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Topic: Reading
Comprehension
Strategy
Used: Active Reading
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The best test-takers use a strategic plan for attacking
passages and questions in an aggressive, energetic, and critical
way. Working this way pays off because it's the kind of pragmatic
and efficient approach that the GRE rewards.
The strategy of attacking the opening paragraph entails being
an active reader. This means thinking about what you're reading,
paraphrasing the complicated parts, determining the topic, scope,
and passage structure, the author's purpose voice, and asking
yourself questions about the passage.
Consider the following
example:
The following is the first sentence of a passage:
- The great migration of European intellectuals to the United
States in the second quarter of the twentieth century prompted
a transmutation in the character of Western social
thought.
Now, ask yourself: What's the topic? The migration of European
intellectuals to the United States in the second quarter of the
twentieth century. That's clear. Second, what's the scope? Well,
the passage looks as if it will discuss the effects of this
migration on social thought.
By quickly determining the topic and scope while reading, we
can easily deduce why the author is writing and notice the
structure of what will follow. Actively reading passages can save
a considerable amount of time once you get to the questions.
Other Strategy
Sessions: