Learning Outcomes
By studying this article, you will recognize common passage types on TOEFL, identify the organizational patterns used in academic texts, and understand how paragraphs function within a passage. You will learn to spot text structure cues, recognize the purpose of different paragraphs, and use this knowledge to answer organization and rhetorical purpose questions accurately.
TOEFL iBT Syllabus
For TOEFL, you are required to understand text organization and how paragraph functions support the passage as a whole. For revision, focus on these syllabus points:
- Recognize major passage types, including expository, argumentative, and narrative texts.
- Identify the function of paragraphs (e.g., introduce, illustrate, explain, contrast).
- Understand the common organizational structures: cause-effect, compare-contrast, problem-solution, sequence.
- Spot paragraph transition and signal words to follow logical flow.
- Answer rhetorical purpose and organization questions about why information is included in a particular paragraph or location in the text.
Test Your Knowledge
Attempt these questions before reading this article. If you find some difficult or cannot remember the answers, remember to look more closely at that area during your revision.
- What is the primary purpose of a paragraph that begins with "In contrast" in an academic passage?
- If a question asks why a paragraph is included just before the conclusion, what kind of function might that paragraph serve?
- Which signal words indicate a passage is organized as a cause-and-effect structure?
- How can understanding the function of a specific paragraph help you answer TOEFL rhetorical purpose questions?
Introduction
Understanding passage types and organizational patterns is critical for success on the TOEFL Reading section. Academic texts on TOEFL use common organizational structures, and each paragraph is designed to perform a clear role within the passage. Recognizing these roles makes it easier to comprehend the text and answer questions that test your awareness of logical flow and function.
Key Term: Passage Type
The overall style or approach of a reading selection, such as expository, argumentative, or narrative, which determines how information is presented.Key Term: Organizational Structure
The pattern authors use to arrange ideas in a passage, such as cause-effect, compare-contrast, sequence, or problem-solution.Key Term: Paragraph Function
The specific purpose a paragraph serves in a passage, such as introducing a topic, providing evidence, explaining, contrasting, or summarizing.
Paragraph Types and Passage Structures
TOEFL passages typically use one of several organizational blueprints:
- Expository: Explains or describes facts using clear structure.
- Argumentative: Presents an opinion or position and supports it with reasoning and evidence.
- Narrative (rare): Recounts events or experiences, usually in time order.
Within each passage, paragraphs serve particular functions:
- Introduction/Topic: Opens the subject and previews the main idea.
- Definition/Explanation: Clarifies a concept or term.
- Example/Evidence: Provides specific illustrations or data.
- Contrast/Comparison: Highlights differences or similarities between ideas or phenomena.
- Cause/Effect: Shows how one event leads to another.
- Problem/Solution: Presents an issue and describes possible solutions.
- Summary/Conclusion: Wraps up the argument or main points.
Recognizing Organizational Patterns
Academic English often signals structure through connecting words and phrases:
- Cause/Effect: therefore, because, as a result, consequently
- Compare/Contrast: while, whereas, however, in contrast, similarly
- Sequence/Process: first, next, finally, then, after
- Problem/Solution: problem, issue, propose, solution, resolve
Spotting these helps you follow the author's logic and answer organization-based questions.
Key Term: Rhetorical Purpose
The reason an author includes a particular paragraph, detail, or phrase, often to clarify, emphasize, argue, or transition between ideas.
Paragraph Functions in Practice
Each paragraph's job is signposted by its topic sentence, location, and transition words. For example, a paragraph following a definition may introduce an example using "For instance," while a paragraph beginning "Despite this" signals contrast.
Questions may ask: "Why does the author mention X in paragraph 3?" or "What is the main purpose of paragraph 4?" Recognizing function is key.
Worked Example 1.1
Read the passage and answer the question:
Researchers have studied food webs in numerous ecosystems. Food webs describe the feeding relationships among organisms, showing how energy is transferred. For example, in a freshwater lake, algae are eaten by small crustaceans and fish, which in turn are prey for larger fish and birds.
However, disruptions such as pollution can affect these complex relationships. When pollution reduces algae, all species in the web may be impacted.
Question: What is the primary function of the second paragraph?
Answer:
The second paragraph highlights a contrast. It introduces "However," and shifts from describing a typical food web to discussing problems (disruptions), illustrating the passage's move from explanation to introducing a problem that affects the previously described system.
Worked Example 1.2
Passage excerpt:
While many believe handwriting is an outdated skill, recent research reveals its continued importance. For instance, studies show that students who write notes by hand retain more information than those who type them.
Question: What is the function of the second sentence in this paragraph?
Answer:
The second sentence ("For instance...") provides an example to support the claim made in the first sentence about the value of handwriting.
Exam Warning
A frequent error is to look only at the content of a paragraph without considering how it connects to the entire passage. Always ask yourself why the paragraph or example appears in that place and not elsewhere.
Revision Tip
When you practice reading, pause after each paragraph and ask: What is this paragraph's function? This builds your ability to answer TOEFL rhetorical purpose questions swiftly.
Key Point Checklist
This article has covered the following key knowledge points:
- Recognize main passage types (expository, argumentative, narrative).
- Identify how paragraphs serve different functions within a passage.
- Spot organizational patterns such as cause-effect, compare-contrast, sequence, and problem-solution.
- Interpret signal words to track passage structure.
- Answer questions about the function or purpose of individual paragraphs.
- Use paragraph function recognition to answer TOEFL rhetorical purpose questions accurately.
Key Terms and Concepts
- Passage Type
- Organizational Structure
- Paragraph Function
- Rhetorical Purpose