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Learn to figure out why an author wrote a passage so you can answer ISEE questions with confidence.
Every time you read something — a text from a friend, a science textbook, or a funny story — the person who wrote it had a reason. That reason is called the author's purpose. Understanding why an author wrote a passage is one of the most important skills on the ISEE Reading Comprehension section.
People have been thinking about author's purpose for thousands of years. Ancient Greek thinkers like Aristotle studied how writers and speakers use language to achieve different goals. Over time, teachers and scholars organized these ideas into categories we still use today.
On the ISEE, you will read six passages and answer about six questions per passage. At least one question on many passages will ask you about the author's purpose. The big question we need to answer is: How can you figure out WHY an author wrote a passage?
There are three main reasons an author writes something. You can remember them with the acronym PIE: Persuade, Inform, Entertain. Most passages on the ISEE fall into one of these categories. Let's look at each one.
When you're reading a passage on the ISEE, use this flowchart to help you decide the author's purpose. Ask yourself the questions in order, starting from the top. Each answer leads you closer to the correct purpose.
Notice that you check for persuade first. That's because persuasive writing can include facts AND stories, so it's easy to confuse it with other purposes. If the author is clearly pushing an opinion or argument, that's your answer right away.
Authors don't usually tell you their purpose directly. Instead, they leave clues in the words they choose, the way they organize ideas, and the tone (feeling) of the passage. Let's look at specific signal words (words that hint at the purpose) and other clues for each type.
One of the fastest ways to identify author's purpose is to pay attention to the tone (the feeling or attitude of the writing). Different purposes create different tones. The chart below shows how purpose, tone, and signal words connect.
| Purpose | You'll Find... | You WON'T Find... |
|---|---|---|
| Persuade | Opinions, reasons, emotional appeals, calls to action | Balanced presentation of both sides |
| Inform | Facts, data, definitions, neutral language | Strong opinions or characters in a story |
| Entertain | Characters, plot, dialogue, humor, suspense | Statistics or scientific data |
| Describe | Sensory details, imagery, vivid adjectives | Arguments or persuasive language |
Let's walk through an ISEE-style passage together. Read the short passage below, then follow the steps to identify the author's purpose.
Now the question: "The author's primary purpose in this passage is to..."
Sometimes the author's purpose isn't obvious. A passage might seem to fit more than one category. Here are common tricky situations and how to handle them on the ISEE.
| Tricky Situation | What to Do |
|---|---|
| A story that also teaches a lesson | If the passage is mostly a story with characters and events, the primary purpose is to entertain. Even if there's a moral, the story format makes it entertainment. |
| A science passage with interesting facts | Even if the facts are cool, if the passage is organized around teaching you information, the purpose is to inform — not entertain. |
| A passage with facts AND opinions | Look at the overall goal. If the facts are used to support an opinion, the purpose is to persuade. If the opinions are minor, the purpose is probably to inform. |
| A personal memoir or narrative nonfiction | These are true stories written in a story format. The primary purpose is usually to entertain or to share a personal experience. Look for emotions and vivid details. |
Sometimes the ISEE won't ask about the purpose of the entire passage. Instead, it might ask about a single paragraph or a specific section. These questions test your ability to do paragraph function analysis (figuring out what job a paragraph does within the larger passage).
| Paragraph Job | What It Does | Example Question Wording |
|---|---|---|
| Introduce | Sets up the topic or grabs attention | "The first paragraph primarily serves to..." |
| Support | Gives examples, evidence, or details | "The author includes paragraph 3 in order to..." |
| Contrast | Shows an opposing view or a different angle | "The purpose of the second paragraph is to..." |
| Conclude | Wraps up the argument or summarizes ideas | "The final paragraph primarily serves to..." |
When you get to the Upper Level ISEE or harder reading tests, these paragraph-level questions will appear more often. Practicing them now gives you a head start. The key strategy is the same: look at what the paragraph actually does, not just what it talks about.
Now it's your turn! Read each short passage or scenario and choose the best answer. Remember to use the PIE strategy and look for signal words, tone, and clues.
Every author writes with a reason in mind. On the ISEE, you can identify this reason by remembering PIE + D: authors write to Persuade (change your mind using opinions and emotional language), Inform (teach facts using neutral, educational language), Entertain (tell a story with characters, dialogue, and vivid details), or Describe (paint a picture with sensory language).
To find the answer, look for signal words and tone clues. Check for persuasion first, then informing, then entertaining. Remember to focus on the primary purpose — the main reason the author wrote the passage. Use process of elimination to cross out wrong answers, and never leave a question blank on the ISEE. You've got this!