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Effective Strategies for Para-Jumbles

The document provides strategies for solving paragraph jumbling questions to save time and increase accuracy. Strategy 1 is to identify the opening and closing sentences using clues from the tone or options. Strategy 2 is to identify links between two sentences that appear in multiple options. Combining strategies 1 and 2 will often solve most questions. Additional strategies include looking for personal pronouns, transition words, demonstrative pronouns, chronological order, full forms and abbreviations, ideas and examples, and definite articles. Tips are provided for beginners to improve reading skills and for advanced solvers to practice by researching passages and exchanging jumbled paragraphs with a partner.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
81 views3 pages

Effective Strategies for Para-Jumbles

The document provides strategies for solving paragraph jumbling questions to save time and increase accuracy. Strategy 1 is to identify the opening and closing sentences using clues from the tone or options. Strategy 2 is to identify links between two sentences that appear in multiple options. Combining strategies 1 and 2 will often solve most questions. Additional strategies include looking for personal pronouns, transition words, demonstrative pronouns, chronological order, full forms and abbreviations, ideas and examples, and definite articles. Tips are provided for beginners to improve reading skills and for advanced solvers to practice by researching passages and exchanging jumbled paragraphs with a partner.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

The smartest approach a) The best approach to solving PJ questions is the 'free fall' one.

That is, develop a high reading speed and scan all 4-5 sentences. Try to get a feel of what the passage is about. b) At this point you need to decide whether this particular paragraph is one which you are comfortable with or not. c) If you decide to go ahead, then scan the answer options. Are they of any help? If , for example the options are, a) BDAC b) BCAD c) CABD d) CBDA Then you know for sure that this paragraph has to start either with B or C. A quick look at B and C will tell you which one looks like a better opening sentence and already your choices will be halved. Similarly, with options, a) BDCA b) CDBA c) DCAB d) ACDB then we know that it has to end with either B or A. So browse sentences A and B and see if any one of them look like a concluding sentence. There might be other indicators to keep an eye out for. For example if three of the five options start with A and the other two with C/B/D there is a good probability that A is the starting sentence. If, say, a link CB occurs in more than 2 options then it is something worth paying attention to.

PJ strategies to save time and increase accuracy Strategy 1: Once upon a time long ago... / ...and they lived happily after: Identify the opening/closing sentence using what we discussed above. Either the tone of the paragraph or the option elimination method. Strategy 2: Where's the interlock dude? Identify links between two sentences and try to see if that link exists in multiple answer options (a sure way to know that you are on the right track). A combination of 1 and 2 will take you home most of the time. Place your magnifying glass on the following, Strategy 2a: Make it 'personal'. Look out for personal pronouns (he, she, it, him, her, you, they). Personal pronouns always refer to a person, place or thing. Therefore, if a sentence has a personal pronoun without mentioning the person, place or object it is referring to, mark it in your head and scan the paragraph for the original person, place or object that it refers to. For example if you go back to the opening jumbled paragraph of this article, the third sentence starts with 'it'. We now need to figure out what 'it' refers to and the sentence containing the original 'it' will come before this sentence. Strategy 2b: Look for 'Poriborton' (Change, in Mamata Banerjee's tongue). Certain words called 'transition words' help the author to shift from one thought flow to another. In other words, they usher in change. Some transition words that appear regularly are --- hence, besides, simultaneously, in conclusion, etc. While you practice PJs whenever you come across a transition word --- note it down. Make a list! Strategy 2c: Demonstrate! Look for demonstrative pronouns --- this, that, these, those, etc. Again, if you look at our opening paragraph, the first line starts with 'for this' --now we know that we need to figure out what 'this' refers to and the sentence containing the original 'this' will come before this sentence. Strategy 3: Main samay hoon! Sometimes the events mentioned in the paragraph can be arranged in a chronological order making it easy for you to identify the sequence. Example, A: Alexander Bain, Scottish clockmaker, patented the electric clock. B: The next development in accuracy occurred after 1656 with the invention of the pendulum clock. C: Clocks have played an important role in man's history. D: Spring-driven clocks appeared during the 15th century, although they are often erroneously credited to Nuremberg watchmaker Peter Henlen around 1511. It is quite obvious by studying the chronology what the sequence should be. Strategy 4: The Chota Rajan Approach. Sometimes you will find that for some terms in the paragraph both the full form and the abbreviation have been used. For Example IMF --- International Monetary Fund, Charles Dickens --- Dickens, Dr Manmohan Singh --- Dr Singh. In these cases where both the full form as well as the abbreviation is present in different sentences, then the sentence containing the full form will obviously come before the sentence containing the abbreviation. Strategy 5: What an Idea Sirji! If there are two sentences, one containing an idea and another giving examples of the same idea then the sentence containing the idea should come before the sentence containing the examples. But they need not necessarily be

exactly side by side. Example, A: Russia possesses the largest stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction in the world. B: 489 missiles carrying up to 1,788 warheads and 12 submarines carrying up to 609 warheads form a looming threat. A will come before B in this case, even though there might be sentences in between. Strategy 6: An article of faith. It is highly unlikely that the definite article 'the' will be part of an opening sentence. If 'a/an' and 'the' both are used for the same noun then the sentence containing 'the' will come after the sentence containing a/an.

Tips for beginners Focus on improving your reading skills. Also try to improve your cognitive ability. For example --- Go to a random website article. Go immediately to the second paragraph and after reading it try to guess what the author could have possibly said in the previous paragraph and the next paragraph. This will help you with a couple of other types of questions as well which we shall discuss in later articles. Tips for the 99 percentilers Whenever you solve para-jumbles the accuracy and speed is a function of how quickly you can become comfortable with the topic. So from today for every PJ you solve, plug a sentence from the PJ into Google which will throw up the source of that PJ or similar articles. Read up that article fully. This will broaden the base of your reading. To-do practice activity for all of you Team up with another friend. Both of you select passages from newspaper editorials, magazines, etc. Paste them to Microsoft Word. Break them up into sentences. Jumble up the sentences. Exchange and solve. Practice!! Practice!! Practice!!

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