SAT Writing and Critical Reading
Timing SAT Writing – 25 minutes - Essay – 25 minutes - 35 questions (improving sentences and paragraphs, identifying sentence errors) – 10 minutes - 14 questions (improving sentences) SAT Critical Reading – 25 minutes - 24 questions (sentence completion, short and reading comprehension) – 20 minutes - 19 questions (sentence completion, long reading comprehension)
Writing Essay – 25 minutes to write about a given topic – Tests you on your grasp of English language conventions and your ability to develop a point of view supported by evidence based on reading, experience, and studies.
Writing Multiple Choice – Two sections – Identifying sentence errors – Improving sentences – Improving paragraphs
Critical Reading Short Passages – 1-2 paragraphs long – 1-2 questions for each passage – Tests you on your reading comprehension, not prior knowledge
Critical Reading Long Passages – 3-5 paragraphs long – 3-5 questions per passage – Main ideas and a couple of details – All of the answers are in the passage
Critical Reading Sentence Completion – Read a sentence with missing word(s) or phrase(s) and choose an answer to fill in the blank
SAT Writing Score Your essay is scored by two SAT graders who will each give a score from 1-6 where 6 is the best and 1 the worst. The essay score that you see on your score report will be the sum of the scores by both graders. Multiple choice writing is on a 20 to 80 scale. If you answer a question correctly, you get one point; if you answer a question incorrectly, you get -1/4 point; if you omit a question, you get zero points. Your multiple choice score and essay score is then converted into one score on a scale from
SAT Critical Reading Score The Critical Reading score are computed similarly to the multiple choice section of SAT Writing. A correct answer earns one point, an incorrect earns -1/4 point, and an omit earns zero points. Again, your raw scores will be converted on scales.
Sample Essay Question Heroes may seem old-fashioned today. Many people are cynical and seem to enjoy discrediting role models more than creating new ones or cherishing those they already have. Some people, moreover, object to the very idea of heroes, arguing that we should not exalt individuals who, after all, are only flesh and blood, just like the rest of us. But we desperately need heroes to teach us, to captivate us through their words and deeds, to inspire us to greatness. Adapted from Psychology Today, "How To Be Great! What Does It Take To Be A Hero?“ Assignment: Is there a value in celebrating certain individuals as heroes? Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue. Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from your reading, studies, experience, or observations.