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Weekend Workout: Applying the 'Passage Mapping' Strategy to SAT Inference Questions

Weekend Workout: Applying the 'Passage Mapping' Strategy to SAT Inference Questions

Includes Practice Question, Passage Mapping Walk Through, Detailed Answer Explanations, and Helpful Key Takeaways

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Dave Walker
Oct 20, 2024
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Weekend Workout: Applying the 'Passage Mapping' Strategy to SAT Inference Questions
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In this Weekend Workout, we're exploring a powerful strategy called Passage Mapping to tackle challenging SAT Reading & Writing Inference Questions. Practicing with this technique will help you learn to break down complex passages and answer questions with confidence.

Introduction to Passage Mapping

Before we dive into our practice question, let's briefly explore the Passage Mapping strategy:

Passage Mapping is a technique designed to distill the key elements of a passage into a clear, concise format that highlights the logical structure and key ideas. Here's how it works:

  1. Identify the main concepts or arguments presented in the passage

  2. Break down the passage into its core components

  3. Organize these components in a logical sequence or hierarchy

  4. Use brief, clear language to summarize each point

  5. Show relationships between ideas using numbering, bullet points, or visual connectors

This strategy is an excellent practice tool that helps you visualize the passage's structure, making it easier to understand complex relationships between ideas and quickly reference key information when answering questions.


Practice Question

Let's apply this strategy to a practice question that mirrors the structure of real SAT inference questions:

Some art critics argue that the aesthetic value of a painting is determined solely by its objective visual qualities, such as composition, color balance, and brush technique, regardless of the artist's intentions or the cultural context of its creation. However, art historian Dr. Elena Rodriguez has demonstrated that surviving treatises on Impressionist art theory express a markedly different perspective. Rodriguez reveals that these works propose a critical framework in which a painting's merit is evaluated based on how well it captures the artist's subjective emotional state at the time of creation, and the extent to which it evokes similar affective responses in viewers. Assuming that these treatises represent Impressionist thought, Rodriguez's analysis suggests that ______

Which choice most logically completes the text?

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