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  1. ISEE Middle Level Reading Comprehension
  2. Draw Conclusions Supported by Details

Detail 1Detail 2Conclusion
ISEE MIDDLE LEVEL • READING COMPREHENSION

Draw Conclusions Supported by Details

Learn to combine clues from a passage to reach answers that aren't stated directly.

SECTION 1

Why Drawing Conclusions Matters

Have you ever watched a movie and figured out the ending before it happened? You weren't just guessing. Your brain was collecting clues from what the characters said and did. Then you put those clues together to reach a conclusion (a decision or judgment you arrive at by thinking carefully). That's the exact same skill you need on the ISEE Reading Comprehension section!

Reading tests have asked students to draw conclusions for over a century. The skill matters because authors don't always spell out every idea. They expect you to be an active reader who can connect the dots. The ISEE specifically tests whether you can find evidence in the passage and use it to figure out things the author implied but didn't state directly.

Step 1
Read Carefully
You read a passage and notice specific facts, descriptions, and details the author includes.
Step 2
Spot the Clues
You identify key details that seem important — word choices, actions, and examples.
Step 3
Connect the Dots
You combine those details with what you already know from the passage to form a logical conclusion.
Step 4
Check Your Work
You verify that the passage actually supports your conclusion — no guessing allowed!

On the ISEE, about one out of every six questions asks you to draw a conclusion. These questions might say "Based on the passage, you can conclude that…" or "The passage suggests that…" Knowing how to handle them can make a real difference in your score.

SECTION 2

Core Principles of Drawing Conclusions

Drawing a conclusion is like being a detective. A detective doesn't just make up a theory. They gather evidence first, then decide what the evidence means. On the ISEE, the passage is your crime scene. The details inside it are your evidence. Here are the core principles that guide strong conclusion-drawing.

1

Stay Inside the Passage

Your conclusion must be based on what the passage says. Never use outside knowledge or personal opinions. If you can't point to a detail in the text that supports your answer, it's probably wrong.
2

Combine Multiple Details

A strong conclusion usually comes from putting two or more details together. One sentence might tell you a character is packing a suitcase. Another might say the character looks sad. Together, they suggest the character doesn't want to leave.
3

Look for What's Implied

An implication is something the author hints at without saying it outright. Pay attention to word choices, tone, and actions. If a character 'shuffled slowly toward school,' the author is implying the character is reluctant.
4

Avoid Extreme Answers

Watch out for answer choices that use words like 'always,' 'never,' or 'everyone.' These are usually too extreme to be supported by the passage. The best conclusions are moderate and well-supported.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of drawing a conclusion like solving a jigsaw puzzle. Each detail in the passage is one puzzle piece. Alone, a single piece doesn't show you the picture. But when you snap several pieces together, the picture becomes clear. On the ISEE, the correct answer is always the picture that the pieces actually form — not one you wish they formed!
SECTION 3

How Conclusions Grow from Details

The diagram below shows exactly how a conclusion forms. You start at the bottom with individual details from the passage. Then you connect them, and the conclusion rises to the top — like building a pyramid with blocks of evidence.

FROM DETAILS TO CONCLUSIONDETAIL 1"Maria grabbedher umbrella."DETAIL 2"Dark clouds filledthe sky."DETAIL 3"She wore herrain boots."CONNECTION AUmbrella + clouds = rain expectedCONNECTION BRain boots + clouds = storm gearCONCLUSIONMaria expected it to rain.Details at the bottom combine upward to form a supported conclusion.
Notice how no single detail proves the conclusion alone. It's the combination of the umbrella, dark clouds, and rain boots that lets us conclude Maria expected rain.

This pyramid pattern appears in every conclusion question on the ISEE. The passage never says "Maria expected rain." But three details all point in the same direction. When you see an answer choice that all the details support, that's your winning answer.

SECTION 4

How to Spot Conclusion Questions

Before you can answer a conclusion question, you need to recognize one. The ISEE uses specific wording that signals you need to draw a conclusion rather than find a fact stated directly. Here are the most common signal phrases (words and patterns that tell you what kind of question you're dealing with).

Common ISEE question stems that signal a conclusion question.
Signal Phrase in the QuestionWhat It's Really Asking
"Based on the passage, you can conclude that…"Use details from the text to figure out something not stated directly.
"The passage suggests that…"Find what the author hints at through details, word choices, or tone.
"It can be inferred from the passage that…"Make a logical step beyond what's directly written using text evidence.
"The reader can reasonably conclude that…"Reach a judgment that the details logically support.
"Which statement is best supported by the passage?"Choose the answer that the most details point toward.
💡 ISEE Test Strategy
When you see words like "conclude," "suggest," or "infer," don't look for an answer that is copied word-for-word from the passage. The correct answer will be a logical next step beyond what the passage says. Think of it as reading between the lines.

Remember: even though the answer isn't stated word-for-word, it must still be supported by specific details in the passage. If you can't point to evidence in the text, the answer choice is probably a trap.

SECTION 5

Types of Details That Support Conclusions

Not all details are created equal. Some are powerful clues that help you draw conclusions, while others are just background information. Learning to tell the difference is a superpower on the ISEE. Let's look at the main types of details you'll find in passages.

FIVE TYPES OF SUPPORTING DETAILS1ActionsWhat characters DO reveals howthey feel and what they want."She slammed the door."2Word ChoicesPositive or negative words showthe author's attitude or tone."brilliant" vs. "adequate"3Facts & DataNumbers, dates, and statisticslet you draw factual conclusions."Population grew 40%."4ExamplesSpecific examples show patternsthat point to broader conclusions."Like wolves, foxes hunt at dusk."5DialogueWhat people say (and HOW theysay it) reveals feelings and motives."I suppose we could try," she sighed.All five types work together to support conclusions.On the ISEE, always identify WHICH details support your chosen answer.
The five types of supporting details you'll encounter in ISEE passages. Actions and word choices are the most common clues in fiction passages, while facts and examples dominate nonfiction.

When you practice, try labeling each clue you find. Ask yourself: "Is this an action? A word choice? A fact?" This habit helps you become a more active reader and makes it easier to match details to the correct conclusion on test day.

SECTION 6

Worked Example: Drawing a Conclusion Step by Step

Let's walk through a sample passage and question together. Pay attention to how we gather details and connect them.

📖 Sample Passage
When Thomas entered the science fair for the third year in a row, his classmates were not surprised. He had spent every weekend in the garage, carefully building a model volcano that could actually erupt. His older sister offered to help, but Thomas insisted on doing everything himself. On the morning of the fair, Thomas arrived an hour early to set up his display. He checked his note cards twice and adjusted the poster board until it was perfectly straight.
❓ Question
Based on the passage, the reader can conclude that Thomas is —

Step-by-Step Solution

Step 1 — Read the question and spot the signal

The question says "the reader can conclude." This tells us the answer won't be stated word-for-word. We need to combine details to figure out a character trait.

Step 2 — Gather the details

Let's list the clues: (1) Thomas entered the fair for the third year. (2) He spent every weekend building his project. (3) He refused help from his sister. (4) He arrived an hour early. (5) He checked his cards twice and adjusted his poster until it was perfect.

Step 3 — Connect the details

These details all point in the same direction. Entering three years in a row shows persistence. Spending every weekend shows hard work. Refusing help shows independence. Arriving early and double-checking shows he cares about doing things well.
Pattern: Thomas is dedicated and detail-oriented.

Step 4 — Evaluate the answer choices

(A) Thomas is shy and dislikes crowds. (B) Thomas is hardworking and takes pride in his work. (C) Thomas is afraid of losing the science fair. (D) Thomas does not get along with his sister. Let's test each one against our details.

Step 5 — Eliminate and choose

Choice A: Nothing says he's shy — he enters a public fair! Eliminate. Choice C: He checks his work, but nothing suggests fear. Eliminate. Choice D: His sister offered to help; he just wanted to work alone. That doesn't mean they don't get along. Eliminate.
Answer: (B) Thomas is hardworking and takes pride in his work.
✅ WHY (B) WORKS
Five separate details in the passage all support choice (B). No other answer choice is supported by even two details. On the ISEE, the best answer is always the one with the most evidence behind it.
SECTION 7

Right Conclusions vs. Wrong Conclusions

The ISEE test makers are clever. They design wrong answers that look tempting. Knowing the common traps helps you avoid them. Here's a comparison of what strong conclusions look like versus the tricky wrong answers.

Use this checklist to test every answer choice before selecting it.
Strong Conclusion ✅Tempting but Wrong ❌
Supported by two or more details from the passage.Based on just one detail, taken out of context.
Uses moderate language ("probably," "likely," "tends to").Uses extreme words ("always," "never," "everyone").
Goes one small step beyond what's stated.Makes a giant leap that the passage doesn't support.
Stays within the scope of the passage.Brings in outside knowledge or personal opinions.
Matches the passage's tone (positive/negative/neutral).Contradicts the passage's tone or mood.
🎯 THE GOLDILOCKS RULE
Think of the best conclusion like Goldilocks picking porridge. Too hot (too extreme) is wrong. Too cold (just repeats what's already stated) is wrong. Just right is a conclusion that goes slightly beyond the text and is backed up by multiple details. Train yourself to pick the "just right" answer!
SECTION 8

Advanced Strategies for Test Day

Once you understand the basics, these advanced strategies can help you work faster and more accurately on the actual ISEE.

StrategyHow to Use ItWhy It Works
Read the question firstBefore reading the passage, glance at the questions. Note which ones ask for conclusions.You'll know which details to pay extra attention to as you read.
Underline key detailsAs you read, mentally note or lightly mark actions, strong words, and repeated ideas.When you reach the question, you can quickly find your evidence.
Eliminate firstCross out any answer that is too extreme, contradicts the passage, or requires outside info.Removing 1-2 wrong answers makes it much easier to pick the right one.
Use the "because" testSay: "I chose this answer BECAUSE the passage says ___." If you can't fill in the blank, reconsider.Forces you to connect your answer to actual text evidence.
⚡ ISEE Reminder
There is no penalty for wrong answers on the ISEE. If you're stuck between two choices, always guess! Use the "because" test on both options, pick the one with stronger evidence, and move on. Never leave a question blank.
SECTION 9

Practice Problems

Read each short passage carefully, then answer the question. Remember to gather details, connect them, and test your answer against the passage. These questions progress from easier to more challenging.

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
Read the passage below. "Every morning, Lily woke up at 5:30 a.m. to practice piano before school. Her fingers danced across the keys for an hour while the rest of the house was still quiet. When her music teacher announced an upcoming recital, Lily smiled and began choosing her favorite piece." Based on this passage, you can conclude that Lily —
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
Read the passage below. "The town of Millbrook had only one grocery store for decades. When a second store opened across the street, the original store lowered its prices, added a bakery section, and extended its hours to stay open until midnight." The passage suggests that the original grocery store —
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Read the passage below. "Dr. Patel studied coral reefs in the Pacific Ocean for fifteen years. In her early research, the reefs were vibrant with color and teeming with fish. By the end of her study, she noted that large sections had turned white and many fish species had disappeared. Water temperature measurements showed a steady increase over the same period. Dr. Patel published her findings in a leading science journal, urging immediate action." Based on the passage, which conclusion is best supported?
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Read the passage below. "In 1920, fewer than 10 percent of American homes had electricity. By 1940, that number had risen to nearly 90 percent in cities, though many rural areas still lacked power. The Rural Electrification Administration, created in 1935, provided loans to build power lines in the countryside. Within a decade, electric lights replaced kerosene lamps on farms across the nation, and families could refrigerate food for the first time." The reader can reasonably conclude that —
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Read the passage below. "When Aisha moved to a new school in October, she sat alone at lunch for the first week. She noticed that a group of students met in the library every Tuesday to play chess. Although Aisha had never played chess before, she walked into the library the following Tuesday and asked if she could watch. By November, she was competing in matches. By December, the group had started saving her a seat at their lunch table." Based on the passage, which conclusion is best supported?
SUMMARY

Putting It All Together

Drawing conclusions is one of the most important skills on the ISEE Reading Comprehension section. To draw a strong conclusion, you gather details from the passage — including actions, word choices, facts, examples, and dialogue — and combine them to figure out what the author is implying. Remember the Goldilocks Rule: the best answer goes one small, logical step beyond the text without being too extreme.

On test day, use these key strategies: look for signal words like "conclude," "suggest," and "infer" to spot conclusion questions. Eliminate extreme answers that use "always" or "never." Apply the "because" test to make sure you can point to passage evidence for your answer. And always remember — there's no penalty for guessing on the ISEE, so never leave a question blank!

Varsity Tutors • ISEE Middle Level • Draw Conclusions Supported by Details