On
the GRE CAT, expect to see three to four Reading Comprehension
passages with approximately three to four questions for each
passage. However, you'll only see one question at a time on the
screen.
In
nearly every passage you encounter, the author will be trying
to convey a specific point. In general, the strategy for the
Reading Comprehension passage is:
1) Find the general topic
2) Find the specific focus of the passage
3) Find the author's reason for writing the passage.
This chapter is broken into 3 parts:
I. 6 Tactics for Analyzing a Reading Comprehension
Passage
II. 3 Most Common Question Types
III. 4 Step Method of Attacking Reading Comprehension Passages
and Sample Essay
I. 6 Tactics for Analyzing
a Reading Comprehension Passage
A. The writer's
purpose and voice
B. Finding the essay's main point
C. Finding the purpose of each paragraph
D. Determining the scope of the argument
E. Determining the structure (Ignore this section if you have
limited time to prepare)
F. Don't read, skim
A. The writer's
purpose and voice
It would be nice if the authors
of the reading passages came right out and specifically said
what they were writing about, what they have to say, and how
they intend to accomplish their goal. That, however, is not the
style of the writing you will encounter on test day. They will
not be hitting you over the head with their points, so you have
to read between the lines and look for them very carefully.
What is the best method to detect the
author's point? The author will frequently change his tone when
describing the main point of the passage. Notice when the author
shifts his voice from an objective, factual description to his
subjective viewpoint.
Attacking
a passage is what critical reading is all about: stepping back
from the factual content, figuring out the author's views on
a topic and how he arrived at them, and looking for the evidence
that must be provided. Always be on the lookout for sentences
in which the author's voice is coming through and try to skip
past the sentences that are purely factual or simply there for
support.
Try to find the author's purpose
and voice in the following passage:
One of the most persistently
troubling parts of national domestic policy is the development
and use of water resources. Because the technology of water management
involves similar construction skills, whether the task is the
building of an ocean jetty for protection of shipping or the
construction of a river dam for flood control and irrigation,
the issues of water policy have mingled problems of navigation
and agriculture. A further inherent complexity of water policy
is the frequent conflict between flood control and irrigation
and between requirements for abundance and those for scarcity
of water. Both problems exist in America, often in the same river
basins; the one is most typically the problem of the lower part
of the basin and the other the problem of the upper part.
Nevertheless, the most startling
fact about the history of water projects in the United States
is the degree to which their shortcomings have been associated
with administrative failures. Again and again these shortcomings
have proved to be the consequences of inadequate study of water
flow, of soil, of factors other than construction technology,
and of faulty organization. In 1959, the Senate Select Committee
on National Water resources found that twenty different national
commissions or committees charged with examining these problems
and seeking solutions had emphasized with remarkable consistency
the need for coordination among agencies dealing with water.
What is the author's voice
and purpose?
There
is one point in the essay where the author lets his guard down,
and his word choice reveals his position. The sentence, "The
most startling fact... shortcomings" at the beginning
of paragraph two marks a shift in tone. Scholars will choose
their words carefully, and the use of "startling",
a rather strong word, should send a clear message to the reader
about the author's attitude toward his subject matter. That is
followed by an exasperated "again and again", suggesting
agencies are refusing to learn from experience.
This
is his axe to grind. Indeed, his point is the incompetence of
government administrations in charge of water management. In
this second paragraph, we discover the author's purpose: the
author believes water resources are managed incompetently, and
he's writing to call attention to the problem. He then suggests
a solution in the last sentence: "Committees charged with
examining these problems and seeking solutions had emphasized
with remarkable consistency the need for coordination among agencies
dealing with water." The bottom line: the author wants "coordination
among agencies dealing with water." That is his purpose,
and that is why his voice changes the way it does through the
passage.
Strategy: As you identify the author's viewpoints,
be sure not to "argue with" the author. If your personal
understanding or view of the issue happens to contradict that
of the author, keep your theories to yourself. The Verbal section
is not the place (save your analysis for the AWA Essay section-
Analysis of Issue question). The questions test your command
of the author's views and how he structures them, not your own.
Occasionally, you will be asked about a flaw in the author's
reasoning, but those questions are rare.
w B.
Finding
the essay's main point
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