The most-missed I&I question type — not because it's hard, but because students pick answers that are true rather than answers that match the whole passage. One method and four eliminators fix this entirely.
After writing your summary, use these four eliminators to rule out wrong answers. Every wrong choice on a central ideas question fits one of these four categories.
SAT passages almost always use hedged language — careful, qualified claims. Wrong answers often upgrade those claims to absolute certainty. Recognizing the difference is essential for eliminating Extreme Language traps.
| Hedging (Passage Uses This) | Extreme (Wrong Answers Use This) | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| can may might could | will must always | Possibility vs. certainty — a huge gap in academic claims |
| suggests indicates implies | proves demonstrates conclusively | Pointing toward vs. establishing beyond doubt |
| often typically generally tends to | always invariably in all cases | Pattern vs. universal law — passages rarely claim universal laws |
| many some most certain | all every no none | Partial scope vs. total scope — nearly every SAT claim is partial |
| associated with linked to correlated with | causes inevitably leads to is the result of | Correlation vs. causation — a critical distinction in science passages |
Which choice best states the central idea of the text?
A — Too Narrow: true, but only the opening stat — not the whole argument.
B — Extreme Language: passage says "could be functionally lost," not "will be completely destroyed."
C — Correct: matches the scope of the full passage — value + threat + stakes + condition.
D — Author Doesn't Say This: passage mentions emissions reductions but never calls on governments to act immediately.
Which choice best states the central idea of the text?
Key insight for nuanced passages: When a passage says "X is beneficial BUT recent studies show limits," the correct central idea must include both the benefit AND the limitation. Choice A captures only the positive half; Choice B captures the full nuanced claim. Watch for passages with "however," "but," or "yet" — they almost always signal that the central idea requires capturing both sides.
14 questions across all genres. Guided questions label every wrong answer's distractor type after you answer. Timed questions escalate to harder, more nuanced passages.
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