The Digital SAT gives you a built-in highlighter, but the highest-scoring students don’t use it to color every line. They use it as a decision-making tool: highlight...
Digital SAT Writing: 4 Fast Ways to Fix Grammar, Meaning, and Data Questions
Digital SAT Writing: 4 Fast Ways to Fix Grammar, Meaning, and Data Questions
On the Digital SAT, the Writing and Language-style questions (now inside the Reading & Writing section) reward students who can move quickly without getting sloppy. That usually means two things: (1) spot the grammatical “signal” the test is actually measuring, and (2) use the minimum amount of reading needed to answer confidently.
Below are four short, targeted video tips you can practice this week. Watch them in order, then try 8–10 similar questions in a row to build speed while keeping accuracy high.
Four video tips you can apply immediately
Tip 1: Don’t insert commas between a title and a name
When a noun directly identifies the person (for example, chemistry professor Yu-Geng Sun), you usually keep it as one unit—no comma. A quick check is to ask: is the name the professor? If yes, separating them creates an error and wastes time.
Tip 2: Match modifiers to the correct noun (meaning > “grammar vibes”)
Some answer choices are grammatically “fine” but attach a descriptive phrase to the wrong thing. If a sentence says titles are “laden with emojis,” then your revision must keep that description connected to titles—not the listener, not the pieces, and not the approach. This is one of the fastest ways to eliminate three choices immediately.
Tip 3: Keep verb forms parallel—don’t mix a main verb with a second action
Watch for sentences where the subject needs one clear main verb. If the sentence tries to say “scientists searched … and adapted …,” the structure can break unless the verbs are set up correctly. A strong fix is often to turn one action into a descriptive phrase (so the main verb stays clean and the meaning stays coherent).
Tip 4: In “graph support” questions, restate the conclusion before choosing data
For questions that ask you to pick data supporting a researcher’s claim, don’t start by reading answer choices. First, paraphrase the conclusion in plain language (for example: “children notice mammals more than other animals”). Then find the single comparison on the chart that directly proves it (like mammals being the highest percentage).
How to practice these skills (15 minutes per day)
Speed comes from repeating the same decision pattern until it becomes automatic. Try this simple routine:
- Day 1–2: Do 10 punctuation questions and label each one: “comma needed” vs. “comma breaks the noun phrase.”
- Day 3–4: Do 10 modifier/meaning questions and underline the noun each description must attach to.
- Day 5: Do 10 verb-form questions and circle the subject + main verb before you look at the choices.
- Day 6–7: Do 8 mixed questions and keep a mistake log with the exact rule you missed.
Common traps to warn students (and parents) about
If you’re helping a student prep, these are the errors that tend to show up repeatedly:
- Over-punctuating: Adding commas “because it sounds right” instead of checking whether the words form one essential unit.
- Ignoring meaning shifts: A revision can be grammatically correct but change who or what the sentence is describing.
- Verb confusion: Switching tenses or structures mid-sentence because multiple actions appear close together.
- Data-choice guessing: Picking a true statement from the graph that doesn’t actually support the stated conclusion.
Need a personalized SAT/ACT plan?
These four tips work best when they’re paired with targeted practice and feedback on your specific error patterns. If you’d like 1:1 support, contact MyGuru for SAT/ACT tutoring: myguruedge.com/sat-tutoring.
