Responding to an AP Lit Prompt

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Prose Analysis Essay for the AP Language and Composition Exam
Advertisements

Matteson AP Lit. Literary Analysis Mattesons Guide For Writing The Perfect Paper.
Conclusions (in general… and for this assignment).
The Century Quilt Take the first 5-7 minutes:
How to Succeed at Life (and Do Well on the AP English Language and Composition Multiple Choice) Adapted from: English Language and Composition, 3rd Edition.
FEBRUARY 4, 2013 MS. ROULE HAPPY NEW SEMESTER! English 3.
an hour and a half There is an hour and a half for this paper, which means that, allowing for: reading the questions, making your selection, writing the.
Writing the Literary Analysis. What is Literary Analysis? It’s literary It’s an analysis It’s-- An Argument! It may also involve research on and analysis.
Getting to Grips With Unfamiliar Text
Suggestions For Writing An Essay
Welcome to AP English Literature
Poetry Analysis TPCASTT
Writing Solid Thesis Statements
Poetry Analysis.
Introductory Paragraph should have the following: 1. Title of the poem, short story, or novel (text, p. 36) 1. Full name of the author in the first sentence;
Archetypes + Approaches to Syntax Handouts + analytic verbs.
Thesis statement defined  A thesis statement is the idea the writer intends to prove in the essay.  It is the main point and the controlling idea of.
AP Prompt #2: Prose Prompt. The FREE RESPONSE prompt (almost) ALWAYS asks… …what it contributes the meaning of the work as a whole …how it illuminates.
AP English Language & Composition Exam Review
PREPARING FOR SUCCESS Advanced Placement Literature and Composition Test.
PLANNING AN IB WRITTEN COMMENTARY How to ANNOTATE and ANALYZE an extract.
Essay 1 Strategy Where to start, how to get organized and how to write your paper.
AP Literature and Composition November 12, 2008 Ms. Cares.
Accelerated 10 English 1. Read 2. Details 3. Topic – Significant to the Text 4. Return to the details. o Details are combined/interpreted to determine.
Suggestions For Writing An Essay
A.P. ENGLISH LITERATURE & Composition Do’s and Don'ts Z. Aleman.
Tackling The Poetry Essay
Essays (college papers) “a. A short literary composition on a single subject, usually presenting the personal view of the author. b.Something resembling.
Suggestions For Writing An Essay Hour Glass Style.
Critical Essay Reading. What is a critical response? A critical response is an essay where you can show your understanding and appreciation of a text.
Analysis Essay for the AP Language and Composition Exam Introduction Information Advice.
The Prose Essay. Types of prose A work of fiction or non-fiction Usually no more than a page in length Section from a novel, short story, drama, essay,
AP Boot Camp (GRUFF VOICE) BRING THE PAIN!. Overview TARGETS 1.Focus preparation on areas of concern 2.Write detailed analysis on demand 3.Eliminate distracting.
Prose Analysis Essay notes. AP Prose Analysis Essay Notes Before you write:  Read the prompt carefully. Twice. Make sure you understand what they want!
AP Lit Essay Portion of the Exam  Part I: Multiple Choice:1 hour for 55 questions  45% of the composite score  Part II: 3 Essay questions: 2 hours.
AP: English Literature and Composition. AP Exam 55 multiple choice questions 4-6 passages –60 minutes –45% of final score 3 essay questions –120 minutes.
Making up for the First Seven Weeks!
September 8, 2014 EQ: How to write a literary analysis paper. Begin with a clear thesis: A thesis is like a road map – It tells the reader where you are.
Q.O.D. FAVORITE PHOENIX BOOK YOU’VE READ UP TO THIS POINT WELCOME!
AP Literature Exam Prep Notes. Wednesday, May 6th 7:30 am Room 306 (may change)
AP Lit Essay Portion of the Exam  Part I: Multiple Choice:1 hour for 55 questions  45% of the composite score  Part II: 3 Essay questions: 2 hours.
Attacking the Poetry Prompt
EOC Testing Tips Ninth Grade Literature and Composition EOC.
Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition 2010 Professional Development (shortened and adapted by Ms. Teref) Ira Abrams Chicago Public Schools.
How to Write the Poetry Essay Tips from: 5 Steps to a 5 : AP Literature.
Reading Poetry.
Last-Minute AP-Lit Test Tips. Write on the test  Make VERY sure you understand what is called for in the question. Reread it several times and underline.
ACT Reading Test The ACT Reading test is 40 questions long. There are four passages of ten questions. 52 seconds a question 8 minutes a passage 35 minutes.
Writing a Literary Analysis Essay AP Literature and Composition Practice.
CPE Reading Strategies Task I. Summarize 1 or more of the authors’ ideas on a given topic Draw a relationship between (compare) aspects of the readings.
Practice Makes Perfect!.  Read the passage from Lord of the Flies beginning with, “Jack was bent double,” (pages ) and ends with “He did not notice.
Analyze the title first. What do you predict this poem will be about? Write down your predictions. We will reflect on the title again after we have read.
AP LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION 9/29. AGENDA Pass back all papers AP Prose Question 2 Scores Read the Rubric Together-highlight/underline key words Score.
WRITING GUIDE AND FEEDBACK Formatting 1” margins Times New Roman font, size 12 Heading (not in a header), on the left-side of your paper—single spaced:
AP Exam Exam Prep. Overview 3 hours Multiple Choice- 1 hour, 55 questions Essay- 2 hours, 3 questions BEFORE THE TEST Review literary terms we have covered.
REMINDERS FOR THE AP TEST. Multiple Choice Go through and do the sections that are most accessible to you first! Read carefully, interacting with the.
Regents Exam: Part I: Listening and Writing for Information and Understanding.
IMPORTANT ENGLISH TERMS English II. Terms and definitions Characterization Definition: The way a writer creates and develops characters’ personalities.
Writing the Literary Analysis Including BREAKING DOWN THE PROMPT.
AP Literature Exam Prep Notes
My Observations One week to go….
Responding to an AP Lit Prompt
Planning and Writing a passage analysis essay
Responding to an AP Lit Prompt
AP Language: Shifts and Rhetorical Analysis AP Prompt
One last push for tomorrow!
Regarding the Final….
Bellwork: August 24, 2015 **BE PREPARED to turn in your 2 copies of your rough draft!!** What is the most important aspect of the following prompt? Explain.
Last-Minute AP-Lit Test Tips
TP-CASST How to analyze poetry in a thorough & complete way that will make your LA 10 teacher happy!
Presentation transcript:

Responding to an AP Lit Prompt Composing an Essay on the AP Lit exam: The Prose Question or Question #2 on the Exam

AP Lit Essay Portion of the Exam Part I: Multiple Choice:1 hour for 55 questions  45% of the composite score Part II: 3 Essay questions: 2 hours  55% of the composite score: 1. Poetry Question 2. Prose Question 3. Novel/Play Question (“a moment in the novel”)

AP Lit Essay Breakdown Intro: thesis  answers the question WHAT? -What is the complex/dramatic situation here? - What did the author do to create the drama? ________________________________________________ The body of the essay answers the question HOW? - How did the author accomplish the complexity in each the given passage or poem? - Discuss and analyzie (don’t simply identify) the effect of the devices used: structure, imagery, tone, diction, syntax.

AP Lit Exam 2010: how to read an AP essay prompt Let’s look at the poetry question: AP Central Instructions: Read carefully the following poem by Marilyn Nelson Waniek. Then write an essay analyzing how Waniek employs literary techniques to develop the complex meanings that the speaker attributes to “The Century Quilt.” You may wish to consider such elements as structure, imagery, and tone. Read the poem twice to yourself.

Example 1: Introduction: How do I arrive at my thesis? Step 1: What is the prompt asking you to do? e.g. If the prompt asks you to discuss the complex meanings of the century-old quilt (Waniek poem), write the definition of “complex meanings” for yourself. Step 2: Mark the prompt every time the blanket is described in a complex way: intense feeling, strangeness, contradiction, irony, hot-cold, tension-release. Step 3: Linger in the details about the many meanings of the blanket! Texturize and layer that blanket. Approach the blanket from as many angles as possible. Let the details about poem pile up. Annotate, annotate, annotate. Circle/ highlight any detail, word, or sentence that stands out about the complexity of the blanket.

Example 2: Introduction: How do I arrive at my thesis? Step 1: What is the prompt asking you to do? e.g. If the prompt asks you to discuss the attitude of the speaker, write the definition of “attitude” at the top of your paper. Step 2: Mark the prompt every time the attitude changes or is described. Step 3: Linger in the details about the attitude! Let the details about the passage or poem pile up. Annotate, annotate, annotate. Circle/ highlight any detail, word, or sentence that stands out about the speaker’s attitude. Now you’re ready to have a position and write your thesis.

Now that you’ve annotated your prompt (no more than 7-8 minutes), decide where the major shifts are (shift=change, contradiction, irony) and put a slash at the beginning of every MAJOR shift (remember, you’re trying to break the prompt down into manageable chunks) What are some clues for finding shifts? Conjunctions: although, but, yet, however, nevertheless Punctuation marks: dashes Time breaks/ passage of time breaks (additional space between paragraphs)

How to read an essay prompt: Tom Jones What did the author do? How did s/he do it? Define the literary concept you are to write about at the top of your prompt to remind yourself of: a) what to look for in a prompt b) what to write about in response to the prompt

This is an illustration of a Victorian paragraph: a unigraph, :D, usually with a few REALLY long sentences… but we will not be intimidated! XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Topic sentence 2 Topic sentence 1 Topic sentence 3 Conclusion (do not write “In conclusion” but just conclude)

We always look for major shifts…Here is a poem: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXX XXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXX Again, the paper isn’t determined by stanzas or paragraphs, but the shifts!!! How many shifts in this poem? How many body paragraphs?

Let’s re-cap: In the intro, we need The title of the literary work (what do we underline? when do we use quotations?) Full name of the author at first; after that, only the last name Thesis – CFC (complexity or shift, function, conjunctions) An argument, position - NOT A FACT C: States the main “complexity” (contradiction: hot & cold, tension/release, irony, juxtaposition, change, shift) OF THE ENTIRE PROMPT F: Explains the “function” of the complexity/shift (What is the purpose or role of that complexity?) C: Conjunctions or key words to help you construct the thesis: not only … but, however, yet, despite, but

Raising the level of student work Essays scored 4 (out of 9) or lower most often result from students “dumbing down” the task. A series of lower-scoring sample essay opening paragraphs will be projected in the next few slides. What instructions would you give these students in order to get them to engage the task more fully?

The Prompt and the Problem The following prompt can be found on Question 1 of the 2010 AP English Lit/Comp Exam: Read carefully the following poem by Marilyn Nelson Waniek. Then write an essay analyzing how Waniek employs literary techniques to develop the complex meanings that the speaker attributes to The Century Quilt. You may wish to consider such elements as structure, imagery, and tone. 2010 Q1 Sample B; score: 4

…and the Problem again… 2010 Sample A; score: 3

…and the Problem again 2010 Q1 Sample R – Score 4

What instructional questions do these low-scoring essay-openings raise? Should students be trained to repeat the prompt in the first paragraph? Should students be trained to organize essays around a list of literary techniques/devices? Should the first paragraph make specific claims about the complex effect or meaning of the text? Or should it remain vague?

What important tasks are these essay writers failing to take on? These writers don’t discuss specific “complex meanings” that the speaker attributes to The Century Quilt. They introduce specific literary techniques without stating how these are used by the poet “to develop the complex meanings that the speaker attributes to The Century Quilt.”

What an adequate response might look like: Sample YYY; score: 9

What strategies does this highly successful student-writer use? The first paragraph has a thesis which defines the complex meanings attributed to the quilt. The description of the quilt’s theme or meanings respects that fact that the poem’s meaning is not static but “develops” as we read and as we deepen our understanding of the work.

What is this highly successful student-writer NOT doing? The student does not repeat the prompt. There is no laundry list of technical terms for literary techniques. There is not much of a distracting “grabber”-type introduction. Nearly all of this first paragraph is about the poem; there is a brief “grabber” sentence, but it is seamlessly related to the statement of the poem’s theme (i.e.“complex meanings”).

How does the successful writer introduce the “literary techniques”? The one “technique” mentioned in ¶ 1, “symbol”, is not from the list of suggested techniques in the prompt; moreover, it is embedded in a meaningful statement about a specific idea:

A different way to succeed: 2010 Q1 Sample VVV – Score 8

Now that we have a thesis, let’s write the Organic Essay (handout)!