SAT · Evidence-Based Passages · France

Evidence-Based Passages for the SAT Exam — French candidates

0% of the SAT test plan. Paired passages, data-table integration, and cross-textual synthesis questions — a distinct question type within the Digital SAT Reading and Writing section. Calibrated for French candidates.

Most exam coaching covers the curriculum at the same depth across all topics. That misses the asymmetry of high-stakes testing: a few topics carry disproportionate weight on the score. Evidence-Based Passages sits at roughly 0% of the Scholastic Assessment Test content distribution — Evidence-based passage questions pair two short texts or pair a text with a table/graph. Students must synthesise information across sources to answer a single question. These multi-source questions are among the more cognitively demanding in the Digital SAT RW section and appear in both easy and hard modules. Pass rates for the SAT are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For French candidates preparing for SAT, the calibration of study to local context matters: France's domestic credentials are the Baccalauréat (school leaving) and DELF/DALF (French proficiency). IELTS and Cambridge are common for English certification.

Pass rates for SAT (France) are published periodically by the awarding body.

Common failure modes

These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.

  • !Reading only Passage 1 and ignoring how it relates to Passage 2 or the table
  • !Selecting an answer that is supported by one source but contradicted by the other
  • !Misinterpreting quantitative data in a table — picking the wrong row or column
  • !Confusing the authors' views with each other in passages presenting contrasting perspectives

Study tips

  • 1For paired passages, read both before looking at any question. Identify the relationship: do they agree, disagree, one extends the other, or one provides evidence for the other?
  • 2For text-plus-table questions, read the claim in the text first, then check the table to see which data point directly supports or illustrates the claim.
  • 3Annotate each passage with a one-word label: 'agrees,' 'disagrees,' or 'adds detail.' This prevents confusion when the question asks what one author would say about the other.
  • 4Practice paired passages specifically in official College Board Digital SAT practice materials — the format is distinct from old paper SAT paired passages.
  • 5Les candidats français préparant le SAT doivent privilégier les ressources alignées sur le CECRL — les niveaux B2 et C1 sont systématiquement attendus pour les programmes de mobilité internationale.

Sample SAT Evidence-Based Passages questions

These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real SAT questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.

  1. 1

    Passage 1 argues that urban green spaces reduce stress. Passage 2 presents data showing lower cortisol levels in urban residents near parks. What relationship do the passages have?

    • APassage 2 contradicts Passage 1
    • BPassage 2 provides quantitative evidence supporting Passage 1Correct
    • CPassage 2 is unrelated to Passage 1
    • DPassage 1 summarises the findings of Passage 2
    Why this answer?

    Passage 1 makes a theoretical claim (green spaces reduce stress); Passage 2 offers empirical data (lower cortisol near parks) that supports the claim. This is a 'evidence supports claim' relationship.

  2. 2

    A question asks: 'Based on both passages, which conclusion is best supported?' The student should:

    • AChoose the conclusion supported by the longer passage
    • BChoose the conclusion that neither contradicts nor is absent from either passageCorrect
    • CIgnore whichever passage seems less authoritative
    • DSelect the most extreme conclusion offered by either passage
    Why this answer?

    For cross-passage synthesis questions, the correct answer must be consistent with both sources. An answer that is true in one passage but false in the other is a distracter. The safest strategy is to eliminate any answer that either passage contradicts.

Frequently asked questions

How many paired-passage questions appear on the Digital SAT?
The Digital SAT typically includes 2–4 paired-passage or text-plus-data-table question sets in each Reading and Writing module. The exact number varies by module difficulty.
Do paired passages on the Digital SAT always present opposing viewpoints?
No. Paired passages may present opposing viewpoints, but they may also show one author extending or building on another's argument, or one passage providing data that illustrates a claim made in the other. Identifying the relationship type before answering saves time.
What is the SAT pass rate for French candidates?
Pass rates for SAT candidates in France are published periodically by the awarding body. Practice questions, full-length simulations, and weak-area drills are the highest-impact way to improve your odds.
How long should French candidates study Evidence-Based Passages for the SAT?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Evidence-Based Passages requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. France's domestic credentials are the Baccalauréat (school leaving) and DELF/DALF (French proficiency). IELTS and Cambridge are common for English certification. Combine Evidence-Based Passages study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

Practice the Digital SAT free with Koydo.

Reading & Writing + Math in the post-2024 adaptive format.

Related study guides

Regulatory citation: College Board Digital SAT Suite Specifications 2024 — Multi-source evidence and integrated text/data questions (Reading and Writing section).