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Master the art of finding specific information directly stated by the author to earn reliable points on the SSAT.
Reading comprehension tests have existed in one form or another for over a century, and at their core they have always asked a fundamental question: Can the reader identify what the text actually says? Before educators began assessing inference, tone, or thematic interpretation, they first needed to know whether a student could locate explicit details — facts, descriptions, and statements written directly on the page. This skill remains the foundation of every standardized reading section, including the SSAT Upper Level.
On the SSAT Upper Level, roughly seven reading passages appear, each followed by several questions. A significant portion of those questions are detail questions — questions whose correct answers can be found word-for-word or in close paraphrase within the passage. Unlike inference or tone questions, these do not require you to read between the lines. The answer is right there; you just need an efficient strategy for finding it. That is what this lesson will teach you.
An explicit detail is any piece of information that the author states directly. It is not hidden, hinted at, or implied — it is written plainly in the passage. When a question asks you to locate an explicit detail, your job is to match the question to the specific sentence or sentences where that information appears. Mastering this skill depends on understanding four core principles.
The diagram below maps the step-by-step process you should follow every time you encounter a detail question on the SSAT. Notice that the process is cyclical: if your first scan does not locate the detail, you widen your search to synonyms and related language before checking the answer choices.
Notice that the process is front-loaded with preparation. By the time you actually look at the passage (Step 3), you already know exactly what you are looking for. This targeted approach saves valuable time and prevents the common mistake of getting lost in irrelevant paragraphs. The context window in Step 4 — the one or two sentences surrounding the key phrase — is where the confirmed detail almost always lives.
Detail questions on the SSAT use specific phrasing that distinguishes them from other question types. Learning to recognize these signal phrases instantly tells you that the answer is stated directly in the passage. Common stems include: "According to the passage…," "The author states that…," "Which of the following is mentioned in the passage?," "The passage indicates that…," and "Based on the passage, what is…" Each of these phrases points you toward explicit text rather than hidden meaning.
The correct answer to a detail question is almost never an exact word-for-word copy of the passage. Instead, test makers use paraphrase — restatement of the same idea using different vocabulary or slightly different sentence structure. For example, if the passage says, "The colony struggled to survive during its first winter," the correct answer might read, "Early settlers faced severe hardship in the cold months." The meaning is identical; the words have changed. Recognizing paraphrase is the single most important micro-skill for detail questions.
Wrong answer choices, called distractors, fall into predictable categories. A distractor might contain accurate words from the passage rearranged to create a false statement. It might reference a detail from a different paragraph than the one the question targets. It might introduce an outside fact that sounds reasonable but is never mentioned in the passage. Or it might exaggerate what the passage says, turning a mild claim into an extreme one. Once you understand these patterns, you can eliminate distractors quickly and confidently.
Understanding the types of wrong answers that appear on detail questions gives you a powerful advantage. The diagram below classifies the four major distractor types, each illustrated with an example based on a sample passage sentence: "The scientist published her findings in 1903 after three years of research."
Labeling each wrong answer with one of these four categories during practice is an excellent habit. Over time, you will develop an almost automatic ability to sense which distractor type is being used, allowing you to eliminate wrong choices in seconds rather than minutes.
Let us walk through a full detail question using a short passage excerpt. Read the passage below, then follow the step-by-step solution.
Question: According to the passage, what caused Dunmore's shipyard to lose its importance?
Students often approach detail questions with habits that feel productive but actually waste time or lead to errors. The table below compares effective strategies with their ineffective counterparts so you can recognize and correct common mistakes.
| Situation | Effective Strategy ✓ | Ineffective Strategy ✗ |
|---|---|---|
| You finish reading the passage | Move directly to the questions; use them to guide your re-reading. | Try to memorize every detail before looking at questions. |
| You see "According to the passage…" | Identify the key phrase and scan the passage for it. | Try to answer from memory without returning to the text. |
| Two choices seem correct | Find the exact sentence in the passage and compare both choices against it word by word. | Pick the one that "sounds better" without verifying. |
| You cannot find the detail | Search for synonyms of the key phrase; check topic sentences. | Re-read the entire passage from start to finish. |
| An answer matches your outside knowledge | Confirm the detail appears in the passage before selecting. | Choose it immediately because you "know" it is true. |
Mastering explicit-detail questions is not just valuable on its own — it is the foundation for every other question type on the SSAT reading section. Inference questions, for example, ask you to determine what the passage suggests or implies. But a strong inference always begins with accurately understanding what the passage explicitly says. If you misidentify the stated details, any inference you build on top of them will be flawed. The table below shows how detail skills connect to more advanced question types.
| Skill Level | Detail Question (This Lesson) | Advanced Question Types |
|---|---|---|
| What you locate | A specific fact or description stated directly in the text. | Inference: a conclusion the author implies but does not state. Main Idea: the central argument supported by multiple details. |
| Where you look | One or two specific sentences. | Inference: surrounding context and paragraph structure. Main Idea: the passage as a whole. |
| How you verify | The answer paraphrases the exact text. | The answer is logically consistent with details, even if not stated outright. |
| Key danger | Choosing an answer that sounds right but is not in the text. | Over-interpreting — drawing a conclusion the text does not support. |
As you progress through SSAT preparation, treat detail questions as your warm-up. They build the muscle memory of returning to the text and verifying claims — a habit that will serve you on inference, tone, vocabulary-in-context, and main idea questions alike. The students who perform best on the SSAT reading section are not necessarily the fastest readers; they are the most disciplined verifiers.
Locating explicit details is the most reliable way to earn points on the SSAT reading section because the answer is always somewhere in the passage. Successful students follow a consistent process: they read the question first to identify the key phrase, scan the passage for that phrase or its synonyms, re-read the surrounding context, and then match the correct answer to a direct paraphrase of the original text.
Equally important is recognizing the four major distractor types — misplaced details, outside information, twisted meanings, and extreme language — so you can eliminate wrong choices quickly. This foundational skill of returning to the text and verifying claims carries over to every other question type, making it the single best habit you can develop for standardized reading tests.