Reading Comprehension (Prose, Poem & Drama) • Topic 1 of 4

Main Idea & Detail

The first two skills CTET tests are finding the main idea and locating explicit details — and the technique for each is different. The main idea (or central theme, or best title) is what the WHOLE passage is about, not just one interesting sentence inside it. To find it, ask 'if I had to tell a friend in one line what this passage is about, what would I say?' The right title is broad enough to cover every paragraph but narrow enough not to promise more than the passage delivers; reject options that are too wide (a whole topic) or too narrow (one example from the passage). Detail questions are the opposite — they ask for something stated directly, so you do not reason, you locate. Use scanning: take the keyword from the question, run your eye down the passage for that exact word or its synonym, and read only that line. This is where skimming (reading fast for the gist, useful before main-idea questions) and scanning (hunting for one specific fact, useful for detail questions) come apart — CTET often asks teachers to name these two strategies directly.

✅ Solved examples

1. Passage: 'The little library had no computers and few new books, yet every evening children filled its mats. The old librarian knew each child by name and kept a story ready. What the children came for was not the books alone, but a place that felt like their own.' The BEST title for this passage is:
A Library That Belonged to the Children. It captures the central idea (belonging, not the books) and covers the whole passage. 'Books in a Library' is too narrow and misses the point the passage builds to.
2. Using the same passage, the librarian recognised the children by:
Their names — the passage states 'knew each child by name'. This is an explicit-detail question: scan for 'librarian', read the line, lift the fact.
3. A teacher tells students to run their eye quickly down a passage to locate one specific date. This reading strategy is called:
Scanning — searching for a specific piece of information. (Skimming is reading quickly for the overall gist.)
4. Which option is usually WRONG for a 'main idea' question?
An option that states a true but minor detail from one line of the passage — the main idea must cover the whole passage, not a single supporting fact.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. The central idea of a passage is best described as:
It covers the whole passage.
Not one small detail.
A good title fits it.
The main point that the entire passage is about
2. To find one specific fact, such as a price or a name, the most efficient strategy is:
Hunt for a keyword.
Not reading every word.
Scanning
3. Reading a passage quickly to get its general sense before answering is called:
Fast, for the gist.
Opposite of detailed reading.
Skimming
4. Passage: 'Rohan saved every coin for a month and finally bought the kite he had wanted.' How long did Rohan save?
Stated directly.
Locate the time word.
For a month
5. A title that names the whole topic far more broadly than the passage actually covers should be:
Too wide is also wrong.
Must match the passage exactly.
Rejected (it is too broad)

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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