Of the 6 most important types of questions for Reading Comprehension, we will  first look at Main Idea/Primary Purpose Questions, and the strategies we can use  to answer them.
 
Main Idea/Primary Purpose  Questions
Many people believe there is no difference between the  main or central idea of the passage and the primary purpose of the author of the  passage. This is simply not true. Let�s take a look at the subtle but important  difference between them:
Main Idea
The question might look something like  this:
Which of the following best states the central idea of the passage?
Which  of the following most accurately states the main idea of the passage?
Which  of the following is the principal topic of the passage?
The main topic of the  passage is��.
Primary Purpose
The question might look like this:
The primary purpose of this passage is to
The primary purpose of the  passage as a whole is to
The primary focus of this passage is on which of the  following?
The main concern of the passage is to�
In the passage, the  author is primarily interested in
The passage is chiefly concerned with.
Strategy:
Main Idea: 
Look in the first and last  paragraphs for the main idea. Any conclusion words like therefore, thus, so,  hence, etc. that you see are most likely introducing the main idea. The correct  answer will say the same thing as it says in the text, but using different  words. The Main Idea is not always stated explicitly in the passage in fact,  more likely than not, it is not stated explicitly. Therefore, in order to answer  this type of question when it is more implicit:
1. Re-read the first line of every passage, and the last line of the first  and last paragraphs. This should give you the general structure or outline of  the argument, with which you can answer the Main Idea question.
2. After  determining the general structure or content of the argument, eliminate answer  choices that are too broad or too specific, i.e. answer choices that go beyond  the content of the passage, or that deal with content only discussed in one  paragraph of the passage.
3. Make brief notes a couple of words- regarding  the Main Idea on the text on your scrap paper while you read.
Primary Purpose: 
What is the author trying to do? What  is his intention? If he is evaluating a theory, then the answer could be  something like Discuss an interpretation. Note that the correct answer would  deal with an interpretation, because the author is only dealing with one theory.  If the Primary Purpose is to criticize 2 new books, then his intention or his  primary purpose might be to Critique new studies. Again, as in Main Idea  questions, re-read the first line of every passage, and the last line of the  first and last paragraphs. This should give you the general structure or outline  of the argument, with which you can answer the Primary Purpose  question.
Note: A good main idea or primary purpose does not go beyond the  scope of the passage, nor does it limit itself to discussing only one part of  the passage.
What is the primary purpose of this passage?
A) discuss the importance of  the television program Star Trek for the international space program
B)  discuss important theoretical work concerned with faster-than-light space  travel.
C) explore a dispute among theoretical physicists regarding the uses  of space flight
D) describe the possible uses of space-warping material
E)  explain how a space-warping bubble would work in the real world
Explanation
This is a Primary Purpose question, so we  have to determine what the author is trying to do or say in this passage. So,  let�s read the first and last lines of the passage in order to get an idea of  the primary purpose. The first line says Great news for Star Trek fans: warp  drives that can propel starships around the Galaxy faster than the speed of  light may be possible after all��with a little help from Dr Who. The last line  is a quote by a physicist that says Of course, there are still some basic  questions��like how does one go about constructing this Tardis space-time �but  it puts the concept of space warps back on the agenda. From both these  sentences, we get the idea of space travel, faster than light travel and space  warps maybe this is a discussion of faster than light space travel. Does that  match what you have already read? Yes, basically this is a discussion of the  theoretical state of play in the area of faster-than-light space travel. Do any  of the 5 answer choices match that? Yes B, even if the wording is somewhat  different from how we are wording it, the idea is almost exactly the same. B is  the answer.
Another way of getting to the answer is through elimination of  obviously incorrect answer choices. We can eliminate A because the author  mentions the popular science fiction program Star Trek merely to introduce the  idea of faster-than-light travel, and nothing more. C is a stronger possibility  because the second paragraph of the passage does discuss some disagreement among  physicists about the possibility of creating a warp-drive, but in the same  paragraph the theoretical dilemma seems resolved. Moreover, since the author  only discusses this in one paragraph, it cannot be the primary purpose of the  entire passage. We can eliminate D because the author does not go into detail  discussing the uses of space-warping material. And we can discard E because the  author does not really go into how the space-warping bubble would work in the  real world.
Title Questions
by Stephen Bolton, 20th August,  1999
Title questions are very similar to Main Idea questions, though are less  common. Though some of the example passage we use in this tutorial and in the  Practice Section are from the New Scientist, and therefore have titles, the  passages in the real GRE will not have titles. The question might look like  this:
Which of the following titles best summarizes the passage as a whole?
Strategy:
Treat this as a Main Idea question. A good  title sums up the central idea of a passage. Therefore, in order to answer this  type of question:
1. Look in the first and last paragraphs for the main idea. Any conclusion  words like therefore, thus, so, hence, etc. that you see are most likely  introducing the Main Idea/Title. The correct answer will say the same thing as  it says in the text, but using different words.
2. Re-read the first line of  every passage, and the last line of the first and last paragraphs. This should  give you the general structure or outline of the argument, with which you can  answer the Title question.
3. Make brief notes a couple of words- regarding  the Title on the text on your scrap paper while you read.
4. After  determining the general structure or content of the argument, eliminate answer  choices that are too broad or too specific, i.e. answer choices that go beyond  the content of the passage, or that deal with content only discussed in one  paragraph of the passage.
What would be an appropriate title for this passage?
A) Constructing The  Tardis
B) How To Make Space-Warping Material
C) Bubbles In  Space-Time
D) Faster-Than-Light Travel: A Possibility?
E) Debate On The  Uses of Space Travel
Explanation
This passage actually already has a title,  Warp Factor One. But we have to look for another title possibility, one that  would be most like the Main Idea of the passage. We look at the first and last  paragraphs, and since the Main Idea is that researchers now feel that  faster-than-light travel maybe more than mere fantasy, we can find the correct  answer choice. Does any answer choice correspond to this idea? Yes- answer D,  which is the correct answer.
We can also find the correct answer through  elimination. There is nowhere in the passage where it discusses building Dr.  Who�s Tardis (pity!), so we can eliminate A. Nor does it tell us how to make  space-warping material. Eliminate B. While bubbles in space-time are discussed  at some length in one of the paragraphs, we cannot say this is the main concern  of the passage, and thus should eliminate C. And nowhere are the uses of space  travel discussed, so discard E.
Specific Detail or Target questions are probably the most common types of questions, and the easiest to answer. The question might look like this:
According to the passage,
The passage states  that
Strategy
The Specific Detail or Target that we are  looking for could be a Line Number, or a Name or Date. Go to the Line Number or  Name or Date, and then read several lines above and below it. Find the answer  choice that basically says the same thing as in the passage, though usually with  different words or word order.
According to the passage, Pfenning and Ford
A) demonstrated conclusively  the impossibility of faster-than-light travel
B) explored the possibility of  bubbles that warp space
C) supported the work of Alcubierre
D) work at of  the Institute for Theoretical Physics at the Catholic University of Leuven
E)  suggested that a warp drive was not physically possible
Explanation
This is a Specific Detail/Target question,  and therefore we look for the Name, Line Number, or Date that will help us. In  this case, the detail consists of the names Pfenning and Ford. We scan the text,  starting from the top of the passage, looking for the names Pfenning and Ford.  We find them in only place, at the beginning of the second paragraph. We read a  couple of lines above the names, and keep reading until a few lines after the  names. It says But in 1997 Michael Pfenning and Larry Ford at Tufts University  in Medford, Massachusetts, apparently killed this ingenious idea by showing that  it needed far more than the entire energy content of the Universe to work (This  Week, 26 July 1997, p 6). The line after that says the research of another  physicist then resurrected the possibility of FTL travel, negating the  implications of the research of Pfenning and Ford. Now we can answer the  question. Do any of the answer choices match the information given around the  target area? Yes- E.
Let’s also eliminate. If we re-read what the passage says about Pfenning and Ford, we can eliminate B, C, and D. None of them are supported by the information in the passage, so let�s eliminate all of them without wasting too much time and with a minimum of fuss. A is tougher to eliminate. From the sentence that mention Pfenning and Ford, it seems their work does rule out the possibility of a space-warp drive. But if we read the next line, it says another researcher said it was indeed possible. So the Pfenning and Ford could not have conclusively demonstrated the impossibity of the FTL drive.
This is probably the most difficult type of Reading Comprehension problem. The question might look like this:
It can be inferred that the author makes which of the following  assumptions?
Which is an assumption underlying the last sentence of the  passage?
Which of the following, if true, would most strengthen the  hypothesis mentioned in lines 17-19?
With which of the following statements  regarding chaos theory would the author be most likely to agree?
Strategy:
1. First, treat this type of problem as a  Specific Target question. Look for a target in the question, find it in the  text, and then look above and below it. Often you do not have to infer very  much, the answer remains within the text.
2. If the answer must be inferred  and is not stated explicitly within the text, then choose the answer choice that  can be inferred or assumed from the information given. Again, you should not  have to infer very much only one or two logical steps removed from the  information in the passage.
3. Make sure that the answer choice you decide on  does not violate or contradict the Main Idea of the passage - if it does, the  answer choice is probably wrong.
It can be inferred that a house with the propeties of the bubble mentioned in  the passage
A) would be larger on the inside than on the outside
B) could  move faster than the speed of light
C) might be very energy efficient
D)  could move through time
E) would eventually fold in on itself and be  destroyed
Explanation
First, let�s try to deal with this question  as a Specific Target problem. Is there a target in the question? Yes the bubble.  The bubble is first mentioned at the end of the second paragraph, and then  discussed at length throughout the third paragraph. Remember, we have to look  above and below that target area (as well as read the target area again), so  quickly go through the second, third, and first part of the fourth  paragraph.
When you are finished, look at the answer choices. Can any of them  be inferred from the information given in the target area? Well, we could  eliminate C, D, and E for simply not being supported by the information given in  the passage. B maybe, but a house moving through time seems pretty silly. But in  the fourth paragraph the author talks about the Tardis, which looked like a  police box but had a spacious interior. Big on the inside, small on the outside.  Is that like our house? Yes- answer A. As well, we can choose A because it does  not go against or contradict the Main Idea in this case, which if it had, would  have made it necessary to eliminate. So choose A.
The question might look like this:
The author’s attitude towards Morgan�s theory could best be described as one  of �
Strategy:
Look for descriptive words, adjectives or adverbs, that  could tell you the author�s attitude. For example, the words unfortunately or  flaw suggest a negative connotation, while strength or valuable emphasize the  positive. Make brief notes a couple of words- regarding the Tone of the text on  your scrap paper while you read. Additionally, keep in mind that the author�s  attitude toward a theory, book, or ethnic group will almost always be  respectful, even when somewhat critical.
The author’s attitude towards Miguel Alcibierre�s theory could best be  described as one of
A) admiration
B) mild skepticism
C) unbridled  scorn
D) dismay
E) complete objectivity
Explanation
Since this is a Tone/Attitude question, we  must look in the passage for descriptive words that tell us what the author  thinks of Alcibierre and his theory. In the second paragraph the author call�s  Alcibierre�s theory this ingenious idea. This is positive, and the only positive  answer choice is A. A is the correct answer. As well, if we could not find the  tone so easily, we could also eliminate C and D at the very least, for being too  extreme.
The question might look like this:
Which of the following best describes the organization of the  passage?
Which of the following best describes the organization of the first  paragraph of the passage?
Strategy:
Re-read the first line of every passage, and  the last line of the first and last paragraphs. This should give you the general  structure or outline of the argument, with which you can answer the question.  Remember to make brief notes about the structure of the text on your scrap  paper. If you are looking for the organization of one paragraph, read the first  and second sentence of the paragraph. That will give you a rough idea of what is  the structure or organization of the paragraph.
Which of the following best describes the organization of the second paragraph of the passage?
A) Two investigations that support Alcubierre�s theory are introduced
B)  Possible objections to the uses of the warp drive are present, and then  refuted
C) An objection to the practicality of the theory is raised, and then  another work is cited to shore up the applicability of the original theory
D)  A work of theoretical physics that supports Alcubierre�s theory is raised, and  then another that refutes it is presented
E) Alcubierre�s theory is analyzed  by a panel of several eminent physicists
Explanation
Read the first sentence of the paragraph: But  in 1997 Michael Pfenning and Larry Ford at Tufts University in Medford,  Massachusetts, apparently killed this ingenious idea by showing that it needed  far more than the entire energy content of the Universe to work (This Week, 26  July 1997, p 6). Then read the second sentence: Now Chris Van Den Broeck of the  Institute for Theoretical Physics at the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium,  has resurrected Alcubierres proposal. So if we out those two sentences together,  and in different words, first the usefulness of Alcubierre�s theory is  questioned by two researchers, then the theory is validated by yet another  researcher. Which of the answer choices is closest to this? C. None of the other  answer choices follow the organizational pattern of the paragraph they reverse  it, or are completely dissimilar. C is the only possible answer.
1. Read the whole text of the passage once.
2. Make brief notes about the  text on your scrap paper.
3. Remember that the tone or attitude of the  passage is usually respectful and moderate, never going to extremes of praise  nor criticism.
4. Look out for structural words that tell you the important  ideas or transitions in a passage.
5. Go back to the text of the passage for  the answers to specific questions.
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