Inferences

Inferences — Identifying Distractors

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How to Approach It

Inference distractors punish students who take one logical step too many. The correct inference is the smallest careful step beyond what the passage states. Wrong answers usually look right because they take a larger step — still in the same direction, still consistent with the topic, but no longer supported by the evidence. The five trap shapes to learn are: overreach, reversed inference, outside-cause, scope expansion, and absolute upgrade. Each is engineered to feel reasonable.

Overreach is the most common inference distractor. The passage says X likely contributed to Y; the wrong answer says X was the sole cause of Y. The passage says a treatment may help; the wrong answer says it always works. The passage says some members of a group reported a behavior; the wrong answer says the entire group practiced the behavior. Overreach traps walk a defensible inference up the staircase one or two steps too far. The defense is to underline the passage's hedge — may, likely, suggests, can, sometimes, in some cases — and require the answer to use a hedge of equal or lower strength.

Reversed-inference distractors keep the same vocabulary but flip the relationship. If the passage says reduced predation likely contributed to a species' spread, the wrong answer may say the species' spread reduced predation. Same words, opposite arrow. These traps work because students often retain vocabulary faster than they retain direction. The fix is to draw a quick arrow in your head as you read: A -> B. Then check whether each choice's arrow points the same way.

Outside-cause distractors invent a cause the passage does not name. A passage about a wetland restoration improving frog populations may offer 'pesticide use also contributed' as a choice, even though the passage explicitly says no pesticides were used. Or a passage about a port city's tax receipts rising after a lighthouse was built may offer 'higher tax rates explain the rise,' even though the passage says rates were unchanged. Outside-cause traps add a plausible-sounding factor the passage rules out or never mentions. The defense is to limit your inference to factors the passage discusses.

Scope-expansion distractors generalize a local finding into a universal rule. A passage describing a study in one wetland may have a wrong answer saying the same effect occurs in every wetland. A passage about a single port city may have a wrong answer saying lighthouses always increase trade. The passage's findings are bound by the scope of its evidence; the inference must respect that. Watch for choices that move from 'in this case' to 'in all cases,' or from 'in this region' to 'everywhere.'

Absolute-upgrade distractors strip the qualifier from a measured claim. A passage saying transportation access can affect interview attendance becomes a wrong answer saying transportation access guarantees employment. A passage saying lighthouses may have contributed to safer harbor entry becomes a wrong answer saying lighthouses prevented all wrecks. SAT writers consistently prefer hedged inferences. If your answer's hedge is weaker than the passage's, the answer is probably too strong.

When you review inference misses, label the trap you fell for. Most students fall for overreach and absolute upgrade. Once you see how often the test rewards the most modest defensible answer, you stop reaching for the strong one. The practice questions below show you the correct answer up front and ask you to identify the strongest distractor. Doing this trains your eye to spot overreach as overreach rather than as confident reasoning.

Example Questions

1mediumsciencescope-expansion
After a wetland was restored, researchers recorded more frogs, more dragonflies, and fewer mosquito larvae. No pesticide was applied during the same period.

The correct answer is A: wetland restoration may have changed the local food web in a way that reduced mosquito larvae. Which choice is the strongest distractor?

2hardhistoryoverreach
A port city's tax receipts rose sharply after a new lighthouse was built, even though tax rates did not change. Shipping records from the same period show fewer wrecks near the harbor entrance.

The correct answer is A: the lighthouse may have made harbor entry safer, contributing to increased trade activity. Which choice is the strongest distractor?

3mediumhumanitiesabsolute-upgrade
The author published the novel under a pseudonym. In private letters, she wrote that publishers treated adventure stories by women as less serious than similar stories by men.

The correct answer is A: the author may have used a pseudonym to avoid gender-based assumptions about her work. Which choice is the strongest distractor?

4easyscienceabsolute-upgrade
In a dry year, trees on shallow soil lost leaves earlier than trees near a stream. The stream-side trees continued growing for several weeks after the others had stopped.

The correct answer is A: access to water likely helped the stream-side trees continue growing longer. Which choice is the strongest distractor?

5hardsocial_studiesscope-expansion
A city offered free bus passes to residents of a neighborhood with limited job access. Six months later, job interview attendance rose, but employment increased only slightly because many jobs still required evening hours after bus service ended.

The correct answer is A: transportation access can affect interview attendance, but service schedules may still limit employment outcomes. Which choice is the strongest distractor?

Practice This SAT Question Type

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