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HESI A2 Reading Comprehension Exam (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Complete Q&A with Detailed Rationales | Passage-Based Questions, Main Idea, Vocabulary in Context, Inference | A+ Graded | Elsevier HESI

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INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD – This is the comprehensive HESI A2 Reading Comprehension Exam study guide for the 2026/2027 academic year, featuring verified exam questions with correct answers and detailed rationales. This resource covers actual passage types and question formats appearing on the HESI Admission Assessment Exam. The Reading Comprehension section typically contains 50‑55 questions timed at approximately 60 minutes . This complete guide covers the five key skill areas: Main Idea (identifying the central point, often found in opening thesis or concluding paragraph, with both stated and implied main ideas) ; Supporting Details (using transition words – first, next, another, finally – to identify examples, reasons, and facts that support the main idea) ; Vocabulary in Context (using definition, synonym, antonym, restatement, example, explanation, and word structure clues to determine word meanings) ; Inference (making logical conclusions based on facts and evidence in the passage, reading between the lines) ; and Author's Purpose & Tone (distinguishing fact from opinion, identifying intent to inform, persuade, or entertain). Includes actual tested passages: Bicycles (innovations history, best title), Changing Time/Daylight Savings Time (author attitude, "they" reference), Glass (brittle definition, essential part of life), Healthcare (premium definition, ER use for minor illness), Homonyms (fact statement, inference about English difficulty), Jazz (origins New Orleans, improvisation distinction), Isaac Asimov (prolific definition, The Big Three, greatest fear), Laughter (Native American humor overlooked, author intent to persuade), Lightning (take cover metal car, penetrate definition), Mr. Rogers (uniqueness belief, show purpose), Nurseries (permits requirement), Amazon Rainforest (precipitation NOT mentioned, Amazon Basin one‑fifth of all rainforests). Features HESI A2 score recommendations: 90% and above for nursing textbook comprehension, 80–89% for most content, 75–79% difficulty, 74% and below requiring remediation . HESI A2 Reading Comprehension Elsevier HESI Assessment Reading Section Main Idea Beginning Middle End Paragraph Supporting Details Transition Words First Next Another Finally Vocabulary in Context Context Clues Definition Synonym Antonym Inference Logical Conclusion Facts Evidence Author Purpose Inform Persuade Entertain Bicycles Main Idea Sentence 4 Innovations History Changing Time Author Attitude DST Should Be Abolished Glass Brittle Easily Broken Glass Essential Part of Our Lives Healthcare Premium Amount to be Paid for Insurance Policy Healthcare ER Minor Illness Cannot Afford Deductibles Homonyms Fact Homonyms Make Learning English Challenging Homonyms Inference English is Difficult to Master Jazz Origins New Orleans Jazz Distinguished by Improvisation Isaac Asimov Prolific High Productivity The Big Three Asimov Clarke Heinlein Laughter Native American Humor Often Overlooked Laughter Author Favors Research into Native American Humor Lightning Take Cover Metal Car Lie Flat Penetrates To Pierce Mr Rogers Believed in Uniqueness Amazon Rainforest Precipitation NOT Mentioned A+ Grade HESI Study Guide

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HESI A2 Reading Comprehension
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HESI A2 Reading Comprehension

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Elsevier — HESI Assessment




2A • GNIDAER
HESI
A2 Health Education Systems, Inc. Admission Assessment
EMPOWERING KNOWLEDGE
ELSEVIER · 1880




HESI A2 — Reading Comprehension
CO R E CO N C E PTS , T E R M I N O LO G Y & C R I T I C A L R E A D I N G ST R AT E G I E S

INSTITUTION Elsevier — HESI Assessment Division EXAM HESI A2 Admission Assessment
SECTION Reading Comprehension ACADEMIC YEAR
EXAM TITLE Reading Comprehension — Core Concepts TOTAL QUESTIONS 40 Questions
Assessment
TARGET PROGRAMS Nursing & Allied Health Programs FORMAT Multiple Choice — Select the Single Best
Answer


EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each question.
▸ Questions cover main ideas, supporting details, inferences, author's purpose and tone, facts vs. opinions, context clues, text
structure, and critical reading strategies.
▸ Pay close attention to question clue words that signal what is being asked.
▸ Correct answers and detailed rationales appear below each question for comprehensive review.
▸ All content reflects HESI A2 Reading Comprehension exam specifications.


READING COMPREHENSION — CORE CONCEPTS & TERMINOLOGY Questions 1 – 40

1. The "main idea" of a passage is best defined as:
A. A specific detail that supports the author's argument
B. The most important point the author wants to convey
C. A brief summary of all minor details in the passage
D. The author's personal opinion about the topic
CORRECT ANSWER B — The most important point the author wants to convey

RATIONALE The main idea is the central, most important concept that the author communicates throughout the passage. It
answers "What is the passage mostly about?" and is often found in the first or last sentence of a paragraph. Option
A describes supporting details. Option C describes a summary. Option D describes the author's opinion or bias.

, 2. Supporting details in a passage function to:
A. Replace the main idea with more specific information
B. Provide facts or examples that explain or back up the main idea
C. Introduce an entirely new and unrelated topic
D. Express the author's emotional response to the subject
CORRECT ANSWER B — Provide facts or examples that explain or back up the main idea

RATIONALE Supporting details serve as evidence — they explain, illustrate, prove, or expand upon the main idea. They include
facts, statistics, examples, anecdotes, and expert testimony. Option A is incorrect because supporting details
reinforce rather than replace the main idea. Option C would indicate poor organization. Option D relates to tone.


3. What is the difference between a topic and a main idea?
A. The topic is the most important point; the main idea is what the passage is about
B. The topic is what the passage is mostly about (usually 1–2 words); the main idea is the most important point the author
conveys about that topic
C. They are identical and interchangeable
D. The topic is found in the conclusion; the main idea is found in the introduction
CORRECT ANSWER B — The topic is what the passage is mostly about (usually 1–2 words); the main idea is the most important
point the author conveys about that topic
RATIONALE The topic is the broad subject (e.g., "climate change"), while the main idea is the specific assertion about that
topic (e.g., "Human activity is the primary driver of climate change"). The topic is a word or phrase; the main idea
is a complete thought or sentence. Option A reverses the definitions.


4. A summary should include:
A. Every detail from the passage in the same order
B. The main idea and key supporting details, without extra detail or personal opinions
C. The reader's personal reaction to the passage
D. Only the author's opinion about the topic
CORRECT ANSWER B — The main idea and key supporting details, without extra detail or personal opinions

RATIONALE A good summary is concise, objective, and captures only the essential elements — the main idea and the most
important supporting details. It should be significantly shorter than the original text and avoid introducing new
ideas or personal opinions (C). Option A describes retelling, not summarizing.


5. An inference is best described as:
A. A statement directly stated in the passage
B. A conclusion based on hints, evidence, or reasoning
C. A random guess with no supporting evidence
D. The author's explicitly stated purpose for writing
CORRECT ANSWER B — A conclusion based on hints, evidence, or reasoning

RATIONALE An inference is an educated conclusion drawn from evidence in the text combined with the reader's reasoning. It is
NOT directly stated — it is implied. Inference questions often use clue words like "suggests," "implies," or "most
likely." Option A describes explicit information. Option C describes speculation without evidence.

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