Unit 20
Unit 20
Unit 20
In the TOEFL® Reading Comprehension section, there are questions about the topic, the
title, or the main idea of a passage. All of these questions essentially ask about the
same thing. The topic is what the passage discusses; the title represents what the passage
is all about; and the main idea is the main point the writer wants to convey. The main
idea of a passage can be either stated or unstated (implied) in the passage. This unit
discusses explicitly stated main ideas. To answer questions about the main idea, you
should carefully read the first line of each paragraph of the passage and look for a
common theme throughout these lines.
Example 1
Line Of the various tribes living in the Ituri rain forest of Africa, Pygmies are the
most unusual. They are perfectly formed people except that they weigh only about
eighty pounds with a height of not more than four feet. Pygmies are great travelers,
capable of moving in the treetops almost as expertly as monkeys. Often they travel
5 great distances through tree branches without touching the ground.
Pygmies are also renowned as great hunters as they can shoot three or four
arrows one after another so rapidly that often the last one leaves the bow before the
first has reached its target. If an arrow misses its target, the impatient Pygmy may
fly into a rage, breaking his arrows and stamping on them. Regardless of their
10 extraordinary little bodies, Pygmies can consume a large amount of food. One
Pygmy can finish a stalk of sixty bananas at a single meal, in addition to quantities
of meat. After eating, he will lie on his hard earth bed and groan in pain all night.
In the morning, he is ready to eat the same amount of food all over again.
Adapted from SRA Reading Laboratory 3b by Don H. Parker
Sample questions
Explanation
1. The first sentence of paragraph one shows that the paragraph talks about how
unusual the Pygmies are. The first sentence of paragraph two also supports the
unusualness of the tribe. Option (B) is too general; option (C) is too specific, used in
support of the main idea in the first sentence; and option (D) is not correct because
the passage does not tell about isolation at all. Therefore, the correct answer is (A).
2. To answer question 2, find a common idea that covers all the details of the passage.
Since the passage tells about the uniqueness of the Pygmies, the correct answer is (D)
The Incredible Pygmy.
Example 2
Line Dew, the thin film of water that has condensed on the surface of objects near
the ground, forms when radiational cooling of these objects during the nighttime
hours also cools the shallow layer of overlying air in contact with them. It then
causes the condensation of some water vapor. This condensation occurs if the
5 capacity of air to hold water vapor lessens as the air is cooled. Dew forms most
readily on those surfaces that lose heat through radiation most efficiently but are
insulated from external heat sources. Dew is easily formed if humidity in the lowest
layers of air is high. The humidity either supplies the moisture or at least inhibits the
evaporation of the dew already deposited. Strong winds reduce dew formation
10 since they mix a larger layer of air, creating a more homogeneous distribution of
heat and water vapor. Under such conditions, it is unlikely that a sufficiently cool
and damp layer of air can form near the ground.
Adapted from The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 2003, Columbia University Press
Sample question
What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) The condensation of water vapor
(B) The impact of humidity on dew formation
(C) How dew is formed
(D) Where dew is formed
Explanation
The question asks about the topic or subject of the passage. Read the first sentence that
says Dew … forms when …. The next sentences give details of how dew is formed.
Strategies
1. Read the first line of the paragraph, or, if the passage consists of more than one
paragraph, the first sentences of all the paragraphs.
2. Look for a common theme or general idea that covers the supporting details.
3. Go over the rest of the passage to check if you have found the correct common
theme or idea.
4. Choose the answer that has the same idea as that found in the passage.
Exercise 1
Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions.
Line Migration, very common among insects and birds, is driven by weather
changes. During the cold winter period, food is incredibly inadequate for the
animals to carry on, so they make remarkable migrations to find warmer places
and to forage. Although most migrating insects only go short distances, particular
5 insects fly very long distances. For example, monarch butterflies spend the summer
in Canada and the Northern U.S., and afterward migrate as far south as Mexico for
the winter. Many birds migrate in the fall and fly extremely far. For instance, arctic
terns nests near the North Pole in the summer. In autumn, they fly south all the way
to Antarctica and return to the north each spring. Since the journey can be
10 dangerous, some travel in large flocks like geese that fly in noisy, V-shaped groups.
Adapted from www.sciencemadesimple.com
Exercise 3
Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions.
Line Hibernating animals that preserve energy and survive in the winter with little
or no food can be put into two categories. The first category is that of the true
hibernators. They go into such a deep sleep that they may appear dead. Their
body temperature drops near the freezing point; breathing and heartbeat slow
5 down significantly. For example, a hibernating woodchuck's temperature drops
from 980 F to as low as 380 F, and its heart rate slows from 80 to 4 beats per
minute. If its temperature continues to fall, it will awaken slightly and shiver to
warm up a bit. Other true hibernators include jumping mice, little brown bats,
eastern chipmunks, and some species of ground squirrels.
10 The other class of hibernators does not experience major changes in
temperature, breathing and heart rate. Animals such as skunks, raccoons and
some chipmunks are light sleepers during the harshest weather and wake for a day
or so every two to fourteen days to roam and eat during milder weather. But
hibernating bears, unlike other hibernators of this class, do not eat or drink or
15 excrete at all. They get their energy by burning their stored fat and the metabolic
rate is reduced by only 50%. They can wake up quickly although they breathe less
and their heartbeats are slower.
Adapted from www.sciencemadesimple.com
REVIEW
Review 1
Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions.
Line That a human being sees the world in three dimensions is made possible
because human eyes are about three inches apart. The separation of the eyes
presents two slightly different views of every image a person encounters. In the
brain's visual cortex, these views are compared, and the overlap is translated into a
5 stereoptic picture. To estimate relative distances, the brain takes a reading of the
tension in eye muscles.
A person sees in three dimensions only up to about 67 meters. Beyond that,
he might as well be one-eyed because his eyes cannot provide two extraordinarily
different views over long distances. Instead, he relies on experience to determine
10 where an object is while at the same time the brain searches for clues and makes its
finest assumption. For example, the brain realizes that near objects overlap far
ones; that bright objects are closer than dim ones; and that large objects are nearer
than small ones.
These “monocular cues” are what painters use to trick the eyes into thinking
15 that a flat canvas is three-dimensional and miles deep. For that reason, paintings
are much more convincing if one closes his eyes and tries to imagine the pictures.
His brain captures all the clues the painter has used. But when both eyes are open,
the brain gets more information and mixed signals. The paint may say miles, but
the eye muscles say inches.
Adapted from www2.gsu.edu
5. Where in the passage does the author mention the limit that human eyes can see
objects in three dimensions?
(A) Lines 1-2
(B) Lines 5-6
(C) Lines 7-9
(D) Lines 14-15
Review 2
Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions.
Line The Academy Awards, granted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences, are the most prominent film awards in the United States. They have
great impact on the film industry since an award winning or nomination can give
both prestige and profit to a studio or a performer. The award ceremony and
5 the extravagant parties afterwards such as the Academy’s Governor’s Ball are
broadcast all over the world.
The award statuette is called The Academy Award of Merit. The small
statue’s nickname, the Oscar, is used as often as its formal name, even by the
Academy itself. The Academy’s domain name is oscars.org and the official
10 website for the Academy Awards is at oscars.com. The origin of the name has
never been determined. Many claimed to have given the name Oscar. They
5. When were the Academy Awards presented for the first time?
(A) In 1927
(B) In 1929
(C) In 1934
(D) In 1935
6. Where in the passage does the author mention the origin of the name Oscar?
(A) Lines 7-9
(B) Lines 10-11
(C) Lines 14-16
(D) Lines 17-19
Supplementary Exercise 1
Directions: Read the passage and answer the questions.
Line The term Third World refers to the technologically less advanced or
developing nations. These nations are in general portrayed as poor nations.
Their economies depend on the export of main products to the developed
countries. In return, the Third World nations will import finished products. They
5 also tend to have high rates of illiteracy, disease, and population growth.
Politically, the Third World sprang from the Bandung Conference in 1955.
At the conference, the concept of a third world force emerged, and as a result, in
1961, Yugoslavia, India, and Indonesia initiated the founding of the Non
Aligned Movement. Its members were nations that formed a force through a
10 policy of nonalignment with the United States and Soviet Union. The term Third
World was at first intended to set apart the nonaligned nations, which gained
independence from colonial rule after World War II, from the Western nations
and from those that made up the former Eastern bloc. More specifically, it was
distinguished from the first world (the United States) and the second world (the
15 former Soviet Union). By the late 1990’s, the movement’s 113 members, mainly
countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, represent more than half of the
world's people, including true neutrals and nations that were in fact aligned with
either the first or the second world during the cold war.
With its many members today, the Third World is now economically diverse
20 although numerically the group dominates the United Nations. The oil-rich
nations such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Libya, and the newly emerged
industrial states such as Taiwan, South Korea, and Singapore have little in
common with desperately poor nations such as Haiti, Chad, and Afghanistan.
Adapted from reference.allrefer.com