SSAT Ivy Global Middle Level 1
SSAT Ivy Global Middle Level 1
Start with number 1 for each new section of the test. You may find more answer spaces than you need.
If so, please leave them blank.
SECTION 1
SECTION 2
SECTION 3
SECTION 4
Schools would like to get to know you better through a story you tell using one of the ideas below.
Please choose the idea you find most interesting and write a story using the idea as your first sentence.
Please fill in the circle next to the one you choose.
Use this page and the next page to complete your writing sample.
Following each problem in this section, there are five suggested answers. Work each problem in your head or
in the blank space provided at the right of the page. Then look at the five suggested answers and decide which
one is best.
Note: Figures that accompany problems in this section are drawn as accurately as possible EXCEPT when it is
stated in a specific problem that its figure is not drawn to scale.
Sample problem:
5,413 (A) 586
4,827 (B) 596
(C) 696
(D) 1,586
(E) 1,686
B C D E
1. If three times a number is 9, what is the number? USE THIS SPACE FOR FIGURING.
(A) 2
(B) 3
(C) 6
(D) 12
(E) 27
4. is closest to
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
5. , , ,
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
8. If and , then
(A) 9.5
(B) 17
(C) 21
(D) 29
(E) 38
11. The cost of go-karting is dollars for the first ten laps
around the track and dollars for each additional lap.
What is the cost, in dollars, of go-karting for 17 laps?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
Figure 3
the
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
16. A safari company offers group tours that cost $100 for
two people and $20 more for each additional person. If
five people share the cost of the tour equally, how
much does each person pay?
(A) $20.00
(B) $24.00
(C) $32.00
(D) $35.00
(E) $40.00
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
(A) 1
(B) 2
(C) 5
(D) 25
(E) 27
(A)
(D)
(B)
Figure 5
(C) (E)
STOP
IF YOU FINISH BEFORE TIME IS CALLED,
YOU MAY CHECK YOUR WORK ON THIS SECTION ONLY.
DO NOT TURN TO ANY OTHER SECTION IN THE TEST.
Read each passage carefully and then answer the questions about it. For each question, decide on the basis of
the passage which one of the choices best answers the question.
certain orbits for each of the planets. In general, the seven planets known at that time observed
these predicted orbits. However, there was an exception: Uranus, at the far outer reaches of the
solar system, refused to behave as predicted. The strange orbit of Uranus posed a problem for
Line 5 scientists.
Others were convinced that there had been some error: Uranus was actually behaving as
expected, and astronomers must have botched their observations. But there was a third
theory: that some as-yet-undiscovered object in the outer solar system was disturbing the
orbit of Uranus. Convinced of this theory, at least two scientists John Adams Couch and
10 Urbain Jean-Joseph Le Verrier worked separately to calculate the position of such an object.
By 1846, they had calculated the mass, orbit, and position of the object, using only their
knowledge of gravity and obse With their calculations,
astronomers were able to locate the object, and in 1846, the planet Neptune was discovered.
A resident of the nearby Virginia suburb of Alexandria, Daphne Steinberg, said she was
attracted by the prospect of finding something special. "I love that I can outfit myself for work,
15
10. According to the passage, the benefits of 12. According to the passage, the organizers
clothing swaps include of Washington-area clothing swaps used
social media to
I. saving money
II. raising money for local charities (A) swap gently used clothing online
III. making new friends (B) control who had access to their
events
(A) I only (C) share information about which
(B) I and II only brands and types of clothing would
be available
(C) I and III only
(D) raise awareness of their events and
(D) II and III only
increase participation
(E) I, II, and III
(E) ensure that participants were
following the rules
11.
is to
(A) offer some opinions on workplace
fashion
(B) highlight the benefits of a new social
trend
(C) offer a critique of the modern fashion
industry
(D) discuss the impact of social media on
shopping
(E) compare clothing swaps in
Washington with those in the rest of
the county
Then, both are shipped off to live out their lives in a petting zoo.
Line 5 This has not always been the case: originally, a turkey was presented to serve as the
presidential dinner. President Kennedy was the first president known to have spared his
Thanksgiv
named Charlie, although there was no actual pardoning ceremony. It was President George H.W.
Bush who presided over the first official turkey pardoning two years later. Since that ceremony,
10 the practice has been followed annually by every U.S. President, and has become an American
tradition.
26. The main subject of this passage is 29. According to the passage, how were
Presidential Thanksgivings different
(A) the difference between Presidents
before Presidents began pardoning
Kennedy and Bush
turkeys?
(B) turkey farming practices
(C) what Presidents eat for Thanksgiving (A) Presidents had to buy their own
turkeys.
(D) legal right to pardon
(B) The turkeys given to Presidents were
(E) an unusual Presidential tradition
eaten for Thanksgiving dinner.
27. According to the passage, when was the (C) Most turkeys were allowed to live
first turkey officially pardoned by an without a pardoning ceremony.
American President? (D) The turkeys at Presidential
Thanksgivings were wild instead of
(A) 1963
farm-raised.
(B) 1965
(E) Petting zoos did not have any turkeys.
(C) 1985
(D) 1987
(E) 1989
31. Based on the context of the passage, John 33. The tone of the second paragraph could
originally wanted to get into the water best be described as
because
(A) tense
(A) he wanted to get out of the heat and (B) curious
go for a swim (C) sarcastic
(B) (D) relaxed
would be, and could only tell by
(E) humorous
getting in
(C) he wanted to pick up a gem that he 34. Which of the following statements best
saw in the water matches the main idea of the story?
(D) he was trying to get away from
(A) Honesty is important, but so is
someone
knowing when not to speak.
(E)
(B) Strong desires can sometimes blind
about why John wanted to get in the
people to danger.
water.
(C)
acquired a great symbolic importance in the aftermath of the French Revolution, when
10 historians used it to illustrate the ignorance and indifference of the upper classes to the
suffering of the poor. The story expressed the feelings of the people, and spoke clearly and
powerfully to the sentiment of the time. It is an excellent tale, but it does have one minor flaw: it
almost certainly is not true.
It is, at the very least, a misattribution, but very likely a total fabrication. It appeared first
15 -
to be true, it would almost certainly have been written while Marie Antoinette was still only a
small child.
20
likely to persist, marching down into history, bearing with it the spirit of an age and followed
35. According to the passage, the poor 36. Based on the context of the passage, the
citizens of 18th century France faced (line 8) most likely
which of the following problems involving means
bread?
(A) a type of French royalty
(A) Bakeries went out of business (B) an ignorant person
because the poor had no money to (C) someone who enjoys cake
buy bread.
(D) a member of the French lower class
(B) There were shortages of bread, even
(E) a type of dolphin
though people spent much of their
money on it.
(C)
time, and craved something different.
(D) The poor were angry that they had
been forced to eat cake as a substitute
for bread.
(E) g to pay
outrageous bread prices and
demanded cheaper alternatives.
STOP
IF YOU FINISH BEFORE TIME IS CALLED,
YOU MAY CHECK YOUR WORK ON THIS SECTION ONLY.
DO NOT TURN TO ANY OTHER SECTION IN THE TEST.
This section consists of two different types of questions: synonyms and analogies. There are directions and a
sample question for each type.
Synonyms
Each of the following questions consists of one word followed by five words or phrases. You are to select the
one word or phrase whose meaning is closest to the word in capital letters.
1. EMBRACE: 4. BLAST:
(A) grab (A) weight
(B) hug (B) push
(C) lift (C) explosion
(D) push (D) instant
(E) lock (E) drill
2. GENERATE: 5. SOLID:
(A) power (A) firm
(B) spin (B) pouty
(C) burn (C) massive
(D) produce (D) sticky
(E) consume (E) harsh
3. COSMIC: 6. NULLIFY:
(A) unknown (A) engage
(B) obscure (B) cancel
(C) bright (C) dispute
(D) celestial (D) melt
(E) elective (E) absorb
Sample Question:
Kitten is to cat as
(A) fawn is to colt
(B) puppy is to dog
(C) cow is to bull
(D) wolf is to bear
(E) hen is to rooster
A B C D E
Choice (B) is the best answer because a kitten is a young cat just as a puppy is a young dog. Of all the answer
choices, (B) states a relationship that is most like the relationship between kitten and cat.
STOP
IF YOU FINISH BEFORE TIME IS CALLED,
YOU MAY CHECK YOUR WORK ON THIS SECTION ONLY.
DO NOT TURN TO ANY OTHER SECTION IN THE TEST.
Following each problem in this section, there are five suggested answers. Work each problem in your head or
in the blank space provided at the right of the page. Then look at the five suggested answers and decide which
one is best.
Note: Figures that accompany problems in this section are drawn as accurately as possible EXCEPT when it is
stated in a specific problem that its figure is not drawn to scale.
Sample problem:
5,413 (A) 586
4,827 (B) 596
(C) 696
(D) 1,586
(E) 1,686
B C D E
5. Meg goes for a run 3 times per week, and she runs for
an average of 27 minutes each time. On average, how
long does Meg run each week?
(A) 54 minutes
(B) 1 hour, 11 minutes
(C) 1 hour, 21 minutes
(D) 1 hour, 29 minutes
(E) 2 hours, 1 minute
(A) dollars
(B) dollars
(C) dollars
(D) dollars
(E) dollars
(A) of
(B) 3 more than
(C) 3
(D) 3 times
(E) 3 less than
9.
(A) -1
(B)
(C) 1
(D) 6
(E) 24
(A) 3
(B) 3
(C) 4
(D) 4
(E) 5
Basketball
Figure 1
13. Over all four quarters, the total funds raised by the
basketball team were what fraction of the total funds
raised by the hockey team?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E)
15. If , then =
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D) 3
(E) 6
16. x
. Which expression represents the perimeter of the
polygon?
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D) Figure 2
(E)
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(E) 1
A)
B)
C)
D)
(A) 0
(B) 1
(C) 5
(D) 20
(E) 25
(A) 8
4
(B) 12
(C) 16
4
(D) 24
(E) 28 H G
Figure 3
STOP
IF YOU FINISH BEFORE TIME IS CALLED,
YOU MAY CHECK YOUR WORK ON THIS SECTION ONLY.
DO NOT TURN TO ANY OTHER SECTION IN THE TEST.