As mentioned in prior posts, the reading section can definitely be an issue for gifted children, because of their ability to see nuance in the questions and answers.
Is there a way to prep students for this? Is there a way to teach them to respond to these types of questions?
Well, in my own experience with my DD, the
best outcome is when they take them YOUNG enough that their cognition is roughly within the same window as the target demographic.
What I mean by that is that a PG 17yo is
not going to be reading SAT questions the way that a NT 17yo will.
But a 10yo PG child might have a better chance at reading such questions "as intended" without much problem.
The fact is that it gets a lot worse before it gets better, and the ultimate determinant is how well the person can engage in 'perspective taking' while answering questions. Meta-cognition of a very particular flavor, in other words.
My DD is pretty good at perspective-taking, but it's a pretty error-prone process when trying to evaluate individual multiple-choice questions. I think she'd have probably done
better on the SAT/ACT when she was 9-11yo.
She's moving
past that target window now, though-- and unless she exercises the discipline to rein her brain in and fixate on that metacognitive state-of-mind about it, she tends to struggle.
We've worked with her for a lot of years on that kind of perspective-taking because her
grades in school are so heavily weighted in that same direction, by the way. I expect that she is probably better than most gifties at playing NT on assessments, but being EG/PG makes it very difficult, and harder the older she gets.
As an off-topic aside, how wacky is it that my 13yo spends MOST of her energy on the PSAT/SAT thinking "how would a typical person be expected to respond here? what SHOULD one have understood regarding this question?" and not on just which answer is "right" or "best" in an objective sense?

Seriously, people ought to get BONUS scoring with FSIQ's above some benchmark. Well, okay-- clearly that is tongue in cheek. But above some sweet spot, these tests ARE harder for bright test-takers. It's the only reason why my DD did
not earn "perfect" scores, which on any given day, she was (and is) more than capable of, even under timed conditions.