GED GED-Writing Real Exam Dumps [June 2026 Update]

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Our GED-Writing Exam Questions provide accurate and up-to-date preparation material for learners preparing for GED writing-focused assessment topics. Developed around core language and writing skills, the questions reflect real scenarios involving grammar, sentence structure, reading analysis, and written response practice. With verified answers, clear explanations, and exam-style practice, you can confidently strengthen your writing skills and overall GED language performance.

Total Questions 295
Update Check May 30, 2026

GED Writing Practice Questions 2026 – Prepare for GED RLA Writing the Right Way

The GED Reasoning Through Language Arts (RLA) test combines reading comprehension and writing skills in a single 150-minute exam. Writing is tested in two distinct ways within the RLA exam: through language and grammar questions embedded in reading passages, and through the Extended Response — a 45-minute essay task requiring you to analyze two arguments and write a well-supported response. Understanding how writing is tested in the current GED format — and preparing specifically for those formats — is what separates candidates who pass on their first attempt from those who are surprised by the essay task.

At Cert Empire, we help you prepare with updated GED writing practice questions covering language conventions, grammar and usage embedded in passage context, and extended response structure and argumentation. Our preparation resources include practice questions organized by skill area and realistic extended response prompts. Candidates preparing for additional GED subjects can also explore our GED Reading practice questions and GED Mathematical Reasoning practice questions as complementary GED subject preparation.

Important: How GED Writing Is Now Tested

The GED was redesigned in 2014. Before 2014, the GED had a separate Writing test with multiple-choice grammar questions and a standalone essay. The current GED combines reading and writing into the Reasoning Through Language Arts (RLA) exam.

Writing skills are tested in two ways within the RLA exam:

  • Language and grammar questions appear as standalone multiple-choice items testing grammar, usage, and language conventions
  • The Extended Response is a 45-minute essay task where you read two passages presenting different viewpoints on a topic and write an argument analysis

The passing score for the RLA exam is 145 out of 200. Scores of 165 and above indicate college and career readiness beyond the minimum passing threshold.

What GED Writing Tests

Language Conventions and Grammar

Language and grammar questions on the RLA exam test whether you can identify and correct errors in written text. These questions appear as multiple-choice items associated with reading passages — you read a paragraph and choose the best revision to a specific sentence, or identify the error in an underlined phrase.

Key grammar and language convention areas tested include:

Subject-verb agreement — the verb must agree in number with its subject, even when words intervene between them. “The collection of books was donated” not “were donated” — the subject is “collection” (singular), not “books.”

Pronoun agreement and reference — pronouns must agree with their antecedents in number and gender, and the reference must be unambiguous. “Everyone should bring their own lunch” tests pronoun-antecedent agreement.

Sentence structure — identifying and correcting run-on sentences (two independent clauses joined without proper punctuation or conjunction), comma splices (two independent clauses joined with only a comma), and sentence fragments (incomplete clauses presented as sentences).

Parallel structure — items in a list or paired constructions must use the same grammatical form. “She likes hiking, to swim, and running” violates parallel structure — the correct version is “She likes hiking, swimming, and running.”

Comma usage — when commas are required (after introductory phrases, in compound sentences before coordinating conjunctions, to separate items in a list, in appositive phrases) and when they are incorrect (comma splices, unnecessary commas between subject and verb).

Modifier placement — misplaced and dangling modifiers create ambiguity. “Running down the street, the bus was missed” is a dangling modifier — the bus was not running down the street. Correct placement ensures modifiers clearly describe their intended subject.

Vocabulary in context — selecting the word that most precisely fits the meaning required in a sentence, including distinguishing between commonly confused word pairs (affect/effect, their/there/they’re, its/it’s, lie/lay).

The Extended Response — The Essay Task

The Extended Response is the most important and most distinctive component of GED writing preparation. You have 45 minutes to read two passages on a debatable topic and write an essay analyzing which argument is better supported.

What the Extended Response is NOT: It is not asking you to state your personal opinion on the topic. It is not asking you to argue for one side based on what you believe. It is asking you to analyze the evidence and reasoning in the two provided passages and argue which author makes the more effectively supported case.

What the Extended Response IS: An argument analysis where you identify specific evidence from the passages, evaluate how well that evidence supports each author’s claims, and argue — with specific passage references — which argument is more logically sound and better supported.

The three scoring traits: The Extended Response is scored on three equally weighted traits, each scored 0-2:

  1. Analysis of arguments and use of evidence — Do you engage with specific claims and evidence from the passages? Do you evaluate the logical quality of the arguments? Do you avoid simply summarizing or stating your opinion? 
  2. Development of ideas and organizational structure — Is your response organized with a clear introduction, supporting paragraphs, and conclusion? Do you develop your claims with specific details from the passages? 
  3. Clarity and command of English conventions — Is your writing clear, coherent, and free of major grammar and usage errors? 

The 45-minute structure: Experienced test-takers typically allocate 5-7 minutes to reading the passages carefully and planning the response, 30-35 minutes to writing, and 5 minutes to reviewing for clarity and major errors.

A model paragraph structure: State a claim about why one argument is better supported, reference a specific piece of evidence from the relevant passage (with brief quotation or description), explain how that evidence supports the claim, and optionally contrast it with a weakness in the opposing argument.

Why Candidates Choose Cert Empire for GED Writing Preparation

Most GED preparation resources treat reading comprehension and writing as completely separate skills. The best candidates understand they are connected — the same close reading skills that help you understand a passage’s argument also help you analyze that argument for the Extended Response. Our practice questions build both skill sets together in the integrated way the RLA exam tests them.

We prepare you for the current GED format, not the retired one 

The GED no longer has a separate Writing test. Writing is tested within the unified RLA exam. Our materials reflect the current format including the 45-minute Extended Response essay and the language convention questions embedded in passage context — not the outdated standalone essay format that no longer exists.

Extended Response preparation with scoring trait guidance 

The Extended Response is scored on three traits: analysis of arguments and use of evidence, development of ideas and organizational structure, and clarity and command of English conventions. Our practice prompts include annotated examples showing what scores at each level on each trait, so you understand concretely what earns full marks versus partial credit.

Grammar and language convention questions in passage context 

Language questions on the RLA appear in context — you read a paragraph and choose the best revision. Our grammar practice uses the same passage-context format the real exam uses, not isolated decontextualized grammar drills.

Practice under real exam conditions with the Cert Empire Exam Simulator 

The Cert Empire exam simulator replicates the timed pressure of the GED RLA exam, including the 45-minute Extended Response window. It tracks your performance on grammar and language convention question types after every session, identifies which grammar skill areas need more work, and builds the reading-plus-writing integration the RLA requires. Consistently strong simulator performance before exam day converts directly into passing scores.

Instant access, 90-day free updates, and 24/7 support 

After purchase, receive immediate access to all GED writing materials. Your purchase includes 90 days of free updates. Our 24/7 customer support team is available for access, content, or simulator questions at any time.

Backed by a full money-back guarantee 

Cert Empire backs all GED preparation materials with a complete money-back guarantee. Explore our complete GED preparation catalog.

FAQS

Does the GED still have a separate Writing test? 

No. The GED was redesigned in 2014 and no longer has a separate Writing test. Writing skills are now tested as part of the unified Reasoning Through Language Arts (RLA) exam, which combines reading comprehension, language and grammar questions, and the Extended Response essay in a single 150-minute exam.

What is the Extended Response on the GED RLA exam? 

The Extended Response is a 45-minute essay task in the middle of the RLA exam. You read two passages presenting different viewpoints on a topic, then write an argument analysis explaining which author’s argument is better supported by evidence and reasoning. It is not a personal opinion essay — it requires analyzing the logical quality of the provided arguments.

What grammar topics should I study for the GED writing portions?

Key grammar topics include subject-verb agreement, pronoun agreement and reference clarity, sentence structure (avoiding fragments, run-ons, and comma splices), parallel structure in lists and comparisons, comma usage rules, dangling and misplaced modifiers, and vocabulary usage in context.

What score do I need to pass the GED RLA exam? 

The passing score for the GED RLA exam is 145 out of 200. Scores of 165-174 indicate College Ready performance, and scores of 175 and above indicate College Ready Plus performance with potential college course credit.

 

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Discussions
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Sofia R. Jun 5, 2026 5:13 am
Anyone know if these questions are mostly multiple choice or do they have writing prompts too?
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