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Contents
Reading
 
Main Ideas and Supporting Details
 
Main Idea and Supporting Details
 
Apply Skills of Inference and Interpretation
 
Analyze Relationships Among Ideas
 
Use Critical Reasoning Skills
Evaluating Validity of an Argument
Relevance of Facts, Examples, or Graphic Data
Distinguish Between Fact of Opinion
Credibility, Objectivity, and Bias
 
Apply Skills for Outlining, Summarizing, and Interpreting
 
Practice Reading Tests
 

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Use Critical Reasoning Skills to Evaluate Written Material

Recognize Stated or Implied Assumptions on which the Validity of an Argument Depends

What section of the newspaper is more likely to contain articles with implicit assumptions?

The editorial page. Editorials and syndicated columns are usually sophisticated, well-written passages with a point-of-view that may be supported by implicit assumptions. More notably, many messages in the Letters to the Editor section have unstated assumptions. Use the Letters to the Editor column for excellent practice at identifying assumptions.

Click the "Previous" button if you wish to review the information on identifying assumptions in a passage.

 

 


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