Drill 2 · Reading · Comparative Passages
ACT Reading: Comparative Passages (Drill 2) is a Reading practice drill covering Comparative Passages. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.
Comparative passage drills present two short passages on a related topic written from different perspectives. This drill emphasizes relationship questions, where you must identify a specific point of agreement or disagreement between the two authors, rather than summarizing each passage separately.
Question 1. The author of Passage A would most likely argue that the author of Passage B underestimates:
Explanation: A is correct. Passage A's core argument is that handwriting activates language and memory regions of the brain in ways keyboards do not, a neurological claim. Passage B treats handwriting as just one tool among equals, which the author of A would likely see as missing the biological distinctiveness of the act. B is not mentioned in either passage. C is not addressed in Passage A. D is actually closer to Passage B's implicit position, not A's.
Question 2. According to Passage B, the studies showing retention advantages for handwriting:
Explanation: G is correct. Passage B states explicitly: "The studies showing retention advantages for handwriting are real but limited; they apply most clearly to lecture note-taking and do not transfer neatly to other writing contexts." F is what Passage A says about journalists, not Passage B's claim about the studies. H is the opposite of B's position; B argues against treating handwriting as irreplaceable. J is not mentioned anywhere in either passage.
Question 3. In Passage B, the reference to calculators and mathematical thinking primarily serves to:
Explanation: A is correct. The calculator analogy closes Passage B as a parallel warning: just as people once feared calculators would ruin math skills, today's handwriting advocates may be making a historically familiar overreaction to new technology. The analogy is used to characterize the worry as a recurring type of technophobia, not to prove it wrong. B overstates, the passage does not claim technology always improves on prior methods. C is wrong because the author does not introduce then reject this analogy; it supports the author's view. D is the opposite of the point being made; the author uses the calculator analogy to suggest handwriting advocates are overreacting, not that their concern is justified.
Question 4. Which of the following is a point of agreement between the two authors?
Explanation: G is correct. Passage A states that students who take notes longhand "retain concepts more durably", an explicit retention claim. Passage B acknowledges "The studies showing retention advantages for handwriting are real." Both authors accept that the research on retention exists. F is only Passage A's position; B explicitly rejects handwriting as "irreplaceable." H is not supported by either passage. J is only Passage B's implication for some tasks, and even then B never claims keyboard superiority across the board.
Question 5. The two passages differ primarily in that Passage A treats handwriting as a uniquely valuable cognitive practice, while Passage B treats it as:
Explanation: B is correct. Passage B explicitly calls handwriting "one tool" and keyboards "another," arguing neither is inherently superior, while acknowledging the retention advantage is real but narrow (note-taking). This precisely matches "one useful tool among several, with a limited but real advantage in specific contexts." A is too strong; Passage B does not say handwriting has no benefits. C is not mentioned in Passage B, which focuses on cognition, not culture. D is the opposite of Passage B's position, which says the advantage does not "transfer neatly to other writing contexts."