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By: The Next Step Magazine
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This article is provided by The Next Step Magazine, a publication that helps
students prepare for life after high school. Visit them at
www.nextSTEPmag.com
The New SAT
Critical Reading Test
Q: “What do they mean by critical reading?”
By Renée Euchner
March 2005 marks the start of
the new SAT and the new critical reading test. “Critical reading is the new
misnomer for the old ‘verbal’ section,” says Jeffrey Sherwood,
CEO of Sherwood Test Prep in Sacramento, Calif. Aside from the new name, the
biggest change is the elimination of analogy problems (lamp is to light as
blanket is to warmth). In its stead, test takers will find
short, one-paragraph reading passages.
The changes
The new critical reading test will still comprise three sections for a
total of 70 minutes and 67 questions. The old test was five minutes longer and
had approximately 11 more questions!
Each reading section will start off with sentence-completion questions. These
questions will be followed by two short reading paragraphs with one or two
questions each. Longer reading passages will follow.
But I score well on analogies!
If you are one of the students who score higher on the analogy problems, you are
not completely left out. While some colleges will only accept the new test
(University of California, for instance), others schools have announced that
they will accept both the old and new tests (check out Harvard, Yale and
Columbia). Still other universities are rethinking their policy for fall 2006
freshman admissions and have yet to make a final decision. Yes, this is a
quandary!
If you scored high on the old SAT, check to see if your college of choice will
accept that test. Of course, be prepared to take an SAT II writing test as well.
What is critical reading?
“Evaluative reading differs from ‘ordinary’ reading insofar as it
reflects a more active and critical mode of engagement,” comments Dr. Peter
Briggs, English professor at Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania. “Is the
statement true? Is it useful? How does it relate to things I already know?”
Knowing how to critically read is important. Bara Sapri, director of Test Prep
New York, says: “The deeper we’re able to think, the more likely we’re going to
create the world we want for ourselves.”
How can you prepare for the new reading test?
First, read. Then read some more. And keep on reading.
While taking the test, “we encourage our students to read only the most
important parts of the essays, and we discourage thorough, time-consuming
‘regular’ reading,” says Sherwood.
What should you read?
“The answer is easy: anything and everything,” quips
Briggs. “Whatever we read is adding something to our overall skill in
understanding and engaging the world."
“Students should read things they enjoy, but they must up the ante,”
says Sapir. “I recommend popular magazines like Utne Reader, Mother Jones, The
Nation, The New Republic, and even Rolling Stone and the Village Voice. Some of
the better comics are also great for vocabulary building. My students stay
interested because I keep their reading material relevant.”
WORD CHALLENGE:
The following bold-faced words appear in this column. Try matching the
words to their meanings.
1.
ante a. state of perplexity
2.
misnomer b. slang for increasing the stakes
3.
quips c. a brief, offhand remark
4.
quandary d. place
5.
stead e. a name unsuitably applied to something
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