Education.com

Social Studies Exam Tips and Strategies: GED Test Prep

By LearningExpress Editors
LearningExpress, LLC

You have reviewed what you need to know for the GED Social Studies Exam. Now you will learn some specific tips and strategies to use on the exam.

On the GED Social Studies Exam, you will read short passages, varying in length from 50 to 200 words, and then answer a multiple-choice question or set of questions concerning the passage. Reading passages may be taken from a number of sources, often drawn from a workplace or academic context. The exam uses both primary sources, such as firsthand historical or practical documents, and secondary sources, such as excerpts from editorials, news articles, or news magazines.

Be an Active Reader

When you read social studies material, you use a similar set of skills as you do when you read other kinds of text. Reading is an active exercise in which you interact with the text, paying close to attention to the key thoughts and details of a passage. Try skimming a passage first so that you can discern its organization and get clues about its main ideas. If you read at a slow pace initially, you may lose the overall idea in too many details. Look to see if a reading excerpt is broken into sections, if there are any helpful topic headings, and what key terms are boldfaced or highlighted. After you finish skimming, go back and read more closely. This time, ask yourself questions as you read to help you better understand and recall the passage: What is the main point of the text? How did the author support his or her point? As you read, consider making quick notes on a separate piece of paper to help you highlight important words or ideas.

Where Is the Main Idea?

To show that you understand the concepts presented in social studies material, the exam will sometimes ask you to find the main idea of a passage. A main idea is a general statement that contains all of the ideas within a passage. It is an author's main point.

To locate a main idea, carefully read the topic sentence of the passage. The first sentence may contain the overall idea that an author wishes to express. However, sometimes an author may build up to his or her point, in which case you may find the main idea in the last sentence of the introductory paragraph or even the last sentence of the entire passage. Students often confuse the topic or subject of a passage—that is, what the passage is about—with the main idea. The main idea is what the author intends to say about the subject. For example, read the following paragraph:

The fertile black soil of the Nile River Valley in northeastern Africa gave rise to the agriculture based society of ancient Egypt. For more than 3,000 years beginning as early as 5,000 B.C., this civilization flourished. Its cultural contributions include basic concepts of arithmetic and geometry, a calendar, jewelry, pottery, statues, the pyramids at Giza, underground burial chambers, and the mummification process. The Egyptian script, called hieroglyphics, is a form of writing based on pictures. The Rosetta Stone, a granite slab inscribed in 196 B.C. with three identical texts, aided scholars in deciphering hieroglyphics.

Note that a statement might be too general to best describe the main idea of a passage. For example, look at the following choices. Which best describes the main idea of the selection?

  1. Early civilizations often developed near a water source.
  2. Before deciphering the Rosetta Stone, scholars could not read Egyptian hieroglyphics.
  3. Ancient Egypt was a sophisticated civilization that made many contributions to human culture.
  4. The most important of Egyptian contributions was a written script called hieroglyphics.
  5. Scholars have found similarities between heiroglyphics and ancient Greek.

Although choice a is a true statement, it is too general to express the main idea of the paragraph. Choice b is also a true statement but is too specific to describe the passage's main idea. Choice d is an opinion that is not supported by the details of the passage. Choice e is not supported by the passage. Choice c best describes the paragraph's main idea.

To practice finding the main idea, ask yourself some of the following questions when you read:

  • What is this passage about?
  • What is the author's purpose?
  • If you were asked to choose a headline or title for the passage, what would you choose?
  • Which sentence contains all of the ideas expressed in the passage?
View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed