Question Types
Learn to recognize different question types so you can choose the right strategy and manage your time wisely.
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Not all test questions are the same! Some are quick to answer, while others take more time. By learning to recognize question types, you can plan your time better and choose the right approach for each one.
The Five Main Question Types
On most standardized tests, you'll see these five types of questions. Each one needs a different strategy:
Recall Questions
30-45 secondsThese ask you to remember a fact directly from the passage or find specific information.
Vocabulary Questions
30-60 secondsThese ask what a word means in context, or which word best fits a sentence.
Inference Questions
1-2 minutesThese ask what you can conclude or figure out based on the information given.
Main Idea Questions
1-1.5 minutesThese ask about the central point, theme, or purpose of a passage.
Analysis Questions
1.5-2 minutesThese ask you to evaluate, compare, or explain why something works a certain way.
Time-Saving Order
Answer questions in this order to maximize your score:
- 1 Recall & Vocabulary first - These are quickest. Get easy points fast!
- 2 Main Idea next - After reading, you usually know the main point.
- 3 Inference questions - These take a bit more thinking.
- 4 Analysis last - Save the hardest questions for when you have time.
How to Spot Each Type
Recall: "According to the passage..." or "The author states that..."
Vocabulary: "The word ___ most nearly means..." or "Which word best replaces..."
Inference: "It can be inferred that..." or "The passage suggests..."
Main Idea: "The main purpose of this passage is..." or "This passage is primarily about..."
Analysis: "The author uses this example to..." or "How does paragraph 2 relate to..."
Examples
Let's practice identifying question types and see the best approach for each.
Passage excerpt: "The giant panda lives in the bamboo forests of central China. An adult panda can eat up to 38 kilograms of bamboo each day."
Question: According to the passage, how much bamboo can an adult panda eat daily?
Why it's fast: The answer (38 kg) is stated directly in the passage. Just scan for the number!
Passage excerpt: "Maria checked her watch again and tapped her foot. The bus was already fifteen minutes late, and dark clouds were gathering overhead."
Question: Based on the passage, how is Maria most likely feeling?
Why it takes longer: Maria's feelings aren't stated directly. You have to use clues (checking watch, tapping foot, late bus, storm coming) to figure out she's anxious.
Sentence: "The scientist made a meticulous examination of the specimen, checking every tiny detail."
Question: As used in the sentence, "meticulous" most nearly means:
Strategy used: The phrase "checking every tiny detail" is a context clue that helps you figure out "meticulous" means careful and thorough.
Practice
Identify the question type for each example. Then you'll know how much time to spend on it!
Question: "What is the primary purpose of this passage?"
What type of question is this?
Question: "In line 5, the word 'immense' most nearly means:"
What type of question is this?
Question: "According to the author, what year was the first telephone invented?"
What type of question is this?
Question: "Based on her actions in paragraph 3, it can be inferred that the character feels:"
What type of question is this?
Question: "The author includes the example in paragraph 2 primarily to:"
What type of question is this?
Question: "The passage suggests that the scientists were surprised by:"
What type of question is this?
Question: "Which choice best states the central claim of the passage?"
What type of question is this?
Question: "The word 'substantial' as used in line 12 most closely means:"
What type of question is this?
Check Your Understanding
Play the Question Type Challenge! Identify each question type correctly to earn points.
Question Type Challenge
Next Steps
Recall
30-45 sec - Find facts directly stated
Vocabulary
30-60 sec - Use context clues
Inference
1-2 min - Read between the lines
Main Idea
1-1.5 min - Big picture thinking
Analysis
1.5-2 min - Explain why/how
Key Takeaways
- Recognize question types by their signal words
- Answer quick questions first (Recall, Vocabulary)
- Save harder questions (Inference, Analysis) for later
- Never spend more than 2 minutes on any single question
- Knowing the type helps you choose the right strategy
Now that you can identify question types, you're ready to practice with timed drills! Continue to the next lesson to test your speed.