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AN INTRODUCTION TO THE AP TEST

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Page 1: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

AN INTRODUCTION

TO THE AP TEST

Page 2: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

AP Requirements

You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You can earn up to six hours!

You must also take many applied practices in class and a full practice exam on March 28th, as it is required of all students (excluding dual credit students).

Page 3: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Test Format Multiple Choice (45%)- 60 minutes to

answer approximately 55 questions 10-minute break between Section 1 and

2 Three Essays (55%)- 55 minutes for

synthesis essay, 40 minutes for argument essay, and 40 minutes for rhetorical analysis essay

Page 4: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Multiple Choice Help Don’t skip questions. Answer every one! Circle your answers in the book and then,

after each passage, transfer them over. If you are running out of time, quickly

answer the word in context questions. Read the FULL question; those “EXCEPT”

questions can kill you. You probably want to skip around to

answer the easiest ones for you and then come back to fill in the rest, so you get to more questions that you know you have a chance of answering correctly.

Page 5: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Most Common Multiple Choice Questions

Word in context- what does this word mean?

Main idea- be able to grasp important point

Terms- literary devices Function- what is the effect of a

device/word? Organization/structure-characterizing/

clustering

Page 6: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

The 3 Prompts Will Be: Synthesis Essay Argument Essay Rhetorical Analysis Essay

Page 7: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Thesis and Topic Sentences

Everything you write should relate back to your thesis, which should, in turn, relate back to the prompt.

Use topic sentences and transitions for each paragraph.

Have your thesis and topic sentences written out in your outline before you begin to write. This will help keep your essay tight and structured. Don’t spend too much time on your outline. 10 mins. MAX

Page 8: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

AP Critical Thinking Ability This test is assessing your thinking skills

just as much as your writing skills.Don’t write what everyone else is going to

write.Use mature and interesting

evidence/examples to support your point; take from history, literature, current events, school knowledge… Keep personal examples to a minimum.

Page 9: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Speculate about our culture The trend in recent years is to include

essays or nonfiction pieces with prompts that ask the reader to comment on our culture.Ex.

○ Entertainment/technology ○ The media & its effect on democracy○ Money/Narcissism

Page 10: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

IF IT’S A PIECE OF SATIRE, DON’T

TAKE IT SERIOUSLYLook for the underlying points

Ex. The Onion

A Modest Proposal

Reading the background information given to you in the directions will always help you identify satire.

Page 11: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Avoid immaturity in your writing, like:

“shows” – go deeper “positive” or “negative” Writing, “In conclusion…” in your

conclusion Restating the thesis exactly in both your

intro and conclusion

Page 12: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Don’t use a formula for your structure if you can help it.(“5 par. Essay”)

Page 13: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Use Effective Verbs –WRITE THESE DOWN(present tense focusing on what the author is doing)

Conveys, reveals, connotes, delineates, emphasizes, accomplishes, advocates, represents, presents, implements, enhances, contrasts, demonstrates, reflects, asserts, contributes, creates, permeates, flows, illustrates, alludes, displays, paints, portrays

Page 14: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Speculate! Every piece will have various levels of

complexity.It’s your job to look for that curve, that shift.

If you do, you will take your essay to the next level of critical analysis, which will help you get from a 6-7 to an 8-9.

Page 15: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Timed Writing Introduction: Get to the point immediately! Don’t worry about lead-ins.

Answer the question (or prompt) directly. (Instead of saying, “In this poem the speaker clearly shows his attitude toward love…” say, “The speaker shows a very cynical attitude toward love…”)

Material: Be sure to use specific details from the text to support your general answer. Do not quote long passages, but do make specific references to the text and include short quotations.

Organization: Although ideally you’d like to set up perfectly logical paragraphs and coherent analysis, time restraints may make this impossible. Try to plan your general structure ahead of time, but feel free to stray from the plan if it’s necessary to cover the material. Your reader will understand your time constraints. Essentially, the first paragraph will directly answer the question or prompt; the middle paragraphs will provide specific details to support that position; and the final paragraph will tie ideas together. {Tell me…show me…tie it together!}

Page 16: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Timed Writing Cont’d Transitions: Try to provide logical flow between

paragraphs, but do not be afraid to break the flow if you discover important ideas that need to be added. Here you can use conversational transitions to bring in addition material: “Let me back up for a minute to clarify a point made earlier…”

Tone: Tone tends to be more conversational, though you want to be as formal as reasonably possible. You are trying to show that you understand the question or prompt.

Title: Not needed. Don’t waste the time.

Page 17: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Timed Writing Cont’d Drafts: One draft is all you have time to do. Make

your writing as legible as is reasonable to expect in the limited time allotted. Do not use valuable time trying to recopy the essay. Be sure to use blue or black ink. Whiteout takes time and breaks the flow of ideas. Neatly cross out errors and keep writing. Readers will tolerate a few spelling or punctuation errors because of the time restraints. However, if errors are too frequent they will hurt the flow of the reader and give the impression that you have poor language skills. Be careful but not obsessive.

Page 18: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Argument Question: Recognize the complexity of the question.

That is ½ of the purpose of the argument.That is a path to a higher score- qualify!!!

If you qualify, make sure you still favor a side. Don’t come across as wishy-washy.

Do not use hypothetical evidence.It must be real (use your AP History knowledge,

your knowledge from reading & being an informed citizen).

Page 19: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Synthesis Essay Make sure you cite by using quotes, summaries, or

paraphrases- both direct and indirect citations. Make their words work for you by incorporating only

what you need of the quote; never use full paragraphs (or even full sentences) if you can help it.

Embed their words in your own words; this is the most mature way to synthesize.

You must cite 3 or more documents (citing more than 3 can actually lower your score, but citing less than 3 will give you an automatic score of 3 or less)

Yes, you can bring in outside information. The synthesis essay is not worth more, so don’t waste

all your time on it.

Page 20: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Synthesis Cont’d

Your argument should be the focus of the essay, NOT the sources themselves. Don’t split your paragraphs around your sources (one paragraph dedicated to each source). Synthesize the sources into your argument. Pretend you’re writing a research-based argument (yes- defend, challenge, or qualify) paper and your research is already done for you. Don’t let the sources take over.

Page 21: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

For the Rhetorical Analysis Essay Remember you can use my formula for

times’ sake: (The author) uses diction, syntax, and figurative language in order to (insert his or her specific rhetorical purpose). You don’t have to, but it’s a nice fallback and will get you where you need to go.

Page 22: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Remember: Discussing purpose and effect ( WHY the author

uses the device or what his/her intended effect is) is more important than listing terms.

Diction: word choice that is meaningful– takes connotation into account and helps set up a tone, a mood, or a theme.

Syntax: rules of language– sentence length, structure, punctuation, word order, active vs. passive verbs, repetition, etc.

Figurative Language: language that isn’t literal, i.e. metaphors, symbolism, allusions, etc.

Page 23: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Tips Discussing purpose & effect is always much more

important than listing terms. Read the prompt carefully, and make sure you know

exactly what is being asked before you dive right in. Reading the background information at the top of the

source will help you identify anything strange about a piece– including if it’s satirical in nature, or if it’s a bogus source (they have been known to try to trick students this way in the synthesis essay). This information can also tell you who wrote the passage/source, why they are relevant, and, possibly most helpfully, can place it in an appropriate historical context that can get you making connections and give you a starting point.

Page 24: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Think like the College Board The front line and the last line of the

piece will be important.Discuss their function.

Page 25: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Don’t explain the terms Remember your audience. Your reader knows what polysyndeton

is, asyndeton, etc. Your reader is a college professor or an

experienced AP Teacher. If you can’t remember the technical

term, or freeze up, discuss punctuation or diction, or ANYTHING you feel might be purposeful or have an effect.

Page 26: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Remember… Your essays will be graded holistically. 5 is considered passing. To receive an 8 or a 9, you must

demonstrate either control of language or a brilliant perspective/argument.

Page 27: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

General Rubric 9-8 Superior papers specific in their references, cogent in their

definitions, and free of plot summary that is not relevant to the question. These essays need not be without flaws, but they demonstrate the writer's ability to discuss a literary work with insight and understanding and to control a wide range of the elements of effective composition. At all times they stay focused on the prompt.

7-6 These papers are less thorough, less perceptive or less specific than 9-8 papers. These essays are well-written but with less maturity and control than the top papers. They demonstrate the writer's ability to analyze a literary work, but they reveal a more limited understanding than do the papers in the 9-8 range. Generally, 6 essays present a less sophisticated analysis and less consistent command of the elements of effective writing than essays scored 7.

Page 28: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Rubric Cont’d 5 Safe and “plastic,” superficiality characterizes these essays.

Discussion of meaning may be pedestrian, mechanical, or inadequately related to the chosen details. Typically, these essays reveal simplistic thinking and/or immature writing. They usually demonstrate inconsistent control over the elements of composition and are not as well conceived, organized, or developed as the upper-half papers. On the other hand, the writing is sufficient to convey the writer's ideas and stays focused on the prompt.

4-3 Discussion is likely to be unpersuasive, perfunctory, underdeveloped or misguided. The meaning they deduce may be inaccurate or insubstantial and not clearly related to the question. Part of the question may be omitted altogether. The writing may convey the writer's ideas, but it reveals weak control over such elements as diction, organization, syntax or grammar. Typically, these essays contain significant misinterpretations of the question or the work they discuss; they may also contain little, if any, supporting evidence, and practice paraphrase and plot summary at the expense of analysis.

Page 29: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Rubric Cont’d

2-1 These essays compound the weakness of essays in the 4-3 range and are frequently unacceptably brief. They are poorly written on several counts, including many distracting errors in grammar and mechanics. Although the writer may have made some effort to answer the question, the views presented have little clarity or coherence.

Page 30: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

Stamina Eat and sleep right the TWO days

before the test (including the day of the test, which is May 13th).

You don’t want to burn out by the last section of the multiple choice or by the last essay.This could make a difference between a 3

and a 4 or a 2/3.

Page 31: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

What to bring

Be at DHS (location to be announced) by 7:30 AM on Wednesday the 13th of May.

You must bring: a blue or black pen, a couple of sharpened #2 pencils, and a highlighter is optional.

DO NOT BRING CELL PHONES. Dictionaries and thesauri are not

allowed either.

Page 32: AP Requirements  You will have to take the AP test at the end of the year to receive college credit for my course (excluding dual credit students). You

QUESTIONS?Ask me in class; ask me during tutorials; or e-mail me:

[email protected]