Introduction to the SAT Writing Test
Page 3
A Few Words on the Multiple-Choice Writing QuestionsThe test writers refer to the three types of multiple-choice questions in the SAT Writing Test as "identifying sentence errors," "improving sentences," and "improving paragraphs." We'll refer to them collectively as "proofreading and editing questions" (or proofreading questions for short) because proofreading is what you're required to do.
Before we consider what grammar and writing topics are tested on these questions, here's what's not tested:
- Spelling
- Capitalization rules
- Punctuation (though on a question or two you may need to decide which is required in a given sentence, a comma or a semicolon)
- Idiom errors
- Pronoun errors
- Singular-plural errors
- Comparison errors
- Lack of parallel structure
By the way, you'll be relieved to hear that you don't need to know all those formidable grammatical terms that strike terror in the hearts of students everywhere like gerund or subjunctive tense or past participle. We'll need a few simple grammatical terms to discuss the subject matter, of course, but if you have even a passing familiarity with the following words, you'll be fine:
- noun
- verb
- pronoun
- adverb
- adjective
- preposition
- phrase
- clause
- subject
- object
How the Multiple-Choice Section Will Be Scored
The multiple-choice writing questions are scored the same way the multiple-choice math or reading questions are scored. First, a "raw score" is calculated by subtracting those questions left blank (times 1.00) and those answered incorrectly (times 1.25) from the total number of questions in the section (45). For the mathematically inclined, here's the formula used to calculate your raw score on the multiple-choice writing questions:
Multiple-Choice Raw Score = 49 (1.00 x blanks) - (1.25 errors)
Notice that blanks do hurt your score in this section, just like they do in the multiple-choice math and reading sections. In fact, on the 200-800 writing scale, each blank you leave on a multiple-choice question lowers your eventual score by 10 points10 points that you can never recover. So, if you've spent time on a question, be sure to put something down on your answer sheet even if you have to guess. (This ironclad rule applies throughout the entire test.)
As I mentioned earlier, this multiple-choice raw score accounts for two-thirds of your overall Writing Score.
Next, I'll discuss how your essay will be scored, and then I'll show you how your two writing section sub-scores are combined into a final 200-to-800 point score.