2024 HESI A2 ENTRANCE EXAM ALL SECTION WITH QUESTIONS & ANSWERS LATEST
UPDATE.
PERCENTAGE OF THE HESI A2 FEATURED IN THE PREVIOUS EXAM
✓ HESI A2 BIO... [Show More] LOGY 87%
✓ HESI A2 READING 95%
✓ HESI A2 GRAMMAR 88%
✓ HESI A2 ANATOMY 85%
✓ HESI A2 MATHS 92%
✓ HESI A2 CHEMISTRY 85%
2024/2025 UPDATE
2024 HESI A2 ENTRANCE EXAM ALL SECTION
WITH QUESTIONS & ANSWERS LATEST
UPDATE
● Isaac Asimov
● Laughter
● Jazz
● Homonyms
● Glass
● Changing time
● Mr. Rogers
● Lightning strikes
● Health care's number game
● Factory
● Electoral college
● Nurseries
● A bit about bicycles
● The Rainforest
VERSION 2 LIST OF PASSAGES
HESI A2 READING COMPREHENSION
PRACTICE QUESTIONS & ANSWERS V1&2
ISAAC ASIMOV
1. Definition of ―PROLIFIC‖.
✓ Highly productive
A. Against war
B. Literate
C. Ecocentric
2. For what type of writing was Mr. Asimov most famous for?
A. Juvenile fiction
B. Mystery
C. Popular science
✓ Science, fiction, writing
3. The Big three mentioned were , , and .
✓ Asimov, Heinlein, Clarke
VERSION 1 LIST OF PASSAGES
o Eating
o Food
o Game of
Bridge
o Getting a
Good
Night's
Sleep
o Chronic
Insomnia
o Phobia
o The Water
Cycle
o Amazon
Rainforest
o Safe
Driving
o Rainforest
o Voice
o White
Elephant
o Golden
Gate Bridge
4. How old was Asimov when he died? (this was a fill in the blank question)
✓ 72 years old
5. What is his greatest fear?
✓ Flying
LAUGHTER
1. Which statement is presented in the passage?
A. Native Americans rarely laugh.
✓ Native Americans humor is often overlooked.
B. Western Americans neglect the needs of Native Americans.
C. Native American humor is mostly satire.
2. What is implied by this paragraph?
A. Native Americans really are as stern and serious as they white men make them out to be.
B. Humor is the same all over the world.
✓ Native American humor deserves more attention.
3. The author seems to favor
✓ Research into Native American humor
4. The author's reason for writing seem to have been to
✓ Persuade people to take a broader view on Native Americans.
ALL THE JAZZ
Jazz has been called "the art of expression set to music", and "America's great contribution to music". It has
functioned as popular art and enjoyed periods of widespread public response, in the "jazz age" of the 1920s, in
the "swing era" of the late 1930s and in the peak popularity of modern jazz in the late 1950s. The standard
legend about Jazz is that it originated around the end of the 19th century in New Orleans and moved up the
Mississippi River to Memphis, St. Louis, and finally to Chicago. It welded together the elements of Ragtime,
marching band music, and the Blues. However, the influences of what led to those early sounds goes back to
tribal African drum beats and European musical structures. Buddy Bolden, a New Orleans barber and cornet
player, is generally considered to have been the first real Jazz musician, around 1891.
What made Jazz significantly different from the other earlier forms of music was the use of improvisation. Jazz
displayed a break from traditional music where a composer wrote an entire piece of music on paper, leaving the
musicians to break their backs playing exactly what was written on the score. In a Jazz piece, however, the song
is simply a starting point, or sort of skeletal guide for the Jazz musicians to improvise around. Many of the early
Jazz musicians were bad sight readers and some couldn't even read music at all. These early musicians couldn't
make money very much and were stuck working menial jobs to make a living. The second wave of New
Orleans Jazz musicians included such memorable players as Joe Oliver, Kid Ory, and Jelly Roll Morton. These
men formed small bands and took the music of earlier musicians, improved its complexity, and gained greater
success. This music is known as "hot Jazz" due to the enormously fast speeds and rhythmic drive.
A young cornet player by the name of Louis Armstrong was discovered by Joe Oliver in New Orleans. He soon
grew up to become one of the greatest and most successful musicians of all time, and later one of the biggest
stars in the world. The impact of Armstrong and other talented early Jazz musicians changed the way we look at
music.
1. Definition of CONFLUENCE.
A. Melding
B. Influence
✓ Intersection
C. Coming together
2. Where and when did jazz originate?
✓ Southern US. 20th century OR New Orleans
3. How does the author regard Jazz?
✓ A real aficionado
A. Unable to determine
B. Doesn't like it much
C. Enjoys it occasionally
4. Derivation of the word ―Jazz‖
✓ West coast slang
HOMONYMS
1. How does the article define homonyms?
✓ Words that sound alike but are spelled different ways with different meanings.
2. What inference can be drawn from the article?
✓ English is a difficult language to master.
3. Which statement is a fact rather an opinion?
✓ Homonyms make learning English more challenging.
4. What conclusion can be drawn from the article?
✓ In order to master English, the student must learn about homonyms.
Glass
1. The definition of brittle is?
✓ Easily broken
2. What conclusion can be drawn by the information included in the article?
✓ New use for glass is constantly being discovered.
3. What statement is implied by the article?
✓ Glass is an essential part of our lives.
4. What statement is a fact stated in the article?
✓ Glass isn‟t an element, but a combination of several elements.
CHANGING TIME
1. To what word or phrase does the word ―They‖ in the 3rd paragraph mean?
✓ Clock change DST
2. Which statement is true based on the info in the article?
✓ Computers automatically change the time settings when DST is established.
3. Which statement most accurately reflects the author's attitude about this subject?
✓ DST is an inconvenience & should end.
MR. ROGERS
1. According to the passage, Fred Rogers believed in .
✓ Uniqueness
2. Why did Fred Rogers design and develop a T.V. show for children?
✓ He wanted to help children deal with real world problems.
3. Author wrote the passage because .
✓ He wanted to inform readers or audience about Fred Rogers
4. Which statement is a fact and not an opinion?
✓ Mr. Rogers started a website for children in his retirement.
LIGHTNING STRIKE
1. The author seems to .
✓ Favor the use of lightning rods
2. The passage suggests lightning rods are used to what?
✓ Draw lightning away from buildings.
3. When taking cover from lightning, you should?
✓ Get into metal car, or lie flat
4. The reader can conclude that lightning?
✓ Consists of a main stroke and several smaller strokes.
5. The word penetrates means.
✓ To pierce
HEALTHCARE
1. The passage implies that
✓ There is a crisis in normal management in healthcare
2. According to the passage, why are more and more people using the emergency room for minor illness?
✓ They cannot afford the co-payments or deductible required by insurance.
3. Which statement is an opinion?
✓ If we don‟t change the way healthcare game is played, we‟re all going to lose.
4. Why do insurance companies continue to raise insurance rates?
✓ Hospitals are passing down the costs of taking care of people without insurance.
5. What does premium means?
✓ An amount to be paid for an insurance policy.
FACTORY
1. The paragraph states that both labor and management .
✓ Can benefit from a well-designed factory.
2. The paragraph suggests the purpose of a factory layout is for .
✓ Safety and profit.
ELECTORAL COLLEGE
The Electoral College has nothing to do with college and contains no students. The Electoral College consists of
votes that each state acquires based on the number of representatives it has in Congress. Each state has two
electoral votes because each state has two senators. The remaining electoral votes are determined by the number
of Congressmen, the number of which is based on the population of the state established by the Census taken
each decade. During the presidential election, most states cast all their electoral votes for the candidate who
wins the popular vote in that state. It's all very confusing, but the founding fathers know what they were doing.
By having and using the Electoral College candidates' campaign in every state, but just because they win the
popular vote across the country doesn't mean they will always win the election. Case in point, in election 2000,
Al Gore won the popular vote across the country, but George W. Bush won more electoral votes. Therefore, he
became our 43rd president.
1. Which statement is a fact?
✓ Each state casts their electoral votes during the Presidential election.
2. What does cast mean?
✓ To give one‟s vote
3. The author intends the ready to ?
✓ Have an understanding of the electoral college.
4. The author's reason for writing this piece seems to be to
✓ Teach the reader
NURSERIES
1. Nurseries are .
✓ Special types of farms.
2. Panel means .
✓ A strip of board or other material that forms a section of a wall or door.
3. Why do they need a special permit?
✓ Too many nurseries mean that there are not enough buyers for the plants that need to be
sold.
4. Which is a fact?
✓ Greenhouses create tropical conditions at nurseries.
5. The author implied that ?
✓ Nurseries are helpful for farmers.
A BIT ABOUT BICYCLES
Today, bicycles are so common that it's hard to believe they haven't always been around. But
two hundred yearsago, bicycles didn't even exist, and the first bicycle, invented in Germany in
1818, was nothing like our bicyclestoday. It was made of wood and didn't even have pedals.
Since then, however, numerous innovations and improvements in design have made the bicycle
one of the most popular means of recreation and transportation around the world. In 1839,
Kirkpatrick Macmillan, a Scottish blacksmith, dramatically improved upon the original bicycle
design. Macmillan's machine had tires with iron rims to keep them from getting worn down. He
also used foot-operated cranks like pedals, so his bicycle could be ridden at a quick pace. It
didn't look much like a modern bicycle, though, because its back wheel was substantially larger
than its front wheel. In 1861, the French Michaux brothers took the evolution of the bicycle a
step further by inventing an improved crank mechanism. Ten years later, James Starley, an
English inventor, revolutionized bicycle design. He made the front wheel many times larger
than the back wheel, put a gear on the pedals to make the bicycle more efficient, and lightened
the wheels by using wire spokes. Although this bicycle was much lighter and less tiring to ride,
it was still clumsy, extremely top heavy, and ridden mostly for entertainment. It wasn't until
1874 that the first truly modern bicycle appeared on the scene. (14) Invented by another
Englishman, H.J. Lawson, the "safety bicycle" would look familiar to today's cyclists. This
bicycle had equal-sized wheels, which made it less prone to toppling over. Lawson also
attached a chain to the pedals to drive the rear wheel. With these improvements, the bicycle
became extremely popular and useful for transportation. Today they are built, used, and enjoyed
all over the world.
1. About how long did it take for bicycles to look and feel like they do today?
✓ 53 centuries or 5300 years.
2. The author intended the reader to what?
✓ Understand a bit about the history of bicycles. [Show Less]