Inferences
How to Approach It
Inference questions ask for the most reasonable conclusion supported by the text. They do not ask for a guess, a prediction based on outside knowledge, or a dramatic interpretation. A good inference is the smallest careful step beyond what is stated. If the passage says birds migrated earlier than in previous decades, you can infer that migration timing changed over time. You cannot automatically infer the cause unless the passage provides evidence for that cause. This is why inference questions often reward caution. Words like may, likely, suggests, can, and some are often safer than proves, always, never, or all.
The best way to solve inference questions is to treat the passage like evidence in a courtroom. What conclusion would a fair judge allow based only on this evidence? In the wetland example, frogs and dragonflies increased while mosquito larvae decreased after restoration, and no pesticide was used. A reasonable inference is that restoration may have changed the food web in a way that reduced larvae. It would be too strong to say restoration definitely caused every mosquito decline in the region. It would also be wrong to say pesticides caused the decline because the passage specifically rules that out.
Inference questions often involve cause, but they rarely allow an absolute causal claim unless the text is explicit. The port-city lighthouse example gives higher tax receipts, fewer wrecks, and unchanged tax rates. The best inference is that safer harbor entry may have contributed to increased trade. Notice the careful word may. The evidence supports a likely explanation, not certainty that the lighthouse was the only cause. Students often lose points by picking answers that are directionally reasonable but too strong. The SAT punishes overreach.
Another common inference pattern involves motivation or strategy. If an author used a pseudonym and private letters mention publishers taking women's adventure writing less seriously, it is reasonable to infer that the pseudonym may have helped avoid gender-based assumptions. But it is not reasonable to infer that publishers refused to print all books by women. That takes a specific bias and turns it into a universal rule. Watch for answer choices that broaden a limited statement into a sweeping claim.
When the answer is not obvious, eliminate anything with new information. A new person, motive, setting, comparison, or time period not in the passage is usually suspect. Then compare the remaining choices by strength. The correct answer often restates the passage's logic at a slightly higher level. In the bus-pass example, the passes improve interview attendance, but jobs requiring evening hours remain difficult because service ends. The inference is two-sided: transportation access helped, but schedule limits still constrained employment. An answer that mentions only success or only failure misses the nuance. The right inference preserves the full shape of the evidence.
As you practice inference, log the size of the leap you made. Did your answer add a new cause, motive, group, time period, or comparison that the passage did not support? Did you turn a cautious claim into an absolute one? Inference improves when you learn to choose the smallest justified step beyond the passage, not the most interesting possibility.
A useful inference test is the 'must be reasonable' standard. The correct answer does not have to be mathematically certain, but it must be justified by the evidence. If you need to add an unstated cause, motive, time period, or population, the answer is probably too speculative. For example, if a city installs fountains and nearby disease decreases, you may infer safer water likely contributed; you may not infer all disease disappeared or that water was the only cause. If a government lowers tariffs but food remains expensive because roads fail, you may infer policy alone was insufficient; you may not infer officials never cared about famine. Inference answers often combine two pieces of information. The best way to find them is to ask, 'What do these facts imply together?' Then keep your wording modest. In review, label each wrong answer by the kind of overreach it commits: too broad, too certain, new concept, reversed relationship, or real-world assumption. This makes inference less mysterious. You are not guessing what the test writer wants; you are choosing the conclusion that stays closest to the passage while adding one logical step.
More Inferences Strategy
Practice Questions
What can most reasonably be inferred?
Trap note: Causation strength: 'may have' is appropriate; claiming certainty or national scope is too strong.
What is the most reasonable inference?
Trap note: Hidden-assumption trap: infer likely contribution, not certain sole cause.
What can most reasonably be inferred?
Trap note: Overgeneralization trap: 'all books by women' is much stronger than the evidence.
What can most reasonably be inferred?
Trap note: Extreme trap: the passage says growth stopped, not that all trees died.
What can most reasonably be inferred?
Trap note: Two-part inference: the correct answer preserves both improvement and remaining limitation.
Turn This Strategy Into SAT Practice
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