C) 4 (D) π (E) 2π © Study Smart Tutors 2011 158 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins SAT Math Mini Lesson #23-Using Logic to Solve Geometry Problems Has anyone ever tried to setup a geometry problem, written down your formulas, and labeled your figure, and then gotten stuck? Remember, when you see a problem that doesn‘t say ―figure is not drawn to scale,‖ the figure IS drawn to scale. Use the logic side of your brain to eliminate answers that don‘t meet your ―eyeball test.‖ Q R 20 P S Hint: About how much of the figure looks shaded? 20. If the figure PQRS above is a square, what is the area of the shaded region? (A) 20 π (B) 40(π -2) (C) 200 (π -2) (D) 100 π (E) 400 π © Study Smart Tutors 2011 159 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins SAT Math Mini Lesson #24-Grid-Ins Made Easy o One SAT math section will contain a group of ten questions that do not contain multiple choice answers. o Although the format is different, Grid-In questions are just like every other SAT math question. You should use all of the techniques discussed in this study guide. o WATCH OUT! The Grid-In questions can easily lead to careless errors. Memorize the instructions and leave a little time to check your work carefully. o There is NO GUESSING PENALTY on the Grid-In section. Always put something down, even if you have no idea how to do the problem. o You should always write in your answer in the boxes so that you don‘t make careless errors. Remember however, that only what you bubble in will be graded. o Always grid your answer as far to the left as possible. o Although a question may contain fractions, there is no need to grid your answer as a fraction. If you can make the problem easier by using decimals, simply record your answer as a decimal. o Similarly, it is perfectly acceptable to grid your answer as a fraction, even if the question uses decimals. o Don‘t waste time rounding decimals or reducing fractions. You won‘t get any extra points and it could cause you to make a mistake. o The scoring machine will not read a mixed number. Convert mixed numbers to fractions or decimals before Gridding-In. o Some Grid-Ins will have multiple correct answers. o Like other SAT math questions, Grid-Ins are arranged in order of difficulty. The first third of the ten questions will be easy, the second third medium and the last third will be difficult. o Negative signs, % symbols and π cannot be gridded-in. © Study Smart Tutors 2011 160 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Grid-In Practice 15. Forty Percent of the members of golf course wore white golf shoes. Twenty percent wore black golf shoes. If twenty-five percent of the remaining members wore brown golf shoes, what percent of the members of the golf course did not wear white, black or brown golf shoes? (Disregard the % when gridding your answer) Step 1- Is there a strategy that can help us solve this? Step 2- What will be the best number to plug in for the total members? Step 3- How many people are wearing white shoes? Step 4- How many people are wearing black shoes? Step 5- How many people are wearing brown shoes? Step 6- How many people are left? Step 7- Is this the answer? © Study Smart Tutors 2011 161 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Grid Ins Practice 10. If a-b=6 and b+4=24, what is the value of b/a? 16. If the function f is defined as f(t)=t2+5 f(d-2)=2d, what is the value of d? 16. The average of four numbers is 14. The average (arithmetic mean) of a different set of six numbers is 42. What is the average (arithmetic mean) of all ten numbers? © Study Smart Tutors 2011 162 Chapter X: Geometry and Grid-Ins Geometry and Grid-Ins Summary Geometry and Grid-Ins Notes: What is the first thing I should do when I look at geometry problems? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ How can my ―logic brain‖ help me solve geometry problems? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Do I need to memorize formulas? If so, which ones? _____________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________ What does ―drawn to scale‖ mean? Are SAT problems always ―to scale?‖ _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Are avoiding algebra tactics useless on geometry and grid-in problems? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Are ―grid-ins‖ harder than other SAT math questions? What should my strategy be when solving them? _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________ Summary: © Study Smart Tutors 2011 163