Cross-Text Connections items are among the slowest questions in the section because they require holding two arguments in mind at once. When you are unsure, the temptation is to reread both passages until the answer becomes obvious. That rarely works. Instead, reduce each text to a one-sentence stance, then ask a small number of structured questions of every choice. With practice, this routine resolves most CTC ties without rereading.
Step one is to write a one-sentence stance for each text in your head. Stance has two parts: a claim and a relationship. The claim is what the author asserts. The relationship is how that claim relates to the other author's. Useful relationship verbs include endorse, extend, qualify, complicate, reject, supplement, narrow, generalize, and reinterpret. If you cannot summarize each author in one sentence, you have not yet read the passages closely enough; spend ten more seconds before evaluating choices.
Step two is to write a single relationship verb for Author 2 with respect to Author 1: 'qualifies,' 'extends,' 'complicates,' 'rejects.' This verb is your guide. When you look at the answer choices, the right one almost always matches your verb, and the wrong ones use mismatched verbs. A 'qualifies' relationship is not the same as a 'rejects' relationship, and the SAT is testing whether you can tell the difference. If your verb is wrong, all your downstream reasoning will be wrong, so re-derive the verb if a candidate answer feels off.
Step three is to require every surviving choice to mention or imply both authors. The most common CTC distractor is a true statement about only one text. If a choice describes only Author 1's view or only Author 2's view, eliminate it, even if the description is accurate. CTC questions test relationships, not summaries, so a relationship must appear in the answer.
Step four is to match intensity. SAT writers prefer measured wording, and so do correct CTC answers. If a choice uses 'would likely,' 'would probably,' 'tends to suggest,' or 'would qualify,' it is gentler than a choice using 'would reject as fundamentally mistaken' or 'completely overturns.' When the underlying disagreement is mild, the gentle wording usually wins. When the underlying disagreement is sharp — one author explicitly calling the other's view wrong — the stronger wording wins. Read the texts' intensity and pick the choice whose temperature matches.
Step five is to test the answer against a forced rewrite. Convert the choice into a fill-in sentence: 'Compared with Author 1, Author 2 ____.' Plug each surviving choice's relationship into the blank and ask whether it matches what Author 2 actually says. 'Compared with Author 1, Author 2 supplements the account by adding pre-existing networks.' That is a clean fit. 'Compared with Author 1, Author 2 rejects the role of charisma.' That clashes with the text's 'agrees that leadership mattered.' Forced rewriting catches choices that sound right when buried in formal prose.
When you must commit without certainty, prefer the choice that names both halves of the relationship: what Author 2 concedes and what Author 2 adds, or what Author 2 accepts and what Author 2 contests. Two-part choices are the SAT's signature correct shape for CTC questions involving qualification, supplementation, or complication. One-part choices that name only the disagreement are usually too strong; one-part choices that name only the agreement are usually too weak. The two-part choice almost always wins when the texts are in a partial-overlap relationship, which is the most common CTC setup. The practice questions below walk through the routine on items where two answers feel defensible at first.
Example Questions
1hardscienceIf Author 2 says 'at least as much as,' the right answer almost always uses 'equally important' or 'just as important.' Match the intensity word.
Text 1: A neuroscientist argues that adolescent decision-making improves primarily because the prefrontal cortex continues developing into the early twenties.
Text 2: A second neuroscientist accepts that prefrontal development matters but argues that improvements in adolescent decision-making depend at least as much on social context — mentors, predictable environments, opportunities to practice judgment — as on biological maturation.
How would Author 2 most likely respond to Author 1?
Answer: B. Stance Author 1: development drives improvement. Stance Author 2: development plus social context drives improvement. Relationship verb: supplements. Mention both authors? B yes, C yes (but wrong direction), A and D one-sided. Intensity: 'at least as much' supports B's 'equally important' and rules out A's full rejection. Forced rewrite: 'Compared with Author 1, Author 2 adds social context as an equally important factor' — clean fit with B.
Trap note: When Author 2 adds a factor, eliminate any choice that has Author 2 dismissing the original factor.
2hardhumanitiesWhen Author 2 uses 'warns,' 'cautions,' 'obscures,' or 'overlooks,' the relationship is usually complicate or qualify, not reject.
Text 1: A film historian argues that early silent comedies relied on a small set of universal physical gags, which is why their humor still translates across languages and decades.
Text 2: Another film historian agrees that physical gags travel well but warns that calling them 'universal' obscures how much each gag depended on specific cultural assumptions — about labor, gender, and class — that no longer apply.
How would Author 2 most likely respond to Author 1's claim that early silent comedies use universal gags?
Answer: C. Stance Author 1: gags are universal, which is why they translate. Stance Author 2: gags travel but rely on cultural assumptions that no longer apply. Relationship verb: complicates. Mention both authors? C yes; A and B are one-sided; D invents a recommendation. Intensity: 'warns that calling them universal obscures' supports complication, not rejection. Forced rewrite: 'Compared with Author 1, Author 2 complicates the universality claim by pointing to cultural assumptions' — clean fit.
Trap note: Complications keep the original claim partially intact. Choices that fully reject the claim are too strong.
3mediumsocial_studiesFor 'both authors would agree' items, pick the claim that survives the narrower author's qualifications. The stricter author's limits set the ceiling.
Text 1: A sociologist argues that volunteer work strengthens community bonds because volunteers form repeated, structured interactions with neighbors.
Text 2: Another sociologist agrees that volunteering can strengthen community bonds but emphasizes that this effect appears only when volunteers serve in their own neighborhoods; cross-town volunteering produces weaker effects.
Based on the texts, with which statement would both authors most likely agree?
Answer: B. Stance Author 1: volunteering builds bonds because of repeated interactions. Stance Author 2: volunteering builds bonds when it is local. Shared ground: volunteering can build bonds, with some conditional language acceptable to both. A is too strong (Author 2 narrows the claim). C reverses both authors. D contradicts Author 2 directly. B is the only claim that both authors' actual wording supports.
Trap note: Shared-agreement choices must satisfy the more cautious author too. Absolute words (always, never) almost never survive that test.
4hardscienceWhen Author 2 raises confounders, the relationship verb is almost always 'complicates' or 'cautions about causal claims.' Pick the choice that names the confounders.
Text 1: A researcher argues that a new educational software program improved math scores in the schools that adopted it.
Text 2: Another researcher reviews the same data and argues that the schools adopting the software also implemented several other reforms at the same time, making it difficult to attribute the score gains to the software alone.
Based on the texts, how would Author 2 most likely respond to Author 1's conclusion?
Answer: C. Stance Author 1: software caused gains. Stance Author 2: gains are real but causation is confounded. Relationship verb: complicates (specifically, raises a confounding-variables objection). A agrees with the wrong author; B and D invent positions not in the text. C matches the text's wording 'difficult to attribute the score gains to the software alone' almost verbatim.
Trap note: Author 2's objection is to the causal inference, not to the score gains. Choices denying the gains are inventing a position.
5hardhistoryWhen Author 2 reorders primary and secondary causes, look for a two-part choice that preserves both Author 2's concession and Author 2's promotion.
Text 1: A historian argues that ancient irrigation systems collapsed primarily because of long-term climate shifts that reduced water supply.
Text 2: Another historian agrees that climate played a role but argues that political fragmentation, which made coordinated canal maintenance impossible, was the decisive factor.
Based on the texts, how would Author 2 most likely respond to Author 1's primary explanation?
Answer: A. Stance Author 1: climate caused collapse. Stance Author 2: climate contributed; political fragmentation was decisive. Relationship verb: reweights (accepts one factor, promotes another). B reverses Author 2's concession; C ignores the disagreement; D invents a denial. A captures both halves of Author 2's stance — the concession and the relocation of primary cause.
Trap note: Reweighting causes is not the same as denying causes. Choices that erase the conceded factor are too strong.
Practice This SAT Question Type
Use the diagnostic to see whether Cross-Text Connections should be part of your next SAT practice plan.