Reading's a strange topic overall for testing and that I too, struggle greatly upon it. But like any subject, practice makes perfect. However, before you practice, there are a few important tips you should definitely consider.
Tip 1: Read the questions. Then, categorize each one either easy, normal, or hard. I'll break down each level:
Easy: These questions require no reading of the text(s), usually asking what a word means or about a sentence ripped straight from the prompt. It sometimes says something like, "Refer to line 20." These questions point you to where you need to read.
Normal: Those questions need some reading from the text or skimming, like a paragraph or two, and a bit of understanding of what you're reading.
Hard: These questions want you to read the whole text or compare and contrast two prompts. Or maybe, they want you to identify the meaning, tone, or theme of a passage. Usually makes you cry internally.
Examples:
"Easy"
(Points you in the correct direction, minimal strings attached.)
"Normal"
(Requires you to skim the text for the answer with some understanding.)
"Hard"
(Requires that you read the prompt AND understand it.)
With these levels, I don't recommend answering the questions in order, because you'll want to answer them from easy to normal then hard. You goal is to get as many as you can right. Skipping is a useful technique too.
Tip 2: This tip follows the first one. Read the prompt fully. Read to understand. Read with the questions in mind. Read briskly. This is probably the hardest step of the test and most time-consuming, but it IS important you read it. To do this, look at the author's diction, syntax, figurative language, and anything else that reveals the theme, meaning, and tone.
Tip 3: Broaden your vocabulary. Oftentimes, a text may be superfluous in nature, so you combat by knowing a wide range of words. English has over a million of them, so its not easy to accomplish, but reading books of high literary merit can alleviate some of the stress by exposing you to a heightened vocabulary.
Tip 4: Do the test backwards. Start with the last prompt and end with the first. Standardized reading tests usually feature the opposite of an escalating difficulty curve, since the excerpts become easier as you go. So go from 50 to 1.
Tip 5: Use process of elimination and choose the BEST answer. One answer can always be eliminated from the get go. This is important for questions that seemingly have two correct answers, but one is always better than the other, even if you think otherwise (I ALWAYS think otherwise!
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Tip 6: Condition your mind with practice tests.
I am most confident you will be successful in your academic career, regardless of whether you follow these tips or not. I hope I showed you something useful.