Tutor Delivery Guidelines – Digital SAT English | Undoubtme Educare
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Digital SAT · Reading & Writing Section

Tutor Delivery Guidelines

A structured, step-by-step teaching framework covering every question type across all 4 domains of the Digital SAT English module.

4 Domains13 Question Types (A–M)

📘 For Tutors Only

Internal Undoubtme Educare resource. Use one section per session. Follow Delivery Steps in order, then use Tutor Tips and Difficulty Notes to personalise each lesson.

⚡ How to Navigate

Use the Quick Jump grid to leap to any topic. Use the sticky filter bar to show only your domain. Each section is fully self-contained for on-the-go reference.

General Tutor Strategy All Topics

PhaseActivityTime
1 — ActivateReview prior topic with 2 quick questions. Introduce today’s question type and its exam position.5–8 min
2 — TeachFollow Delivery Steps for the topic. Use examples from the module. Think aloud throughout.15–20 min
3 — Guided PracticeWork 2–3 questions together. Verbalise the elimination process explicitly at each step.10 min
4 — Independent PracticeStudent solves 2 questions alone. Tutor observes silently and notes error patterns.10 min
5 — DebriefReview errors by naming the trap type. Reinforce the strategy. Preview next session topic.5–7 min
Predict before you read

Train students to predict the answer BEFORE reading the choices. This single habit eliminates most distractor traps.

Name the error, not just the answer

Require students to name the trap type on every wrong answer — “too narrow”, “wrong tone”, “off-topic”. Builds pattern recognition fast.

Process over content

The SAT tests skills, not knowledge. Focus on the solving process. The passage topic is almost never the barrier.

Adaptive module awareness

Strong Module 1 performance unlocks harder Module 2. Only students who reach hard Module 2 can score above ~650. Q1–10 accuracy is critical.

Pacing is a skill

Teach ~1.2 min/question and the flag-and-return strategy. Students lose points on questions they know because of time pressure alone.

Quick Jump 13 Topics

A

Words in Context

Craft & Structure~4–5 questions/moduleQ1–5

Identify the most precise word or phrase that fits the meaning, tone, and logic of the passage.

Q1–5

~4–5 questions/module

20–25 min intro + 15 min practice

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Context clues: contrast (however/although), cause-effect (because/therefore), example (such as)
  • Connotation vs. denotation — same word, different feel
  • Register and tone matching (formal vs. informal)
  • Part-of-speech awareness before reading answer choices
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Open with a real sentence on the board. Ask students to cover the target word and guess what belongs there — before any instruction.

2

Introduce the 3 context clue types: contrast, cause-effect, and example. Give two signal words for each type.

3

Teach the ‘blank-and-predict’ strategy: read, replace the blank with your own word, then find the closest answer choice.

4

Practice elimination: cross out answers that are wrong part-of-speech, wrong register, or off-tone.

5

Drill 2–3 easy questions together, then 2 independently. Debrief naming each wrong answer’s trap type.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Choosing a word they ‘like’ rather than one supported by context clues
  • Ignoring passage tone — selecting a harsh word when the passage is neutral
  • Forgetting that correct answers are sometimes less common synonyms of the expected word

💡 Tutor Tip

Use vocabulary-in-context drills: show the same word in 3 different sentences to demonstrate how meaning shifts with context. More memorable than definitions alone.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants use archaic or domain-specific vocabulary. Prepare a list of SAT-favourite tricky words (e.g., ‘temper’, ‘check’, ‘train’ as verbs) where the common meaning is a trap.

📖 SAT Tricky Word Bank — 20 Multi-Meaning Words
▼ Show

Each word below has two distinct meanings — one common, one less expected. The SAT frequently exploits the gap between them. For each word, read both meanings and example sentences aloud with the student, then use the sentence as a drill: cover the word and ask what fits.

temper
v. to moderate or soften
“The judge tempered the harsh sentence with a note of compassion.”
n. a person’s emotional state
“His temper flared when he heard the news.”
check
v. to stop or restrain
“New regulations were introduced to check the spread of misinformation.”
v. to verify or examine
“Please check your work before submitting.”
train
v. to direct or focus toward a target
“The cameras were trained on the entrance throughout the night.”
v. to coach or prepare
“She trained for months before the competition.”
spare
adj. extra or additional
“The technician kept a spare battery in the drawer.”
v. to refrain from harming
“The general decided to spare the captured soldiers.”
even
v. to make level or equal
“The contractor spent hours evening out the surface.”
adv. (emphasis)
“Even the most experienced climbers found the route challenging.”
cultivate
v. to develop or foster (abstract)
“She cultivated a reputation for fairness over decades.”
v. to grow (literal)
“Farmers cultivated wheat across the valley.”
colour
v. to influence or bias
“Personal experience often colours our interpretation of events.”
n. visual hue
“The painting used bold primary colours.”
inform
v. to shape or guide
“Her background in medicine informed her approach to policy.”
v. to tell or notify
“Please inform the committee of any changes.”
arrest
v. to stop or halt
“The new drug arrested the progression of the disease.”
v. to detain legally
“Officers arrested the suspect near the station.”
novel
adj. new or original
“The researchers proposed a novel solution to the problem.”
n. a long work of fiction
“She stayed up all night reading the novel.”
critical
adj. essential or crucial
“Maintaining public trust is critical to the agency’s mission.”
adj. involving criticism
“The critical review highlighted several weaknesses.”
champion
v. to actively support
“She championed the rights of marginalised communities throughout her career.”
n. a winner
“He became the national chess champion at age sixteen.”
qualify
v. to limit or add nuance to
“The author qualifies her claim by acknowledging the lack of longitudinal data.”
v. to meet requirements
“You must qualify before advancing to the finals.”
address
v. to deal with or tackle
“The new policy aims to address rising housing costs.”
v. to speak to
“She addressed the audience for nearly an hour.”
air
v. to express or broadcast
“The senator aired her concerns during the committee hearing.”
n. atmosphere or feeling
“There was an air of uncertainty in the room.”
advance
v. to promote or put forward
“The article advances the argument that economic inequality drives crime.”
v. to move forward
“Troops advanced toward the border at dawn.”
warrant
v. to justify or merit
“The severity of the situation warrants immediate action.”
n. a legal authorisation
“Police obtained a warrant to search the premises.”
bear
v. to carry or support
“The evidence bears out the researcher’s original hypothesis.”
v. to endure
“She bore the criticism without complaint.”
afford
v. to provide or offer (non-financial)
“The hilltop location afforded a panoramic view of the city.”
v. to have the money for
“Few families could afford the rising tuition fees.”
forge
v. to create or develop through effort
“The two leaders forged a historic alliance.”
v. to falsify
“The documents had been forged using sophisticated software.”
sanction
v. to officially approve or permit
“The board sanctioned the new research programme after months of review.”
n. a penalty imposed to enforce compliance
“Economic sanctions were placed on the country following the agreement’s violation.”
cleave
v. to split or divide forcefully
“The glacier cleaved the valley into two distinct halves over centuries.”
v. to cling or adhere closely to
“She cleaved to the principles she had been raised with, even under pressure.”
buckle
v. to fasten or secure
“He buckled his seatbelt before the turbulence began.”
v. to bend, collapse, or give way under pressure
“The bridge buckled under the weight of the floodwaters.”
weather
v. to endure or come through a difficult situation
“The company managed to weather the economic downturn without layoffs.”
v. to erode or age due to exposure
“The stone facade had weathered considerably over the past two centuries.”
dog
v. to follow persistently or trouble
“Controversy dogged the politician throughout the campaign.”
n. a domestic animal (common, often irrelevant meaning on SAT)
“Students automatically picture the animal — the verb meaning is the trap.”
flag
v. to lose energy or enthusiasm; to become tired
“After three hours, the audience’s attention began to flag.”
v. to mark or draw attention to
“The editor flagged several inconsistencies in the manuscript.”
table
v. (US English) to postpone or set aside for later discussion
“The committee tabled the motion until the next quarterly meeting.”
v. (UK English) to bring forward for discussion — the opposite meaning!
“Context determines everything — check for regional usage signals in the passage.”
effect
v. to bring about or cause (rare but SAT-tested)
“The new director sought to effect meaningful change within the organisation.”
n. a result or outcome (common meaning)
“The effect of the policy was felt immediately across the sector.”
ground
v. to base or establish firmly (abstract)
“Her argument was grounded in decades of empirical research.”
v. to restrict or confine (informal)
“The airline grounded all flights due to the severe weather warning.”
tender
v. to formally offer or submit
“She tendered her resignation after the board rejected the proposal.”
adj. gentle, sensitive, or easily hurt
“The topic remained tender for the community years after the incident.”
🎯 Words in Context — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
The scientist’s explanation of the phenomenon was remarkably _______, avoiding the jargon-laden prose typical of academic papers and instead presenting the findings in plain, accessible language.
As used in the sentence, which word most precisely fills the blank?
The correct answer is B) lucid (meaning clear and easy to understand). The context clue is the contrast: the sentence contrasts the blank with ‘jargon-laden prose’ and specifies ‘plain, accessible language’ — signalling the blank must mean the opposite of complex or obscure. ‘Verbose’ (wordy), ‘perfunctory’ (routine/careless), and ‘esoteric’ (obscure) all contradict or ignore these clues.
B

Text Structure & Purpose

Craft & Structure~3–4 questions/moduleQ6–10

Identify the author’s organisational choice, the function of a specific sentence, or the overall passage purpose.

Q6–10

~3–4 questions/module

20 min instruction + 15 min practice

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Rhetorical purpose verbs: argue, illustrate, challenge, qualify, introduce
  • Text structures: problem-solution, compare-contrast, cause-effect, narrative
  • Function of individual sentences: topic sentence, counterargument, evidence, conclusion
  • Author’s perspective and overall intent
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Label short passages together: ‘What is the first sentence doing?’ Elicit: introduces, illustrates, contrasts, qualifies.

2

Give students a ‘purpose verb bank’ of 12–15 verbs the SAT uses. Explain differences between similar ones (describe vs. argue).

3

Teach students to predict the purpose BEFORE reading the answers: ‘Why did the author include this sentence?’

4

Show how traps use partially correct purpose verbs — right topic, wrong verb. Students must check both elements.

5

Run a paired activity: Student A reads, Student B labels the structure of each paragraph. Switch roles and debrief.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Confusing ‘the author mentions X’ with ‘the author argues X’ — different verbs, different strength
  • Picking a purpose true of the whole passage but not the specific sentence asked about
  • Choosing answers with correct verbs but wrong scope (too broad or too narrow)

💡 Tutor Tip

Colour-code passage sentences by function (intro, evidence, counterpoint, conclusion). Making structure visual dramatically speeds up pattern recognition.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants embed the target sentence mid-paragraph with a subtle transition. Students must understand how it connects to surrounding sentences — not just read it in isolation.

🎯 Text Structure & Purpose — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
The construction of the transcontinental railroad was hailed as a triumph of engineering. However, the project relied heavily on exploited Chinese immigrant labour, who worked in dangerous conditions for far lower wages than their white counterparts and were systematically denied credit in the official historical record.
The primary purpose of the second sentence is to:
The correct answer is C) qualify the characterisation of the railroad as a triumph. The second sentence does not simply describe history (A) or argue against construction (B) — it complicates the ‘triumph’ framing by introducing evidence of exploitation. The SAT verb ‘qualify’ means to limit or add conditions to a claim, which is precisely what this sentence does. Students who choose A have identified the topic but missed the rhetorical function.
C

Cross-Text Connections

Craft & Structure~1–2 questions/moduleQ8–10

Compare or synthesise two short passages, identifying agreement, disagreement, or how Author 2 would respond to Author 1.

Q8–10

~1–2 questions/module

25 min (paired-text format takes longer to process)

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Identifying the main claim of each text independently before comparing
  • Locating points of agreement vs. disagreement
  • Inferring how one author would view the other’s argument
  • Logical relationship types: support, challenge, qualify, extend
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Read each text independently first. Ask: ‘What is Text 1 claiming? What is Text 2 claiming?’ before any comparison.

2

Create a two-column chart: Text 1 claim | Text 2 claim. Map similarities and differences visually on the board.

3

Teach the four relationship types with analogies: support = agree, challenge = disagree, qualify = ‘yes, but’, extend = ‘and also’.

4

Focus on the question stem — ‘How would Author 2 respond to Text 1?’ requires inference, not just summary.

5

Practice with one full worked example together, then one independent pair with debrief.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Summarising one text when the question asks about the relationship between both
  • Assuming the texts always disagree — some Cross-Text questions feature texts that agree
  • Choosing an answer that is true of one text but not supported by the other

💡 Tutor Tip

Annotate each text with a one-sentence summary before attempting the question. This prevents mixing up which author said what — the most common error on this type.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard versions involve texts on the same topic with subtle partial agreement. Teach students to verify every word of the answer against BOTH texts, not just one.

🎯 Cross-Text Connections — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
Text 1: Artificial intelligence systems that generate creative content — images, music, text — do so by identifying statistical patterns in vast training datasets. The resulting outputs are fundamentally derivative; they recombine existing human work rather than originating new ideas.

Text 2: Human creativity is itself a recombinative process. Painters learn by copying masters; composers internalise existing musical structures before departing from them. The difference between human and machine creativity may be one of degree, not kind.
How would the author of Text 2 most likely respond to the claim made in Text 1?
The correct answer is B). Text 1 claims AI is ‘fundamentally derivative’ — implying this is a weakness specific to AI. Text 2 responds by pointing out that human creativity is also recombinative, thereby undermining the distinction Text 1 relies on. This is a ‘qualify / challenge’ relationship. Students who choose C have misread Text 2 as agreeing with Text 1 — a classic Cross-Text trap.
D

Main Idea / Central Claim

Information & Ideas~3–4 questions/moduleQ11–15

Identify the primary claim or central purpose of the entire passage.

Q11–15

~3–4 questions/module

20 min

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Distinguishing main idea from supporting detail
  • Scope: too narrow (single detail) vs. too broad (beyond the text)
  • Author’s central argument vs. background information
  • Signal phrases: ‘the passage primarily’, ‘the main purpose’, ‘the central claim’
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Teach the ‘newspaper headline’ trick: after reading, ask ‘What 10-word headline would summarise this passage?’

2

Show how the correct answer captures ALL of the passage — not just the first sentence or a single paragraph.

3

Demonstrate scope errors: pick a clearly ‘too narrow’ and ‘too broad’ answer and explain why each fails.

4

Eliminate answers that are only true of one paragraph — main idea must hold for the entire text.

5

Do 2 guided examples, then 2 independent questions with a debrief focused on scope errors.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Picking the first sentence as the main idea — it may be a hook or background, not the central argument
  • Choosing an answer that sounds impressive but isn’t supported by the full text
  • Confusing a supporting example for the central argument

💡 Tutor Tip

Have students write their own one-sentence summary BEFORE reading the answer choices. Students who predict first are far less likely to be tricked by distractors.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants use passages where the main idea is implicit — never stated directly. Teach students to infer from the overall direction and emphasis, not just a single sentence.

🎯 Main Idea / Central Claim — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
Urban green spaces — parks, street trees, community gardens — are often dismissed as aesthetic luxuries in budget discussions. Yet research consistently links access to green space with reduced cortisol levels, lower rates of depression, and faster recovery from illness. In lower-income neighbourhoods, where residents face compounding stressors and have less access to private outdoor space, the effect is even more pronounced. Treating urban greenery as expendable may therefore carry a significant and largely unacknowledged public health cost.
Which of the following best states the central claim of the passage?
The correct answer is C). It captures the full scope of the passage — the evidence (health research), the implication (cost of cutting green space), and the target population (urban areas broadly). Option A is too broad and introduces a comparison the passage doesn’t make. Option B is true of one paragraph but not the whole passage (too narrow). Option D directly contradicts the passage, which calls the research consistent.
E

Command of Evidence – Textual

Information & Ideas~4–5 questions/moduleQ11–15

Find textual evidence that supports a claim, or identify which statement the passage most strongly supports.

Q11–15

~4–5 questions/module

25 min (most complex Information & Ideas type)

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Locating evidence in the passage: direct quotation vs. paraphrase
  • Logical support: evidence must directly prove the claim, not just relate to the topic
  • Sub-type 1: ‘Which finding would support X?’ vs. Sub-type 2: ‘Which claim is best supported by the passage?’
  • Strength of evidence: weak vs. strong logical support
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Clarify the two sub-types upfront — the solving approach differs significantly. Students must identify which type they face first.

2

For ‘Which supports X?’: translate each answer into a test — ‘If this were true, would it make X more likely?’ Only the correct answer passes.

3

For ‘What does the passage support?’: find the explicit quote or paraphrase in the passage that directly matches the answer.

4

Teach the ‘too far’ trap — answers that go slightly beyond what the passage says are always wrong, even if plausible.

5

Guided practice with 2 examples (one of each sub-type) before independent work.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Choosing an answer that is on-topic but doesn’t logically support the specific claim
  • Selecting evidence that is emotionally compelling but logically weak
  • Confusing correlation with causation in passages about research findings

💡 Tutor Tip

Use the ‘because test’: read the claim, then say ‘because [answer choice].’ If the logic holds naturally, it’s likely correct. If it feels like a stretch, it probably is.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants introduce a quantitative element (graph or table) — this becomes Type F. Make sure students identify which sub-type they face before attempting to solve.

🎯 Command of Evidence – Textual — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
A 2023 study on remote work found that employees who worked from home reported higher job satisfaction than those in offices. The researchers noted, however, that this effect was strongest among employees who had dedicated home workspaces and disappeared almost entirely among those who did not.
Which finding, if true, would most directly support the conclusion that the home workspace environment — rather than remote work itself — drives satisfaction gains?
The correct answer is B). If office workers with private spaces match the satisfaction of remote workers with dedicated workspaces, this isolates the dedicated workspace as the key variable — not remote work in general. This is a classic ‘controlled comparison’ evidence question. Option A is about commuting, not workspace quality. Options C and D are distractors that introduce scope (industry, company type) not relevant to the specific claim.
F

Command of Evidence – Quantitative

Information & Ideas~1–2 questions/moduleQ13–15

Use a graph, table, or chart to evaluate or complete a claim made in a short passage.

Q13–15

~1–2 questions/module

20 min (include graph-reading practice time)

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Reading graphs: axes, units, trends, outliers — in that order
  • Reading tables: row/column headers before individual values
  • Connecting quantitative data to a verbal claim (support, contradict, or neither)
  • Precision: the correct answer must match the data exactly — approximations are wrong
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Always read the passage claim BEFORE looking at the graph — know what you’re looking for before you look.

2

Teach graph-reading protocol: (1) read the title, (2) read axis labels and units, (3) identify the trend or key value the question references.

3

Practice with a simple bar chart first: ask ‘What does this graph actually say?’ Students often misread axis labels under time pressure.

4

Show how the correct answer uses specific numbers or trends — not vague generalisations about the topic.

5

One worked example together (circle the exact data point referenced), then one independent with debrief.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Reading the graph too quickly and misidentifying which bar/line corresponds to the correct category
  • Choosing an answer that sounds reasonable but uses a different data point from the one referenced
  • Ignoring units — confusing percentage with raw number, or millions with billions

💡 Tutor Tip

Remind students they do NOT need to understand the topic of the graph — they only need to read the data correctly. This greatly reduces anxiety around science-heavy graphs.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants include graphs with multiple data series or complex tables. Teach students to circle the exact data point referenced before reading any answer choices.

🎯 Command of Evidence – Quantitative — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
A researcher claims that students who studied for more than 3 hours performed significantly better on the Digital SAT than those who studied for 1–3 hours. [Imagine a bar chart showing: 1–3 hours study = avg score 560; 3–5 hours = avg score 610; 5+ hours = avg score 615]
Which statement is best supported by the data in the chart?
The correct answer is C). The gap between 1–3 hours (560) and 3–5 hours (610) is 50 points; the gap between 3–5 hours and 5+ hours (615) is only 5 points — so the largest gain is between the first two groups. Option A inverts the correct comparison (5+ vs 1–3 is 55 points, which is true, but the question asks what the data best supports and A is less precise than C). Option B is contradicted by the diminishing returns visible in the data. Option D is wrong — 610 ≠ 615.
G

Rhetorical Synthesis (Notes-Based)

Expression of Ideas~2–3 questions/moduleQ25–27

Given bulleted research notes, choose the sentence that best synthesises them for a stated rhetorical purpose.

Q25–27

~2–3 questions/module

25 min — rewards drilling more than explanation

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Identifying the stated goal (emphasise a similarity, introduce a contrast, highlight a cause)
  • Accurate use of notes — the correct answer must be factually consistent with ALL notes used
  • Concision: no unnecessary information should be introduced from outside the notes
  • Rhetorical purpose alignment: the answer must fulfil the exact purpose stated in the question
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Read the notes carefully first. Ask: ‘What are the key facts? Are there contrasting facts?’ Map them before reading the question.

2

Underline the purpose phrase in the question stem (e.g., ‘to emphasise the contrast between…’). This is the single most important step.

3

Check each answer: (1) Does it use relevant notes accurately? (2) Does it exclude irrelevant notes? (3) Does it fulfil the stated purpose?

4

Show how wrong answers either include wrong notes, miss the stated purpose, or add information not in the notes.

5

This type is highly learnable — drill with at least 4 practice examples. Accuracy improves dramatically with repetition.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Choosing a well-written answer that doesn’t match the stated rhetorical purpose
  • Selecting an answer that contradicts one of the notes
  • Ignoring the purpose phrase and choosing the answer that includes the most notes

💡 Tutor Tip

Match the purpose verb in the question (’emphasise’, ‘introduce’, ‘contrast’) to the sentence structure of the answer. This eliminates 2–3 wrong answers before reading them fully.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants have answer choices that all use the correct notes but differ only in rhetorical purpose. Students must be precise about the exact goal stated — not the closest or most logical one.

🎯 Rhetorical Synthesis — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
Notes:
• The Amazon rainforest produces approximately 20% of the world’s oxygen.
• Deforestation in the Amazon increased by 22% between 2019 and 2021.
• Indigenous-managed territories in the Amazon have significantly lower deforestation rates than non-indigenous areas.
A student wants to write a sentence that emphasises the contrast between the Amazon’s ecological importance and its current rate of destruction. Which option best achieves this goal?
The correct answer is A). It directly sets the ecological importance (20% of world’s oxygen) against the threat (22% deforestation increase), creating the contrast the question asks for. Option B contrasts deforestation rates across land types — a different contrast. Option C uses ‘and also’ where it should use ‘but/however’, failing to establish contrast. Option D focuses only on indigenous stewardship and drops the ecological-importance note entirely.
H

Transitions

Expression of Ideas~3–4 questions/moduleQ21–24

Select the transition word or phrase that correctly links two sentences based on their logical relationship.

Q21–24

~3–4 questions/module

20 min

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Transition categories: addition (furthermore), contrast (however), cause-effect (therefore), example (for instance), emphasis (indeed)
  • Identifying the logical relationship between the two sentences being connected
  • The transition must match the relationship — not just sound natural or sophisticated
  • Same-direction vs. shift transitions — students must know which category each word belongs to
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Present a master transition list grouped by category. Students memorise the categories, not individual words.

2

Teach the two-step method: (1) Summarise each sentence in one word — same direction or opposite? (2) Match to the transition category.

3

Use the ‘contrast test’: cover the blank and ask ‘Does the second sentence agree or disagree with the first?’ Reveals the needed type instantly.

4

Show common traps: ‘additionally’ vs. ‘consequently’ — both move forward but serve completely different logical functions.

5

Run a categorisation drill before full questions — students label a list of transitions by category first.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Choosing a transition that sounds smooth but misrepresents the logical relationship
  • Confusing ‘however’ (contrast) with ‘therefore’ (result) when sentences are close in meaning
  • Selecting transitions based on personal writing style rather than logical fit

💡 Tutor Tip

Transitions has the highest ‘drill ROI’ of any topic — just 15 practice questions dramatically improves accuracy. Prioritise drilling over extended explanation.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants place the blank mid-passage, requiring students to understand the broader argument flow — not just the relationship between the two adjacent sentences.

🎯 Transitions — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
Early clinical trials of the drug showed promising results in reducing inflammation. _______, the larger Phase III trials revealed serious side effects that had not appeared in earlier testing, leading regulators to halt further development.
Which transition most logically completes the sentence?
The correct answer is C) However. The first sentence presents a positive result (promising); the second sentence presents a negative outcome (serious side effects, halted development). This is a contrast relationship — only ‘However’ signals a contrast. ‘Furthermore’ and ‘Similarly’ both signal continuation or agreement (same direction), which contradicts the content. ‘Therefore’ signals a logical result, but the side effects are not a logical consequence of promising early results.
I

Sentence Boundaries

Std. English Conventions~3–4 questions/moduleQ16–20

Identify and correct run-on sentences, comma splices, and sentence fragments by choosing the correctly punctuated option.

Q16–20

~3–4 questions/module

25 min (foundational grammar — do not rush)

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Independent clause vs. dependent clause: subject + verb + complete thought
  • Run-on: two independent clauses joined without correct punctuation
  • Comma splice: two independent clauses joined with only a comma
  • Fragment: an incomplete clause presented as a sentence
  • Correct fixes: period, semicolon, comma + FANBOYS, or subordinating conjunction
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Teach clause identification first: ‘Does this have a subject AND a verb AND express a complete thought?’ All three = independent clause.

2

Show all four error types with simple examples before introducing the fixes.

3

Teach the FANBOYS acronym: For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So — only these can follow a comma to join two independent clauses.

4

Demonstrate that a semicolon equals a period — both join two independent clauses without a conjunction.

5

Practice identifying the error type first, then choosing the correct fix. Always name the error before evaluating answer choices.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Treating a long clause as automatically independent — length does not determine independence
  • Using a comma before ‘however’ or ‘therefore’ to join two clauses — these are not coordinating conjunctions
  • Correcting a run-on by adding only a comma, creating a comma splice instead

💡 Tutor Tip

Use a ‘clause colour-coding’ drill: students underline each clause in different colours. Once they identify clauses reliably, the boundary rules become intuitive.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants use long sentences where clause boundaries are hidden by lengthy modifying phrases. Teach students to strip all modifiers and find the core subject-verb pair first.

🎯 Sentence Boundaries — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
The documentary received widespread critical acclaim, _______ it failed to find a large audience, earning only a modest return at the box office.
Which punctuation choice correctly joins the two clauses?
The correct answer is B). Both ‘the documentary received widespread critical acclaim’ and ‘it failed to find a large audience’ are independent clauses. A semicolon correctly joins two independent clauses. Option A is a comma splice — a comma alone cannot join two independent clauses. Option C is a fused/run-on sentence. Option D places ‘however’ with two surrounding commas inside the sentence — this creates a comma splice before ‘however’ since ‘however’ is not a coordinating conjunction.
J

Subject-Verb Agreement

Std. English Conventions~3 questions/moduleQ16–20

Choose the verb form that correctly agrees in number with the true subject of the sentence.

Q16–20

~3 questions/module

20 min

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Identifying the true subject — not the nearest noun to the verb
  • Collective nouns (team, group, committee) take singular verbs in SAT context
  • Indefinite pronouns: singular (anyone, each, every, nobody) vs. plural (both, many, few, several)
  • Inverted sentences: verb comes before subject (There is/are…)
  • Prepositional phrase interruption: the object of ‘of’ is NOT the subject
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Start with the most common trap: ‘A collection of rare stamps [is/are] on display.’ Students must identify ‘collection’ as the singular subject.

2

Teach the ‘cross out the prepositional phrase’ technique to isolate the true subject every time.

3

Drill indefinite pronouns — give students a list and have them categorise each as singular or plural. No exceptions on the SAT.

4

Practice inverted sentences: ‘There [is/are] several reasons…’ — subject comes after the verb, so find it before choosing.

5

Run 5 rapid-fire oral drills before written practice to build automaticity.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Agreeing the verb with the nearest noun instead of the true grammatical subject
  • Treating collective nouns as plural by default
  • Missing agreement errors in inverted or interrupted sentences

💡 Tutor Tip

Rapid-fire oral drills are far more effective than written exercises for building automaticity on this topic. Run them at the start of every SEC session as a warm-up.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants combine subject-verb agreement with complex clause structures — the subject may be separated from its verb by an entire subordinate clause. Strip the clause first.

🎯 Subject-Verb Agreement — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
The committee of senior researchers, along with several external advisors, _______ scheduled to present their findings at the annual conference next month.
Which verb form correctly completes the sentence?
The correct answer is B) is. The subject is ‘committee’ — a singular collective noun. The prepositional phrase ‘of senior researchers’ is not the subject, and the interrupting phrase ‘along with several external advisors’ does not change the subject’s number. Cross out both phrases: ‘The committee … is scheduled’ — singular subject, singular verb. Students who choose A have incorrectly agreed with ‘researchers’ (the nearest noun) or ‘advisors’.
K

Verb Forms & Tense

Std. English Conventions~3 questions/moduleQ16–20

Identify the correct verb tense or form (infinitive, gerund, participle, or conjugated) to complete a sentence grammatically and logically.

Q16–20

~3 questions/module

25 min

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Tense consistency within a sentence and across a passage — establish the ‘anchor tense’ first
  • When to use infinitive (to + verb) vs. gerund (verb + -ing)
  • Participle phrases and the noun they must logically modify
  • Perfect tenses: present perfect (has/have + pp) vs. simple past
  • Sequence of tenses with subordinating conjunctions
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Establish the tense ‘anchor’ of the sentence or passage: what is the main time frame? All verbs align to this.

2

Teach the infinitive vs. gerund rule via common verb collocations (prefer + gerund, want + infinitive). Memorising key verbs is faster.

3

Introduce participle phrases: ‘Having finished the experiment, the scientists…’ — the participle must logically apply to the sentence’s subject.

4

Show perfect tense use: ‘had finished’ signals an action completed before another past action. Timeline visualisation helps.

5

Practice with 3 worked examples — one each for tense consistency, gerund/infinitive, and perfect tense.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Switching tense mid-sentence without a logical reason — the most common error on this type
  • Using simple past when context requires past perfect (sequence of events)
  • Treating gerund and infinitive as interchangeable — they are not; specific verbs require one or the other

💡 Tutor Tip

Create a ‘tense timeline’ on the board for each practice passage — visually mapping when events occurred helps students select the correct tense form far more reliably.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants require students to infer the correct tense from context clues elsewhere in the passage — the sentence alone may not contain enough information to decide.

🎯 Verb Forms & Tense — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
By the time the rescue team arrived at the crash site, the survivors _______ in the dense forest for nearly three days without food or clean water.
Which verb form correctly completes the sentence?
The correct answer is D) had been sheltering. The sentence describes an action (sheltering) that began before another past action (the rescue team arriving) and was ongoing up to that point. This requires the past perfect progressive (‘had been + -ing’). Simple past (B) doesn’t convey the duration or sequence. Present perfect (C) cannot be used with a specific past time marker like ‘by the time the team arrived’. Past progressive (A) lacks the ‘had’ needed to establish the sequence.
L

Pronoun Usage & Agreement

Std. English Conventions~2–3 questions/moduleQ16–20

Select the pronoun that correctly agrees with its antecedent in number, gender (where specified), and case.

Q16–20

~2–3 questions/module

20 min

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Pronoun-antecedent agreement: singular antecedent = singular pronoun
  • Pronoun case: subjective (I, he, she, they), objective (me, him, her, them), possessive (my, his, her, their)
  • Indefinite pronouns as antecedents: the SAT accepts ‘their’ as singular for gender-neutral antecedents
  • Ambiguous pronoun reference — if two antecedents are equally plausible, replace the pronoun with a noun
  • Reflexive pronouns: only used when subject and object are the same person
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Start with a simple rule: find the antecedent, determine its number, match it to the pronoun. Three steps, every time.

2

Teach case selection: use the ‘remove the other person’ test — ‘She and I went’ → remove ‘She and’: ‘I went’ ✓ vs. ‘Me went’ ✗.

3

Cover indefinite pronoun antecedents. The SAT accepts ‘their’ as singular for gender-neutral antecedents — explain this explicitly.

4

Show ambiguous reference traps: when two antecedents are equally plausible, the correct answer replaces the pronoun with a specific noun.

5

Drill case errors with oral substitution exercises — isolate the pronoun and check whether it sounds correct in isolation.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Choosing a pronoun that agrees with the nearest noun rather than the true antecedent
  • Using reflexive pronouns incorrectly: ‘The award was given to John and myself’ is wrong
  • Ignoring case and choosing pronouns based on ‘sound’ alone without applying the isolation test

💡 Tutor Tip

Case errors are most visible when the pronoun is isolated. Use the ‘isolation test’ — remove the surrounding text and check if the pronoun makes grammatical sense on its own.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants involve pronouns with antecedents in previous sentences or compound subjects. Teach students to trace back carefully — never assume the antecedent is in the same sentence.

🎯 Pronoun Usage & Agreement — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
Each of the engineers on the project submitted _______ final report two days before the deadline.
Which pronoun correctly completes the sentence?
The correct answer is A) their. The antecedent is ‘each’ — an indefinite pronoun that is grammatically singular but gender-neutral. The Digital SAT accepts ‘their’ as a singular gender-neutral pronoun in this context, reflecting current standard usage. Option C (his or her) is grammatically acceptable but more cumbersome and not the SAT’s preferred form. Option B (its) is used for non-human antecedents. Option D (our) implies the writer is part of the group, which is not established.
M

Punctuation

Std. English Conventions~3–4 questions/moduleQ16–20

Select the correct punctuation mark (comma, semicolon, colon, dash, or apostrophe) based on grammatical function.

Q16–20

~3–4 questions/module

30 min (most rule-dense topic — may need a follow-up session)

Key Concepts to Teach
  • Comma rules: introductory elements, appositives, non-restrictive clauses, lists, before coordinating conjunctions
  • Semicolons: join two independent clauses; separate items in a complex list
  • Colons: introduce a list, explanation, or elaboration — must follow an independent clause
  • Dashes: emphasise parenthetical information; can replace commas, colons, or parentheses
  • Apostrophes: possessives and contractions — it’s vs. its, they’re vs. their vs. there
Step-by-Step Delivery Guide
1

Teach the ‘punctuation hierarchy’: start with the strongest (period/semicolon) and work down. Provides a decision framework.

2

For colons and semicolons: both require an independent clause before them. This one rule eliminates most wrong answers instantly.

3

Teach comma rules with specific names, not intuition — ‘pause’ is unreliable. Prioritise the 4–5 most common SAT comma rules.

4

Drill the ‘it’s vs. its’ rule explicitly — it appears in almost every module and students consistently miss it.

5

Use fill-in drills (no multiple choice) to build automatic recognition before introducing answer choices.

Common Student Mistakes
  • Using a comma before a colon or semicolon — never correct under any circumstances
  • Placing a colon after an incomplete clause (must follow a full independent clause)
  • Confusing the possessive ‘its’ with the contraction ‘it’s’ — the SAT tests this every module
  • Using an apostrophe in plural nouns (‘student’s’ when ‘students’ is intended)

💡 Tutor Tip

Give students a one-page punctuation rule card to keep for all sessions. The SAT tests the same rules repeatedly — memorisation plus application is the winning combination.

🔴 Hard Module 2 Note

Hard variants require students to understand whether a clause is restrictive or non-restrictive — a conceptual distinction that requires careful explanation and multiple concrete examples.

🎯 Punctuation — Sample Practice Question
▼ Show question
The exhibition featured works by three pioneering artists _______ Frida Kahlo, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Lee Krasner.
Which punctuation mark correctly fills the blank?
The correct answer is C) a colon. The colon is used after an independent clause to introduce a list or elaboration — ‘The exhibition featured works by three pioneering artists’ is a complete independent clause, and what follows is the list that fulfils that claim. A comma (A) would be too weak and does not signal ‘here comes the list’. A semicolon (B) joins two independent clauses — the list that follows is not an independent clause. A dash (D) could technically work stylistically, but the colon is the cleaner, more precise choice the SAT rewards.