CARS
Overview
A brief introduction on how the CARS section will work
9 passages (500-600 words)
5~7 questions each (53 in total)
90 minutes, so 1o minutes per passage
Topics:
Humanities
Literature
Philosophy
Ethics
Social sciences
Physiology
Sociology
Economics
*Note: EVERYTHING you need to answer will be in the passages, you are not expected to know them already/have a deep understanding
Types of Questions:
Foundations of Comprehension (30%)
Intended message
Overall idea
Organization of the passage
Usage of specific words and phrases
Reasoning within (30%)
What claim are they supporting
Or where do they think it is flawed
Reasoning beyond (40%)
Apply ideas in the passage to new situations
How would the author’s message change if there was new information to consider?
Foundations:
Comprehension
Tests your basic understanding
Main idea, theme, intended meaning and why the specific organization
Some questions ask you about the main goal of the passage and/or main position/claim, which can usually be found in the thesis statement (usually early)
Thesis statements also foreshadows what they are going to talk about
Can also be asked about the conclusion, and you can look at the conclusion so see if there was a clear ending to the passage
Infer author’s attitude
Consider their particular words and phrases
May ask you to use connotative language1 to determine what the author is trying to convey (if it is factual, their opinion, or revealing a bias)
Intended meanings
May use unfamiliar words and figure them out from the rest of the passage
May use familiar words that you may need to determine the precise meaning
Consider passage structure
Helps identify basic info, main ideas, thesis, etc.
Reasoning within
Ask you to examine the arguments
Directs your attentions to arguments, themes, conclusions and pieces of evidence
Analyze and evaluate the author’s arguments in some way
Two main types:
Structural
Identify how the author is trying to relate various ideas within the passage
Asks you to recognize which particular evidence is intended to support (find quotes)
Evaluative
Criticize and consider flaws and weaknesses in the author’s arguments and evidence (i.e. unreasonable or unjustified and perhaps just not strong enough)
May ask you to identify unstated assumptions (something that the author didn’t specifically say, but needs to be true in order for their conclusion to be correct)
Evaluate the author’s reasoning in terms of info presented within the passage
Do NOT introduce your own opinion
Base responses on what is provided
Reasoning beyond
Easiest to spot, because you are given something new to think about
Two main type
Apply concept from passage
Focus on key parts
Look for answers that preserves the role for the key parts
Integrate new information into passage
Can be facts not mentioned in the passage or new information after the passage was written
Consider if the new information is consistent or not with the passage
The right answer can be justified by considering something in the passage
Answer using only information provided
No personal opinions
Keywords:
1Connotative Language — the use of a word to suggest a different association than its literal meaning. Can also be thought of as loaded words signaling some sort of bias (i.e. a “novice” or “expert” way of doing things, it is clear the writer prefers the latter way as they’ve used a lighter respecting word such as “expert” to describe a certain thing)
Signal Words — words that signify a meaning to something (i.e. “most importantly”, “the only thing that matters is” within a passage that can help you determine the meaning/general idea of what they were trying to say there). There can also be sub-points signaled by words like “by the way” of “in a few cases”
Rhetorical Devices — devices the author uses to convey their message. Includes signal words as well as repetition and parallelism (when words and sentences are repeated), which can be literary devices.
NOT to be taken literally:
Metaphor (compares one thing to another)
Sarcasm (meaning the opposite of what is said)
Allegory (when relates a narrative to something else, when they personify abstract ideas)
Symbolism (when the author uses a concept to represent something else)
Can help determine a theme for the work
Overview
A brief introduction on how the CARS section will work
9 passages (500-600 words)
5~7 questions each (53 in total)
90 minutes, so 1o minutes per passage
Topics:
Humanities
Literature
Philosophy
Ethics
Social sciences
Physiology
Sociology
Economics
*Note: EVERYTHING you need to answer will be in the passages, you are not expected to know them already/have a deep understanding
Types of Questions:
Foundations of Comprehension (30%)
Intended message
Overall idea
Organization of the passage
Usage of specific words and phrases
Reasoning within (30%)
What claim are they supporting
Or where do they think it is flawed
Reasoning beyond (40%)
Apply ideas in the passage to new situations
How would the author’s message change if there was new information to consider?
Foundations:
Comprehension
Tests your basic understanding
Main idea, theme, intended meaning and why the specific organization
Some questions ask you about the main goal of the passage and/or main position/claim, which can usually be found in the thesis statement (usually early)
Thesis statements also foreshadows what they are going to talk about
Can also be asked about the conclusion, and you can look at the conclusion so see if there was a clear ending to the passage
Infer author’s attitude
Consider their particular words and phrases
May ask you to use connotative language1 to determine what the author is trying to convey (if it is factual, their opinion, or revealing a bias)
Intended meanings
May use unfamiliar words and figure them out from the rest of the passage
May use familiar words that you may need to determine the precise meaning
Consider passage structure
Helps identify basic info, main ideas, thesis, etc.
Reasoning within
Ask you to examine the arguments
Directs your attentions to arguments, themes, conclusions and pieces of evidence
Analyze and evaluate the author’s arguments in some way
Two main types:
Structural
Identify how the author is trying to relate various ideas within the passage
Asks you to recognize which particular evidence is intended to support (find quotes)
Evaluative
Criticize and consider flaws and weaknesses in the author’s arguments and evidence (i.e. unreasonable or unjustified and perhaps just not strong enough)
May ask you to identify unstated assumptions (something that the author didn’t specifically say, but needs to be true in order for their conclusion to be correct)
Evaluate the author’s reasoning in terms of info presented within the passage
Do NOT introduce your own opinion
Base responses on what is provided
Reasoning beyond
Easiest to spot, because you are given something new to think about
Two main type
Apply concept from passage
Focus on key parts
Look for answers that preserves the role for the key parts
Integrate new information into passage
Can be facts not mentioned in the passage or new information after the passage was written
Consider if the new information is consistent or not with the passage
The right answer can be justified by considering something in the passage
Answer using only information provided
No personal opinions
Keywords:
1Connotative Language — the use of a word to suggest a different association than its literal meaning. Can also be thought of as loaded words signaling some sort of bias (i.e. a “novice” or “expert” way of doing things, it is clear the writer prefers the latter way as they’ve used a lighter respecting word such as “expert” to describe a certain thing)
Signal Words — words that signify a meaning to something (i.e. “most importantly”, “the only thing that matters is” within a passage that can help you determine the meaning/general idea of what they were trying to say there). There can also be sub-points signaled by words like “by the way” of “in a few cases”
Rhetorical Devices — devices the author uses to convey their message. Includes signal words as well as repetition and parallelism (when words and sentences are repeated), which can be literary devices.
NOT to be taken literally:
Metaphor (compares one thing to another)
Sarcasm (meaning the opposite of what is said)
Allegory (when relates a narrative to something else, when they personify abstract ideas)
Symbolism (when the author uses a concept to represent something else)
Can help determine a theme for the work