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Setting Your PSAT Test-Taking Strategy

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2016-03-26 15:45:27
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Every correct answer you bubble on your PSAT/NMSQT earns exactly one point, whether the question is super easy or horrendously hard. Your goal is to harvest the maximum number of points from a large field of questions — within the time limit! To do so, you need a strategy. Check out these tips, which explain what to skip and what to answer.

  • What you shouldn’t skip:

    • Grid-ins: You lose no points for wrong answers, so take a stab at all of them.

    • Vocabulary-in-context: These are usually the easiest passage-based questions. Try them all!

    • Questions with three possible correct answer choices: You lose no points for a skipped answer but a quarter point for a wrong answer. If you can eliminate two or more wrong choices, guess! Your chances of gaining a full point are better than your chances of losing a quarter point.

    • Questions at the beginning of a section: Except for passage-based questions in reading and paragraph improvement, the questions go from easy to medium to difficult. Try for everything on the easy end of a section, even if you skip some later questions.

    • Introductory material for reading passages: Sometimes knowing the author or type of material helps you choose an answer.

  • What you should skip:

    • General directions: You should know the directions ahead of time.

    • Questions with vocabulary you don’t know: If every answer choice puzzles you, cut your losses and move on.

    • Questions at the end of a section, except for passage-based questions: Because the questions get tougher toward the end of a section, the last few in a section may stump you. If you can’t eliminate any answer choices, leave a blank. (If you can cross off an answer or two, guess.)

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Geraldine Woods is a grammarian and writer with more than 35 years’ experience teaching and writing about English. She is the author of English Grammar For Dummies, SAT For Dummies, and Research Papers For Dummies.