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PSAT/NMSQT
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What is the National Merit Scholarship Program (NMSQT)?
The National Merit Scholarship Program is a national academic competition for high school students to provide financial aid to attend college. It is administered by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation (NMSC). Students qualify for the National Merit program by achieving a high score on the PSAT.
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What is on the PSAT/NMSQT?
The PSAT/NMSQT includes a Reading Test, Writing and Language Test, and Math Test.
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How is it structured?
The PSAT/NMSQT takes 2 hours and 45 minutes and consists of 3 tests: (1) the Reading Test, (2) the Writing and Language Test, and (3) the Math Test. Most of the questions are multiple-choice, though some math questions ask you to write in the answer rather than select it.
The following table shows how much time you get for each test and the number of questions for each test:
Section Length (minutes) Number of Questions/Tasks Reading 60 47 Writing and Language 35 44 Math 70 48 Total 165 139 -
The Reading Test Overview
The Reading Test presents five reading passages followed by multiple-choice questions about each passage. You have 60 minutes to complete this test, which includes 47 questions total.
What the Reading Test Passages Are Like
The five passages on the Reading Test include four standalone passages and one pair of passages that you read together. The standalone passages and the paired set are each 500–750 words. The passages are drawn from the following types of documents:
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1 literary passage from a work of fiction.
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1 or 2 passages from a U.S. founding document or a text in the Great Global Conversation they inspired. An example of a founding document would be the U.S. Constitution. The Great Global Conversation refers to works from around the world that focus on topics such as freedom, justice, or human dignity. A speech by Nelson Mandela would be an example.
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1 passage from a work of economics, psychology, sociology, or some other social science.
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2 passages from scientific works that examine foundational concepts and developments in Earth science, biology, chemistry, or physics.
What the Reading Test Questions Are Like
The questions on the reading test fall into three broad categories:
1. How the Author Uses Evidence
Some questions ask you to show that you understand how an author is using evidence to support a claim. Questions like this might ask you to:
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Identify the part of a passage that supports a point the author is making.
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Find evidence in a passage that best supports the answer to a previous question.
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Find a relationship between an informational graphic and the passage it’s paired with.
2. Understanding Words in Context
Many of the questions on the Reading Test ask you to identify the meaning of a word in context. The “in context” part is important: the questions ask you to use context clues in a passage to figure out which meaning of a word or phrase is being used. Other questions will ask you to decide how an author’s choice of words shapes meaning, style, and tone.
3. Analysis in History/Social Studies and in Science
The Reading Test includes passages in the fields of history, social studies, and science. You’ll be asked questions that require you to draw on the reading skills needed most to succeed in those subjects. For instance, you might read about an experiment and then see questions that ask you to:
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Examine hypotheses.
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Interpret data.
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Consider implications.
The answers are based only on the content stated in or implied by the passage, not your prior knowledge of the subject.
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PSAT/NMSQT Vocabulary
The PSAT/NMSQT doesn’t require you to learn unusual or difficult vocabulary words. The words you’ll be asked about come up often in college-level reading and in professional life.
In addition, the PSAT/NMSQT also doesn’t ask you to define a word without any context to guide you. All of the words you’ll be asked about appear in the context of reading passages, so you can use context clues to guide you to the best answer.
If you build your vocabulary by learning the meaning and usage of words that appear most often in college-level assignments, you’ll have a much easier time with the test. In particular, you won’t have to spend time guessing from context what a word might mean. If you recognize vocabulary words on sight, you’ll read passages faster and with greater confidence.
Practice identifying the meaning of words in context on Official SAT Practice at satpractice.org.
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The Writing and Language Test
The Writing and Language test is a multiple-choice test where you read passages, find mistakes and weaknesses, and fix them.
This part of the PSAT/NMSQT is 35 minutes long, includes 4 passages, and contains 44 multiple-choice questions.
What the Writing and Language Test Passages Are Like
The 4 passages on the test are each 400–450 words. The complexity of the passages varies: some are more challenging and others more straightforward.
The passages are about a variety of topics, including careers, science, the humanities, and history and social studies.
The purpose and format of each passage varies:
- At least 1 is a narrative, meaning it describes events in a storylike way. This passage is not a work of fiction, but it could be a nonfiction account of an historical event, or it might describe the sequence of events in a scientific experiment.
- The other passages are either argumentative, meaning they try to convince or persuade the reader of something, or else informative and explanatory.
Some of the passages contain charts, graphs, or infographics that you interpret together with the written part of the passage.
What the Writing and Language Test Questions Are Like
Each passage has 11 multiple-choice questions.
The questions fall into two main types: those where you improve the expression of ideas, and those where you have to recognize and correct errors in sentence structure, grammar, usage, and punctuation.
Expression of Ideas
These questions ask you to improve the substance and quality of the writer’s message. They can be divided into three kinds:
- Development questions are about main ideas (topic sentences and thesis statements), supporting details, focus, and quantitative information in tables, graphs, and charts.
- Organization questions focus on logical sequence and placement of information and ideas as well as effective introductions, conclusions, and transitions.
- Effective Language Use questions ask you to improve precision and eliminate wordiness, consider style and tone, and combine sentences to improve flow and to achieve particular rhetorical effects (such as emphasizing one point over another).
Standard English Conventions
These questions focus on recognizing and correcting grammar, usage, and mechanics problems in passages. These questions ask you to recognize and correct errors in sentence structure (like run-on or incomplete sentences), usage (like lack of subject-verb or pronoun-antecedent agreement), and punctuation (like missing or unnecessary commas).
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The Math Test: Overview
The Math Test focuses on the areas of math that play the biggest role in a wide range of college majors and careers:
- Heart of Algebra, which focuses on the mastery of linear equations and systems.
- Problem Solving and Data Analysis, which is about analyzing problems and drawing information from data.
- Passport to Advanced Math, which features questions that ask you to manipulate complex equations.
- The Math Test also includes 2 questions from Additional Topics in Math, including the geometry and trigonometry most relevant to college and career readiness.
The Math Test is divided into two parts: a no-calculator portion and a calculator portion. In both portions, most of the test is multiple choice, but some of the questions at the end ask you to write the answer (these are called “grid-ins”).
Breakdown of the Test
No-Calculator Portion Time allotted 25 minutes Total questions 17 Multiple-choice questions 13 Grid-in questions 4 Calculator Portion Time allotted 45 minutes Total questions 31 Multiple-choice questions 27 Grid-in questions 4 Types of Math Tested
Type of Math Number of Questions Heart of Algebra 16 Problem Solving and Data Analysis 16 Passport to Advanced Math 14 Additional Topics in Math 2