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Reading Comprehension Foundations · Main Idea and Purpose

Finding the main idea

The main idea is the single sentence the entire passage is trying to support.

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Finding the main idea

The main idea is the central point a writer is making. Every other sentence in the passage is there to defend, explain, or illustrate it.

How to spot it

  1. Read the first and last paragraphs first — main ideas often cluster there.
  2. Ask yourself: "If the writer could keep only one sentence, which would survive?"
  3. Beware of detail traps: a true detail is not the same as the main idea.

Example

Most students think note-taking is about copying what the teacher says. In fact, the most useful notes are short, paraphrased, and reorganized in the student's own words. When notes become a copy of the lecture, they lose their power as study tools.

The main idea is "useful notes are short, paraphrased and reorganized" — not "students take notes" (too broad) and not "students copy lectures" (a detail).

Practice

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A main idea is best described as: