Home

Tutoring

Subjects

Live Classes

Study Coach

Essay Review

On-Demand Courses

Colleges

Games

Opening subject page...

Loading your content

  1. ISEE Lower Level Reading Comprehension
  2. Draw a Conclusion Supported by Passage Details

ISEE LOWER LEVEL • READING COMPREHENSION

Draw a Conclusion Supported by Passage Details

Learn to use clues in a passage to figure out what the author is really telling you.

SECTION 1

Why Do We Draw Conclusions?

Have you ever watched a movie and figured out the ending before it happened? You used clues from the story to make a guess. That's exactly what drawing a conclusion means! You put together details to figure out something the author didn't say directly.

People have been teaching this skill for a very long time. Let's look at how reading and thinking skills have grown over the years.

Ancient Times
Storytelling Begins
People told stories around campfires. Listeners had to figure out the lessons hidden inside the tales.
1800s
Schools Teach Reading
Schools began teaching children to read carefully. Students learned to look for clues in books.
1900s
Reading Comprehension Tests
Tests like the ISEE started asking students to draw conclusions from passages. This skill became very important.
Today
A Key Skill for Life
Drawing conclusions helps you in school, on tests, and in everyday life. It's like being a reading detective!

On the ISEE, you'll read short passages and answer questions. Some questions will ask you to figure out something the passage doesn't say directly. You'll need to use the details like puzzle pieces to find the answer. Let's learn how!

SECTION 2

Core Principles: How to Draw a Conclusion

Drawing a conclusion is like being a detective. You gather clues (details from the passage) and put them together. Here are the key ideas you need to know.

1

Find the Clues

Look for important details in the passage. These are facts, descriptions, and actions that tell you something.
2

Think About What You Know

Connect the details to what makes sense. Ask yourself: What do these clues add up to?
3

Make Your Conclusion

A conclusion is a smart guess based on evidence. It's not just made up — it's supported by the passage.
4

Check Your Work

Go back to the passage. Can you point to details that prove your conclusion? If yes, you've got it!
🔍 KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of drawing a conclusion like baking cookies. You see flour, sugar, eggs, and chocolate chips on the counter. Nobody told you what's being made, but you can conclude someone is baking chocolate chip cookies! You used the clues (ingredients) to figure it out. On the ISEE, the passage details are your ingredients.
⭐ ISEE Test Tip
On the ISEE, conclusion questions often use words like "based on the passage" or "you can tell that" or "the reader can conclude." When you see these words, you know you need to be a detail detective!
SECTION 3

See How It Works: The Conclusion Bridge

Imagine you're building a bridge. On one side are the details from the passage. On the other side is your conclusion. The bridge is your thinking — it connects the clues to the answer. Let's look at a diagram that shows this.

The Conclusion BridgePASSAGE DETAILS(The Clues)• Facts stated• Descriptions• Actions / Events• Character wordsCONCLUSION(Your Answer)A smart guessbased on the cluesin the passage.YOUR THINKINGConnects clues → answerDetails + Thinking = Conclusion
This diagram shows how passage details (left) connect through your thinking (the bridge) to reach a conclusion (right). Your job is to build that bridge using clues!

Notice how the bridge connects both sides. Without the details, you can't reach the conclusion. And without your thinking, the details just sit there. You need both parts!

SECTION 4

How Drawing Conclusions Works Step by Step

Let's break down the exact steps you should follow when you see a conclusion question on the ISEE. Think of these steps as your detective toolkit.

The 4-Step Detective Method

  1. Step 1 — Read the question first. Know what you're looking for before you read the passage. Circle key words in the question.
  2. Step 2 — Read the passage and underline clues. As you read, underline details that might help answer the question. Look for facts, descriptions, and actions.
  3. Step 3 — Put the clues together. Ask yourself: What do these clues tell me? What makes sense based on what I read?
  4. Step 4 — Pick the best answer and prove it. Choose the answer that the passage supports. Make sure you can point to details that back it up.
🚨 Important ISEE Rule
Your conclusion must come from the passage — not from your own life. Even if you know something about the topic, the correct answer is always the one supported by details in the passage. Stick to what the author wrote!

Here's a quick way to check your answer: use the "Because" test. Say your conclusion out loud and add "because." Then point to details in the passage. If you can finish the sentence with real details, your conclusion is strong!

SECTION 5

Types of Conclusion Questions on the ISEE

Not all conclusion questions look the same. Let's learn to spot them! Here are the different ways the ISEE might ask you to draw a conclusion.

Conclusion Question Signal WordsTYPE 1"You can conclude..."Asks you to figure outsomething not stated.TYPE 2"Based on the passage..."Reminds you to usepassage evidence only.TYPE 3"The reader can tell..."You are the reader!What did you learn?TYPE 4"It is most likely that..."Asks for the best guessthe details support.TYPE 5"Which best describes..."Asks you to summarizeor judge from details.All types need you to FIND DETAILS → THINK → CONCLUDEAlways look for the answer choice you can prove with the passage!
This chart shows five common ways the ISEE asks conclusion questions. Each type uses different signal words, but they all want you to use passage details to figure out the answer.

When you see any of these signal words, your brain should say: "Time to be a detective!" Look back at the passage and find the clues. Then pick the answer that the clues support best.

✂️ ISEE Strategy: Eliminate Wrong Answers
If you're not sure of the answer, cross out choices that the passage does NOT support. Even removing one or two wrong answers helps a lot. Remember, there is no penalty for guessing on the ISEE, so always pick an answer — never leave a question blank!
SECTION 6

Worked Example: Be the Detective

Let's practice together! Read this short passage, then follow the steps to draw a conclusion.

📖 Sample Passage
Maria rushed into the kitchen. She grabbed a bowl, flour, eggs, and sugar. She looked at the clock — only two hours until the party. "I hope I have enough time," she whispered. She opened the oven door to make sure it was heating up.

Question: Based on the passage, you can conclude that Maria is most likely —

Solving It Step by Step

Step 1 — Read the question first

The question asks what Maria is most likely doing. The words "you can conclude" tell us this is a conclusion question. We need to find clues in the passage.

Step 2 — Find the clues

Let's underline the important details: she grabbed a bowl, flour, eggs, and sugar. There is a party in two hours. She checked the oven. These are our clues!

Step 3 — Put the clues together

Bowl + flour + eggs + sugar + oven + party = she is probably baking something for the party! The passage never says "Maria is baking a cake," but all the details point to it.

Step 4 — Pick the best answer

Now let's look at the answer choices: (A) Maria is cleaning the kitchen. (B) Maria is baking something for a party. (C) Maria is cooking dinner for her family. (D) Maria is going shopping.
The best answer is (B). We can prove it with details: baking ingredients + oven + party. The "Because" test works: "Maria is baking because she grabbed flour, eggs, and sugar, and she checked the oven for a party."

Great job following along! Notice that (C) says "cooking dinner" — but the passage mentions a party, not dinner. That's how you eliminate tricky wrong answers. Always check the details!

SECTION 7

Good Conclusions vs. Bad Conclusions

Not all conclusions are good ones. Some are too big, some are off topic, and some are just guesses. Let's learn to tell the difference between a strong conclusion and a weak one.

How to spot wrong answers on conclusion questions
Type of AnswerWhat It Looks LikeWhy It's Wrong (or Right)
Strong conclusion ✅Matches several details in the passage.You can point to specific clues that prove it. This is the right answer!
Too big ❌Goes way beyond what the passage says.Example: "Maria is the best baker in the world." The passage never says that.
Off topic ❌Talks about something the passage doesn't mention.Example: "Maria is going shopping." The passage says nothing about shopping.
Opposite ❌Says the opposite of what the passage means.Example: "Maria has plenty of time." But the passage says she was worried about time.
Half right ❌Has some true details but adds wrong information.Example: "Maria is baking for her birthday." Baking is right, but the passage says party, not birthday.
🎯 KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of wrong answers like puzzle pieces that don't fit. A "too big" answer is like a piece from a different puzzle. An "off topic" answer is from a puzzle you've never even seen. The right answer clicks perfectly into place because it matches the clues in the passage.
SECTION 8

Conclusions and Other Reading Skills

Drawing conclusions is connected to other reading skills you'll use on the ISEE. Let's see how it compares to some similar question types.

How drawing conclusions compares to other ISEE reading skills
SkillWhat It MeansHow It's Different
Drawing a ConclusionUsing details to figure out something the passage doesn't say directly.You combine multiple clues to reach an answer.
Finding the Main IdeaFiguring out the big message of the whole passage.Main idea is about the whole passage. A conclusion can be about one part.
Making an InferenceReading between the lines to understand hidden meaning.Very similar to conclusions! Both use clues. Inferences focus on feelings or reasons.
Finding a DetailLocating a specific fact stated in the passage.Detail questions have answers written right in the passage. Conclusions do not.

As you get better at drawing conclusions, you'll notice it helps with all these other question types too. It's like a superpower that makes your whole reading brain stronger! In upper level ISEE tests and in middle school, you'll face even trickier conclusion questions with longer passages. The skill you're building now is the same one you'll use later.

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

Now it's your turn! Read each short passage and answer the question. Remember to find the clues, think about what they mean, and choose the answer the passage supports. You've got this!

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
Read this passage: "Every morning, Jake puts on his uniform, grabs his glove, and runs outside. He practices throwing and catching with his dad before school. On weekends, he watches games on TV and cheers for his favorite team." Based on the passage, you can conclude that Jake —
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC
Read this passage: "Lily looked out the window and frowned. The sky was dark gray, and rain was pouring down. She put her swimsuit back in the drawer and picked up a book instead." The reader can tell that Lily was probably planning to —
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Read this passage: "The town of Millville had not seen rain in three months. Farmers watched their crops turn brown. The river that usually ran through the center of town was now just a thin stream. The mayor held a meeting to talk about saving water." Based on the passage, it is most likely that the people of Millville were —
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Read this passage: "When Dr. Patel walked into the animal shelter, the little brown dog wagged its tail so hard its whole body shook. It pressed its nose against the cage door and whimpered softly. Dr. Patel knelt down, smiled, and said, 'I think this is the one.' She signed the adoption papers that afternoon." Which best describes how the dog probably felt when Dr. Patel knelt down?
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Read this passage: "Samira's older brother Omar had been away at college for four months. On Friday, Samira taped a huge banner across the front door that read 'Welcome Home!' She baked his favorite chocolate cake and set an extra place at the dinner table. Their mother kept looking out the window and smiling." Based on the passage, what can you conclude about the family's feelings?
SUMMARY

Wrapping It All Up

You've learned that drawing a conclusion means using details from the passage to figure out something the author didn't say directly. You follow four steps: read the question first, underline clues in the passage, put the clues together, and pick the answer you can prove with those clues.

Watch out for wrong answer traps that are too big, off topic, opposite, or only half right. Use the "Because" test to make sure your answer is backed up by details. Remember to eliminate wrong answers and always answer every question — there's no penalty for guessing on the ISEE. You're a reading detective now. Go get those answers!

Varsity Tutors • ISEE Lower Level • Draw a Conclusion Supported by Passage Details