Central Ideas and Details

Identifying main ideas, locating specific details, and making inferences

You read a short passage. The question asks: what does this text say, suggest, or set out to do?

Why this matters

Central Ideas and Details is the most common skill in the Information and Ideas domain. Students assume it's just "read and answer," but the five pattern types test very different skills — summarizing, locating, inferring, comparing, and identifying purpose. Mixing them up is how you lose points on questions you actually understood. Learn to recognize what kind of question you're looking at.

The five patterns

The biggest trap: choosing a "too narrow" answer on Main Idea questions. The SAT loves offering a choice that perfectly restates one sentence from the passage. It's accurate, it's clearly supported — and it's wrong, because a main idea has to cover the whole passage. If your answer only accounts for one paragraph or one example, keep looking.

Learn the pattern. Then lock it in.

The SAT repeats question patterns. Miss them, and you lose points. Recognize them fast, and you gain points. JustLockedIn shows you which patterns are hurting your score and gives you focused practice to fix them.

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