Graph questions are not math questions — they're reading comprehension questions with a chart. The number skills required are minimal. The reading skills are everything.
Before reading any question, spend 20 seconds reading the graph. Hit these four elements in order:
A graph can show that two things move together (correlation) without proving that one causes the other (causation). This distinction generates more wrong answers on graph questions than any other single trap.
Which choice most effectively uses data from the graph to support the researcher's argument?
Key: C is the only choice that accurately states specific data values from the graph and connects them directly to the claim. A is a causation trap. B is topic-relevant but proves nothing about stress levels. D adds a comparative claim ("most important factor") that the graph cannot support.
Which choice most effectively uses data from the graph to support the economist's argument?
Key: Always read the direction and magnitude of changes, not just whether there is a difference. A wrong answer can get the direction wrong (A), add a causation claim (B), or misread the comparison (D). C is the only choice that accurately reads both lines and connects the data to the claim.
14 questions — each one includes an inline bar chart, line graph, or data table. Guided practice walks you through the 4-step method. Timed section includes questions with two data sources plus a passage.
Open Session 8 Exercises →