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Understanding why an author writes transforms you from a passive reader into a critical thinker.
For as long as humans have communicated through writing, readers have needed to ask a fundamental question: why did the author write this? The study of author's purpose is rooted in the ancient discipline of rhetoric—the art of effective communication. From Greek philosophers who analyzed speeches to modern standardized tests that ask you to evaluate passages, understanding purpose has always been central to critical reading.
On the SSAT Upper Level, you will encounter passages drawn from literature, science, history, and the humanities. Each passage was selected because it demonstrates a clear purpose—and the test expects you to identify that purpose accurately. The key challenge is this: authors rarely announce their intentions directly. You must infer purpose from clues embedded in word choice, structure, tone, and content. The rest of this lesson will teach you exactly how to do that.
Every piece of writing exists because the author wanted to achieve something—a goal, an effect, a response. Identifying that goal is what we mean by recognizing the author's purpose. While purposes can overlap and blend, most passages on the SSAT fall into one of several primary categories. Understanding these categories and the textual evidence that signals each one gives you a reliable framework for answering purpose questions.
The diagram below maps each primary author's purpose to the specific textual evidence you should look for. On the SSAT, you won't have time to analyze every detail of a passage, so knowing which clues point to which purpose allows you to identify intent quickly and accurately.
Notice how each purpose has a distinct set of signals. An informational passage relies on facts and neutral language, while a persuasive passage uses charged words and opinion statements. An entertaining passage deploys narrative elements like characters and dialogue, while a descriptive passage loads up on sensory imagery. On the SSAT, the test makers design answer choices to tempt you toward secondary purposes. By anchoring your answer to the dominant cluster of evidence, you can avoid these traps.
Identifying purpose is not a matter of guessing or gut feeling—it's a systematic process. The method below gives you a repeatable approach that works across all passage types on the SSAT. Think of it as a diagnostic checklist: each step narrows the possibilities until the purpose becomes clear.
A useful mnemonic for the four major purposes is P.I.E.S.: Persuade, Inform, Entertain, and Share/Describe. When you first encounter a passage, run through the following diagnostic steps.
One of the fastest ways to identify purpose is to pay attention to signal words—specific vocabulary choices that reveal what an author is trying to accomplish. These words function like road signs: they tell you where the writing is heading before you've finished the journey. The table below organizes common signal words and phrases by purpose category, giving you a quick-reference tool for test day.
| Purpose | Signal Words & Phrases | Typical Tone |
|---|---|---|
| Inform | "according to," "studies show," "research indicates," "in fact," "the process involves," "for example" | Neutral, objective, measured, matter-of-fact |
| Persuade | "must," "should," "it is essential that," "clearly," "undeniably," "we cannot afford to," "the evidence proves" | Urgent, passionate, assertive, sometimes indignant |
| Entertain | "once upon a time," "suddenly," "she whispered," "the door creaked," "little did he know," direct dialogue | Engaging, playful, suspenseful, dramatic, humorous |
| Describe | "glistening," "the aroma of," "crimson," "as smooth as," "towering," sensory adjectives | Vivid, evocative, lyrical, contemplative |
| Analyze | "however," "on the other hand," "the significance of," "this suggests," "compared to," "in contrast" | Thoughtful, balanced, evaluative, scholarly |
While individual words are helpful, the overall tone of a passage is an even more reliable indicator of purpose. Tone is the author's attitude toward the subject, conveyed through the cumulative effect of word choice, sentence length, and rhetorical strategy. A passage with a detached, clinical tone almost certainly aims to inform, regardless of whether any single word screams 'informational.' Conversely, a passage that builds to an emotional crescendo is likely persuasive or expressive, even if it contains factual data.
Passages that fall in the middle of this spectrum—reflective or mildly opinionated—are the trickiest on the SSAT. For these, you need to look beyond tone and examine the passage's overall structure and concluding paragraphs. Authors often reveal their true purpose most clearly in how they end a passage: a call to action points to persuasion, a summary of facts points to information, and a reflective closing image points to description or entertainment.
Even strong readers can stumble on purpose questions when they fall into predictable traps. The SSAT test writers craft answer choices that exploit common misreadings. Knowing these traps in advance gives you a significant advantage.
| Common Mistake | Why It Happens | How to Avoid It |
|---|---|---|
| Confusing topic with purpose | A passage about volcanoes might lead you to select 'to explain how volcanoes work' when the author's actual purpose is to argue for better evacuation plans. | Ask 'WHY did the author write about this topic?' not just 'WHAT is the topic?' |
| Choosing a secondary purpose | Most passages serve multiple purposes. A narrative might inform while entertaining—but the question asks for the PRIMARY purpose. | Identify which purpose drives the passage's structure and conclusion. The primary purpose shapes the whole text. |
| Letting personal feelings interfere | If you strongly agree or disagree with a passage, you may project purpose onto it—seeing persuasion where there is only information. | Base your answer strictly on textual evidence: tone, signal words, and structure—not your reaction to the content. |
| Selecting an overly broad answer | Choices like 'to discuss a topic' or 'to share information' sound safe but are often too vague to be the best answer. | Choose the most specific answer that accurately captures purpose. Specificity usually beats generality on the SSAT. |
| Ignoring the conclusion | Readers often form a judgment based on the opening paragraph alone and skip the ending, where purpose is most explicitly revealed. | Always read the final paragraph carefully. The conclusion often contains the author's thesis, call to action, or reflective insight. |
As you advance in your reading skills, you'll encounter passages where purpose is not a simple, single category. Sophisticated authors often layer purposes, and the SSAT sometimes tests your ability to navigate this complexity. Understanding the distinction between basic purpose identification and nuanced purpose analysis will help you handle the most challenging SSAT reading questions.
| Basic Purpose Question | Nuanced Purpose Question |
|---|---|
| "The author's primary purpose is to..." | "In paragraph 3, the author shifts purpose in order to..." |
| Requires identifying one overarching purpose for the whole passage | Requires recognizing how purpose changes within a passage |
| Answer choices are clearly distinct categories (inform, persuade, entertain) | Answer choices are subtle variations within a single category ("to challenge a common assumption" vs. "to introduce a controversial theory") |
| Strategy: Use the P.I.E.S. framework and flowchart | Strategy: Reread the specific section, noting how it connects to surrounding paragraphs |
Within each major category, there are more specific purposes that the SSAT may test. An informational passage might specifically aim to compare two theories, to trace the development of an idea, or to define a complex term. A persuasive passage might aim to challenge a popular misconception, to advocate for a policy change, or to defend an unpopular position. When you see answer choices at this level of specificity, match each choice against the passage's thesis and structural organization to find the best fit.
As you prepare for the SSAT, practice not only identifying the broad category of purpose but also articulating the specific goal of each passage you read. This habit builds the precise thinking that distinguishes top scorers from average ones.
Identifying author's purpose means determining why a passage was written. The major categories—inform, persuade, entertain, and describe—each produce distinct textual fingerprints. Use the P.I.E.S. framework and the three-step diagnostic method: first assess tone, then examine content and intent, and finally check signal words and structure. Always focus on the primary purpose—the one that drives the passage as a whole—rather than a secondary or partial purpose.
Watch out for common traps: confusing topic with purpose, selecting secondary purposes, choosing answers that are too broad or too narrow, and ignoring the conclusion where purpose is often most clearly revealed. For advanced questions, be prepared to identify sub-purposes and shifts in purpose within a passage. Practice these skills consistently, and purpose questions will become among the most reliable points you earn on the SSAT.