ap english language and composition course don stoll, associate professor writing arts department...

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Self Introduction… Prepare a 2-minute self introduction for a specific audience – the participants in this workshop Purpose– to make audience want you on their team – Include relevant personal information, professional information, reason(s) for taking the workshop, etc.

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Page 1: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Self Introduction…

Prepare a 2-minute self introduction for a specific audience – the participants in this workshop

Purpose– to make audience want you on their team –

Include relevant personal information, professional information, reason(s) for taking the workshop, etc.

Page 2: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

The AP English Language & Composition Course

Course Requirements Teacher Curriculum Learning Outcomes The Test

Page 3: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Teacher Teacher has read the most recent AP

English Course Description available on the AP English Language and Composition Course Home Page

Course teaches and requires students to write in several forms about a variety of subjects

Page 4: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Course requires students to… write essays that proceed through

several stages/drafts with revision aided by teachers and peers

Write in informal contexts designed to help them become increasingly aware of themselves as writers and of the techniques employed by the writers they read

Page 5: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Course requires… Expository, analytical, and

argumentative writing assignments based on readings representing a wide variety of prose styles and genres

Nonfiction readings selected to give students opportunities to identify and explain an author’s use of rhetorical strategies and techniques.

Page 6: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Course teaches… students to analyze how graphics and visual

images both relate to written texts and serve as alternate forms of texts themselves

research skills, in particular the ability to evaluate, use and cite primary and secondary sources by assigning projects that ask students to present an argument of their own that includes the analysis and synthesis of ideas from an array of sources

Page 7: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

AP Teacher provides instruction and feedback that help students develop…

A wide-ranging vocabulary A variety of sentence structure Logical organization A balance of generalization and specific

illustrative detail An effective use of rhetoric including

controlling tone, clear voice, and appropriate emphasis through diction and sentence structure

Page 8: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

AP English Language Course Outcomes

A description of the learning outcomes and the means to

achieve & assess these outcomes

Page 9: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Read Well Learning Goals:

Denotation & Connotation Inference & Implication

Read a variety of texts from a variety of genres and historical periods

Understand the conventions of the genres and their relationship to rhetorical situations

Page 10: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Understand and Follow Directions

Read essay prompts accurately Recognize there is a pattern to the prompts -

Read the selection Write an essay in which you… Pay close attention to the word following “you”

Analyze Develop Support, refute, qualify Characterize Take a position on

Page 11: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Think Critically Thinking should not be programmatic

nor simplistic What Constitutes Critical Thinking Skills

Finding analogies and other kinds of relationships between pieces of information

Determining the relevance and validity of information that could be used for structuring and solving problems

Finding and evaluating solutions or alternative ways of treating problems

Page 12: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Critical Thinking #2-Getting below the Surface

Understanding the meaning of a text before identifying writer’s strategies and techniques

To begin by identifying the techniques often leads to a list of parts that may only tangentially relate to the meaning of the text

Page 13: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Have Persuasion Skills The responsibility of a writer is to

convince the reader the writers’ POV is viable

We teach persuasion techniques and devices and we want our students to…

Incorporate these skills into their own persuasive, descriptive, and analytical writing

Page 14: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Select Evidence Effectively Teach students to use evidence for

which they can provide a clear rationale Eschew novels or other literary texts to

gain false credence for an argument Evidence fails to convince if the reader

cannot fully grasp its relevance

Page 15: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Effectively Select Details Students must understand the

difference between “telling” details and details that merely “pad”

More details are not necessarily better Three examples may or may not be

better than two

Page 16: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Effectively Decipher Text The trinity of stylistic analysis - imagery,

diction, and syntax - is a useful tool to understand how a writer has accomplished the effect.

But…tools are only as good as what they accomplish - they have minimal intrinsic value. Maintain balance.

Page 17: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Develop Ethos Personal essays have value Students need to learn the value of

establishing ethos as a tool in convincing the reader the writer’s POV is viable.

Students need to learn how to present personal experience as relevant and appropriate evidence.

Page 18: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Go Beyond the 5-Paragraph Essay

5-paragraph essay and other formulistic methods cause more problems than they solve…. Lack of individual voice Limitation of Invention to three points Ignoring salient issues and belaboring the

obvious Can annoy reader…

Page 19: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

We want our students to… Develope Personal Voice Urge students to risk making their own

perceptive claims Urge students to create their own

organic structures Encourage risk taking Flawed “something” is almost always

preferable to the well-wrought “nothing”

Page 20: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Course teaches… students how to cite sources using a

recognized editorial style MLA APA Chicago Manual of Style

Page 21: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

Overview

I. Preparation for the Exam

II. The Exam

III. The Prompts

IV. Scoring

Page 22: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Date - Wednesday, May 12, 2010 8am Website -

apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc The fee for each AP Exam is $86. Fee Reduction - The College Board provides a $22 fee

reduction per exam for qualified students with acute financial need. For each eligible student, schools should also forgo their $8 rebate. Thus, eligible students pay $56 per exam.

Page 23: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Exam Structure

How the exam is constructed

Committee of 8 (4/4)

Psychometricians & Specialists

Testing Questions

Page 24: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Committee

Page 25: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Section I - Multiple Choice Questions

45% of grade

54 - 56 questions on 6 readings

60 minutes allotted

Page 26: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Advice on Multiple Choice Questions

First look at and then scan all the readings

Note the number of questions associated

with each reading - pick readings with the

largest number of questions

Answer the easy questions first - there are

easy and hard questions on each reading

Page 27: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Advice on Multiple Choice Questions

Of the five choices…4 are “distracters” 1 is clearly wrong 1 is partially wrong 1 is the opposite of the right answer 1 is nearly right 1 is right (key)

Guess… if you can reduce the possible answers to at least 3 - better 2

If the answer is obvious, it is usually right

Page 28: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Advice on Multiple Choice Questions

New Question - At least one of the

readings will include footnotes and there

will be 2 - 4 questions associated with that

reading that refer to the footnotes

Page 29: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Section II - Free Response Questions

55% of grade

3 Questions

135 minutes allotted of which 15 minutes is

devoted to reading provided sources for

the “synthesis” question

Page 30: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

II. The AP English Exam Section II - Free Response Questions

Advice on Free Response Questions Scan all the questions and pick the easiest for

you - maybe start with the “synthesis” question

Plan before writing and identify examples you

plan to use

Timing - give yourself time for all three essays

Relationship between short answer and essays

Page 31: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts Read the prompts carefully - Recognize there is a pattern to the

prompts - Read the selection Write an essay in which you…… Pay close attention to the word following

“you”

Page 32: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts

The passage below is an excerpt from What are People For? By Wendell Berry. Read the passage carefully. Then write an essay in which you support, refute, or qualify Berry’s argument. Use appropriate evidence to develop your position.

Page 33: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts“Below are excerpts from a crucial scene in

Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar…. Read the excepts carefully. Then write an essay in which you analyze the rhetoric of both arguments and explain why you think the Caesar finds Decius’s argument more persuasive than Calphurnia’s. You may want to consider such elements as choice of detail, use of appeals, and understanding of audience.”

Page 34: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts“The following passage concludes an essay by

Edward Abbey about Aravaipa Canyon in New Mexico. Read the passage carefully. Then write an essay in which you characterize Abbey’s attitudes toward nature and analyze how Abbey conveys these views.”

Page 35: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts“From talk radio to television shows, from popular

magazines to Web blogs, ordinary citizens, political figures, and entertainers express their opinions on a wide range of topics. Are these opinions worthwhile? Does the expression of such opinions foster dramatic values?

Write an essay in which you take a position on the value of such public statements of opinion, supporting your view with appropriate evidence.”

Page 36: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts“The passage below is an excerpt from “On Want of

Money,” an essay written by nineteenth-century author William Hazlitt. Read the passage carefully. Then write an essay in which you analyze the rhetorical strategies Hazlitt uses to develop his position about money.”

Page 37: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts“The passage below is an excerpt from Jennifer Price’s

recent essay “The Plastic Pink Flamingo: A Natural History.” The essay examines the popularity of the plastic pink flamingo in the 1950s. Read the passage carefully. Then write an essay in which you analyze how Price crafts the text to reveal her view of United States culture.”

Page 38: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

III. The Prompts“The following prompt is based on the accompanying six sources. The

question requires you to integrate a variety of sources into a coherent, well-written essay. Refer to the sources to support your position: avoid mere paraphrase or summary. Your argument should be central; the sources should support this argument.

Remember to attribute both the direct and indirect citations.Television has been influential in United States presidential elections since

the 1960’s. But just what is this influence and how has it affected who is elected? Has it made elections fairer and more accessible, or has it moved candidates from pursuing issues to pursuing image?

Read the following sources (including any introductory information) carefully. Then, in an essay that synthesizes at least three of the sources for support, take a position that defends, challenges, or qualifies the claim that television has had a positive impact on presidential elections.”

Page 39: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

The Scoring The reading context The training The Rubric The instructions to readers Insider tips

Page 40: AP English Language and Composition Course Don Stoll, Associate Professor Writing Arts Department Rowan University

The Scoring 2002 Free-response essay - rangefinders “Carefully read the following passage

from Testaments Betrayed, by the Czech writer Milan Kundera. Then write an essay in which you support, qualify, or dispute Kundera's claim. Support your argument with appropriate evidence.”