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SAT PREP CLASS Wednesday March 2 nd 2016 You will learn the following tonight:  Changes to the test  Scoring the test  Command of Evidence  Words in.

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Presentation on theme: "SAT PREP CLASS Wednesday March 2 nd 2016 You will learn the following tonight:  Changes to the test  Scoring the test  Command of Evidence  Words in."— Presentation transcript:

1 SAT PREP CLASS Wednesday March 2 nd 2016 You will learn the following tonight:  Changes to the test  Scoring the test  Command of Evidence  Words in context

2 How is the SAT changing this year? Structure OLD TEST  3 Critical Reading sections  20-25 minutes each  3 Math sections  20-25 minutes each  3 Writing sections  10-25 minutes each  Includes 1 Essay test (25 minutes)  1 Experimental test  5 answer choices for multiple-choice questions NEW TEST  1 Evidence-Based Reading and Writing test  65-minute Reading section  35-minute Language and Writing section  1 Math test  55-minute section with calculator  25-minute section without calculator  1 Essay test (optional) - 50 minutes  4 answer choices for multiple choice questions

3 How is the SAT changing this year? Timing OLD TEST  3 hours 45 minutes NEW TEST o 3 hours; 3 hours 50 minutes with optional essay

4 How is the SAT changing this year? Administration OLD TEST  Only available in print  Focused on broad range of content and skills NEW TEST  Available in print and digitally*  Fewer questions with a greater focus on in-depth analysis of content and evidence

5 How is the SAT changing this year? Essay OLD TEST  Essay is required  Students have 25 minutes to draft a response  Quality of reasoning and accuracy of data not tested  Score combined with multiple-choice Writing section NEW TEST  Essay is optional  Students have 50 minutes to analyze a 650-750 word document and draft an essay  Tests reading, analysis, and writing skills; requires students to analyze a source document and explain how the author builds an argument  Facts matter  Scored separately

6 How is the SAT changing this year? Reading & Writing OLD TEST  Critical Reading  Sentence Completions  Passage-based questions  Passage-based questions from short (100-150 words) and long (400-850 words) passages  Writing  Combined score of writing multiple- choice questions and Essay NEW TEST  Evidence-Based Reading  No Sentence Completions  Tests understanding of passages from U.S. and World Literature, History/Social Studies, and Sciences (500-750 words)  Writing and Language  Tests "Expression of Ideas" and "Standard English Conventions" through passages relating to Careers, History/Social Studies, Humanities, and Science  All questions pull from extended prose (400- 450 words)

7 Scoring of the test Total Score400-1600 The sum of the two Section scores–Math score + Evidence- Based Reading & Writing score The Essay score will be reported separately and is not a part of the Total Score Section Score200-800 There are two Section scores – one for Math and one for Evidence-Based Reading & Writing The Essay score is scored separately and not included in either Section score Essay6-24 The Essay will have three scores – Reading, Writing, and Analysis, each scored between 2 and 8.

8 About the Reading section  Answering questions about what is stated and what is implied by the text.  Questions that deal with information and ideas.  Questions that ask about structure, purpose, and craft of writing.  Questions that ask you to make connections

9 About the Reading Passages  Genre- informational & literary texts (may include literary elements  Purpose- can be informational, entertaining, or argumentative  Subject- U.S. & World Literature, social studies, or science  Complexity- varied levels of difficulty  Paired passages- two passages that are related somehow  Informational Graphics- can contain tables, charts, graphs

10 Reading Questions  INFORMATION & IDEAS o Locate stated information o Make reasonable inferences o Apply what you’ve read to a similar situation o Choose the best evidence o Determine central ideas & themes o Summarize important information o Understand relationships (cause & effect, compare/ contrast, sequential)

11 Reading Questions  RHETORIC o How the author puts together the text o How various pieces contribute to the whole text o How author’s word choice shapes meaning, tone, & style o How text is structured o Understand author’s point of view & purpose o Persuasive devices in the text

12 Reading Questions  SYNTHESIS Draw connections between a pair of passages Draw conclusions based on graphic & a passage

13 Practice Reading Questions 1. Content: Rhetoric6. Content: Info. & Ideas Answer: BAnswer: C 2. Content: Information & Ideas7. Content: Rhetoric Answer: BAnswer: A 3. Content: Synthesis8. Content: Info. & IdeasAnswer: C 4. Content: Rhetoric9. Content: Info. & Ideas Answer: AAnswer: C 5. Content: Rhetoric10. Content: Info. & Ideas Answer: AAnswer: D

14 Practice Reading Questions 11. Content: Information & Ideas Answer: C 12. Content: Information & Ideas Answer: B 13. Rhetoric Answer: B ***Additional passages located on pages 113-126 with explanations***


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