Reading Comprehension



Reading Comprehension

Time: 35 minutes
Format: 26-28 questions
Topics Tested: Identifying Purpose, Identifying Structure, and Ascertaining Main Idea

Reading Comprehension is the only question type that appears on all major standardized tests, and the reason isn't too surprising. No matter what academic area you pursue, you have to make sense of dense, unfamiliar prose. Law, of course, is no exception.

What's the objective?

The Reading Comprehension section consists of four passages, each about 450 words long with five to eight corresponding questions. The topics are chosen from the areas of social sciences, humanities, natural sciences, and the law. As of June 2007, the Reading Comprehension section has a new question type � Comparative Reading. This queston type replaces one of the passages with a new type that has 2 shorter passages.

Types of questions include identifying the main idea, detail, inference, logic, extrapolation — questions on the Comparative Reading passage will also ask about how the shorter passages relate to one another. The questions are designed to test your ability to read dense, scholarly material and ascertain the structure, purpose, and logic.

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