- Mon Feb 17, 2025 5:59 pm
#111954
Hi lsat,
While the first and last paragraphs are often good places to identify key ideas that get at the main point based on how many passages are organized, that is not really the optimal strategy for determining/pre-phrasing the main point and doesn't always work.
Instead, after you've finished reading the passage, ask yourself a few basic questions.
1. What is the passage about? In other words, what is the topic of the passage?
Here, the passage is about fake art, including what is considered fake art, and about a specific book on this topic.
2. What does the author think/How does the author feel about this topic?
The author believes that this topic is complicated and that there are many possibilities between the extremes of deliberately fake (i.e. intended to deceive, like a forgery) and something considered original. While the support for this primarily appears in the first and last paragraph, you should determine this based on the message of the passage rather than looking for the answers in specific set places in the passage. In other words, the support for the main point could have been located elsewhere, so it's important to note the author's viewpoint as you read and diagram the passage, so that you can determine the main idea/point no matter where it appears.
Finally, one trick that can be helpful is to imagine the author in front of you and you ask the author to convey the meaning/most important idea of the passage in one sentence. In other words, why did the author write this passage? What is the idea that the author is trying to convey? What is the one piece of information that the author would like readers to know and take away after reading the passage?