Reading
Part 5 - Long Text
Answer multiple-choice questions about a text. You are expected to understand a text for detail, opinion, tone, purpose, main idea, implication and attitude. For questions 1-0 choose the correct answer.
A Cambridge-Style Reading Task
Preparing for a Cambridge English exam can feel strangely familiar: you sit at a desk, you read a text, and you answer questions that appear simple until you notice how carefully each word has been chosen. Many candidates assume that success depends mainly on knowing a large number of words. Vocabulary certainly matters, but examiners are usually testing something more specific: whether you can follow an argument, recognise the writer’s attitude, and separate what is stated from what is merely suggested. In other words, the exam is not only about English; it is also about reading discipline. One common difficulty is time management. Candidates often spend too long on the first part of a text because they want to understand every detail. However, Cambridge-style tasks reward efficient reading. You are expected to identify the main idea of each paragraph, notice how examples support it, and move on. If you stop to translate every sentence in your head, you may finish with a perfect understanding of half the text and no answers for the rest. Another issue is the way questions are written. The correct option rarely repeats the exact wording of the text. Instead, it paraphrases it. Meanwhile, incorrect options may contain words that appear in the passage but are used to express a different meaning. This is why candidates who rely on “word spotting” often choose the wrong answer: they recognise a phrase, assume it matches, and overlook the logic. It is also important to understand what Cambridge examiners mean by “evidence”. Evidence is not what you personally believe to be true; it is what the text supports. For example, if a writer says that online learning is convenient, you cannot automatically conclude that it is better than classroom learning unless the writer explicitly compares them. Strong readers constantly ask themselves: *Where is the proof for this option?* Finally, candidates sometimes forget that the writer has a purpose. A text may be written to inform, to persuade, to warn, or to entertain. Recognising that purpose helps you interpret tone. A formal article might sound neutral while still guiding you towards a conclusion through careful selection of facts. If you can identify that direction, you will find the final, “whole text” question much easier. In short, Cambridge-style reading is a skill that can be trained. It requires vocabulary, but it also requires strategy: reading for structure, checking evidence, and resisting traps that look familiar but do not actually answer the question.
Answer the Questions
For each question, choose the correct answer
1. What does the writer suggest many candidates wrongly believe about exam success?
2. Why does the writer say some candidates struggle with time management?
3. What is the writer’s main point about how correct answers are phrased in Cambridge-style questions?
4. Why do candidates who rely on “word spotting” often choose the wrong option?
5. What does the writer mean by “evidence” in the context of the exam?
6. Overall, what is the writer’s purpose in the text?
Instructions
Answer multiple-choice questions about a text. You are expected to understand a text for detail, opinion, tone, purpose, main idea, implication and attitude. For questions 1-0 choose the correct answer.
Exercise Details
Author
Harley Davidson
@harley-davidson
User Prompt
"According to the Cambridge exam"
Created on:
May 23, 2026
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