Briefing Style
SAT Digital Practice Test 11: Questions 19-22 Solved in Minutes with AI
Published
March 9, 2026
Read Time
5 min
Author
Sudip Kar
Category
Video Creation
Key Sections

What if you could turn any SAT question into a professional video explanation just by uploading a screenshot?
That's exactly what we did. We took four questions from SAT Digital Practice Test 11 (Questions 19-22), dropped the screenshots into Golpo AI, and in minutes had a fully narrated whiteboard-style video walkthrough - complete with visual annotations in our Sharpie marker style.
Watch the full video, then read the detailed breakdown below.
Question 19: "Which is why" - Declarative vs. Interrogative
"Ganga is a folk singing tradition that originated in the Dinaric Alps in southern Europe. Ganga singers sing different melodies at the same time. The clashing notes can echo a long way across the mountains, which is why ________"
The choices:
A) ganga has been used as a communication method?
B) ganga has been used as a communication method.
C) has ganga been used as a communication method.
D) has ganga been used as a communication method?
Why B is correct:
"Which is why" must be followed by a declarative statement. Options A and D use a question mark - that breaks the sentence. Option C sneaks in inverted question word order ("has ganga been") even with a period, which is still wrong. Only B gives you standard subject-verb order with a period.
Rule to remember: After "which is why," you always need a statement, never a question. If the word order is flipped (verb before subject), it is wrong regardless of the punctuation at the end.
Question 20: The "Enables" Verb Pattern
"A popular suite of mapping and spatial analysis software, ArcGIS enables cartographers like Karachi Cartography founder Namra Khalid ________ maps by analyzing and arranging raw geospatial data."
The choices:
A) create
B) to create
C) creating
D) created
Why B is correct:
"Enables" locks you into a specific grammar pattern: enables [someone] to [verb]. This is non-negotiable in standard English. "Create," "creating," and "created" all break the pattern. Only "to create" completes it correctly.
Rule to remember: Verbs like enable, allow, encourage, permit, and cause all follow the same structure: verb + object + to + infinitive. If you see any of these verbs on the SAT, look for the "to" option.
Question 21: The No-Punctuation Trap
"The part of a compound that determines the compound's color is ________ the chromophore. One example of a chromophore is hemoglobin, which gives human blood its red color."
The choices:
A) called,
B) called
C) called-
D) called;
Why B is correct:
Read it out loud: "The part of a compound that determines the compound's color is called the chromophore." Clean. Natural. No pause needed anywhere. A comma, dash, or semicolon would all break a perfectly smooth sentence for no reason.
Rule to remember: The SAT loves to test whether you will add punctuation where none belongs. If the sentence flows naturally without a pause, do not insert one. Long sentences are not automatically in need of commas.
Question 22: When a Dash Saves the Day
"In rural Minnesota, ecologist Leroy Walston conducted a study to determine whether seeding solar panel fields with wildflowers could bolster pollinator populations in nearby food crops. Walston's findings indicate that - assuming solar panel installers' ________ practice has the potential to increase the number of native bees in crops near solar fields throughout the Midwest by up to 20 percent."
The choices:
A) cooperation, this
B) cooperation-this
C) cooperation: this
D) cooperation this
Why B is correct:
"This" refers back to the whole idea of cooperation between ecologists and solar installers. A comma creates a splice. A colon needs a full sentence before it (we don't have one). No punctuation makes "cooperation this" grammatically broken. A dash works perfectly because it can introduce a restatement or clarification after a noun.
Rule to remember: When a colon fails because there is no complete sentence before it, a dash is usually the answer. Dashes are the Swiss Army knife of SAT punctuation.
What This Means for Your SAT Prep
Four questions. Four grammar rules that show up again and again on the SAT:
- "Which is why" needs a statement - not a question, not inverted word order
- "Enables" needs "to + verb" - memorize the pattern for enable, allow, permit, encourage
- No punctuation is sometimes the answer - do not add pauses that are not there
- Dashes replace colons when needed - if the clause before is not a full sentence, use a dash
These are not obscure rules. They repeat across every official SAT practice test. Master them and you pick up easy points.
How We Made This Video (and How You Can Too)
Here is the entire process:
- Screenshot the SAT questions
- Upload them to Golpo AI
- Pick a style (we used Sharpie whiteboard)
- Golpo reads the questions, solves them, and generates a narrated video with visual annotations
Total time: minutes. Total cost: a fraction of what a tutor charges for one session.
Whether you are a student building your own study library, a tutor creating content for clients, or a test prep company scaling your video output - Golpo turns static problems into engaging video lessons without cameras, editing software, or production teams.
Start with a free 1-minute video. Subscribe as you need.
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