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SAT PREP: STRATEGIES PARTS OF THE VERBAL TEST CRITICAL READING • Sentence Completion • Critical reading— short and long passages WRITING • Identifying Errors • Improving Sentences • Improving Paragraphs • Student-Written Essay SENTENCE COMPLETION: STRATEGIES #1 AND #2 PAGES 120-123 STRATEGY #1 FOR A SENTENCE WITH ONE BLANK, FILL IN THE BLANK WITH EACH CHOICE TO FIND THE BEST FIT STRATEGY #2 FOR SENTENCES WITH TWO BLANKS, ELIMINATE INITIAL WORDS THAT DON’T MAKE SENSE PRACTICE WITH SENTENCE COMPLETION STRATEGIES #1 AND #2 • On pp 674-675, do problems #1-8 • On p 702, do problems #1-6 ANSWERS pp 674-675 #1-8 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. E D D D C E B D p 702 #1-6 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. E A D D B C CRITICAL READING INFORMATION PAGES 127-133 READING COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS • Four Question Types: 1. MAIN IDEA/ PURPOSE 2. KEY DETAILS/ SPECIFIC INFORMATION 3. IMPLIED INFORMATION 4. TONE OR MOOD TIPS • Get involved with the passage! • Annotate (underline, write in margin, circle, etc.) • Keep in mind the four question types (see previous slide) when reading the passages • Take note of the organization of the information • Read the question and then each answer option. If an answer option doesn’t feel right, move to the next one without trying to make it fit. MORE TIPS • Don’t get bogged down on a question. If none look correct, skip it and move on (you can come back to it later in that section if you need). • Look at information not related to the passage—there will probably be a question on that material READING COMPREHENSION: STRATEGY 1 PAGES 135-137 STRATEGY #1 AS YOU READ EACH QUESTION, DETERMINE THE QUESTION TYPE: 1) 2) 3) 4) MAIN IDEA DETAILS INFERENCE TONE/MOOD EXERCISE #1 Go to pp 676-679 #9-24 and label each question by its type **Don’t read the passages or answer the questions yet READING COMPREHENSION: STRATEGY 2 PAGES 138-139 STRATEGY #2: UNDERLINE THE KEY PARTS OF THE READING PASSAGES EXERCISE #2 Read the passages on pp 676-679 #9-24 and underline key parts (info addressing the question types) READING COMPREHENSION: STRATEGY 3 PAGE 140 STRATEGY #3: LOOK BACK AT THE PASSAGE WHEN IN DOUBT EXERCISE #3 ANSWER THE QUESTIONS NOW, LOOKING BACK TO THE UNDERLINED PORTIONS OF THE PASSAGES AS NEEDED ANSWERS PP 676-679 9. E 10.C 11.B 12.E 13.D 14.B 15.A 16.C 17.B 18.E 19.D 20.E 21.C 22.E 23.E 24.B EXTRA PRACTICE PAGES 693-694 #10-15 ANSWERS PP 693-694 10.D 11.C 12.E 13.C 14.D 15.D VOCABULARY LIST #1 PARTS OF SPEECH AND DEFINITIONS 1. Acquiesce: Part of Speech: Verb Definition: Agree; consent 2. Admonish: Part of Speech: Verb Definition: To caution; to scold; to urge to a duty 3. Aesthetic: Part of Speech: Adjective Definition: Having a sense of the beautiful; concerned with emotion/imagination and not purely intellect 4. Allude: Part of Speech: Verb Definition: To refer casually or indirectly; make an allusion 5. Ambivalence: Part of Speech: Noun Definition: Uncertainty, especially caused by the inability to make a choice or by a desire to do opposite or conflicting things 6. Anecdote: Part of Speech: Noun Definition: A short account of an event, usually of an interesting or amusing nature 7. Antecedent: Part of Speech: Noun Definition: A preceding circumstance, event, object, style, etc. 8. Apathy: Part of Speech: Noun Definition: Absence of passion, emotion, or excitement; lack of interest in or concern for things that others find moving/ exciting 9. Ardent: Part of Speech: Adjective Definition: Fierce; intensely devoted 10. Articulate: Part of Speech: Adjective/ Verb Definition: Capable of speech, using language easily (adjective); To utter clearly and distinctly (verb) 11.Ascertain: Part of Speech: Verb Definition: To find out definitely; learn with certainty/ assurance 12. Assimilate: Part of Speech: Verb Definition: To take in and incorporate as one’s own; absorb; to bring into conformity; to cause to resemble 13. Banal: Part of Speech: Adjective Definition: Devoid of freshness/ originality; trite 14. Begrudge: Part of Speech: Verb Definition: To envy or resent the pleasure or good fortune of (someone); to be reluctant to allow 15. Belligerent: Part of Speech: Adjective Definition: Warlike; given to waging war; aggressively hostile QUIZ ON FRIDAY! WRITING: ESSAY RUBRIC P 522 RUBRIC CATEGORIES • Stance/ Support & Development/ Thinking • Organization/Focus & Progression of Ideas • Use of Language: Precise Vocabulary • Varied Sentence Structure • Follows Conventional English (Grammar) WRITING: ESSAY INFORMATION AND TIPS INFO & TIPS P 521 • 25 minutes-- ~5 minutes/ paragraph (4) + 5 min prewriting • Try to engross the reader—make him/her think • TAKE A POSITION • Be specific in examples/support—avoid general statements without concrete details and/or ambiguity • If you can (if it makes sense), incorporate theme/plot/characters, etc. from a book you have read • Sketch a brief outline before beginning to make sure your writing has a purposeful path WRITING: ESSAY ORGANIZATION BASIC INFORMATION • Graders know this is a rough draft, so they are looking for what you can produce in “pressure situations” AKA 25 minutes • Essay needs 4-5 paragraphs: introduction, body (2-3), conclusion • Your thinking/reasoning is MOST important in the essay, but how you convey your ideas is also significant. • Use precise diction (word choice)—but not words you don’t know how to use properly • Vary your syntax (sentence structure) to promote smooth flow • Demonstrate control over the conventions of grammar (at the rough draft level—they don’t expect the essay to be perfect grammatically) ORGANIZATION • INTRODUCTION– Take a position and indicate topics you will address (thesis)—first person is okay • BODY– Bring in SUPPORT for your claims—This should be from observations, popular culture, literature/film, etc. The more specific the information, the better your essay will be. • Organize body paragraphs from strongest to weakest • Include strong topic sentences • CONCLUSION—Reiterate your stand/supporting details and include a “golden nugget”– a quotation/maxim, another connection to life/the world, etc. Something to leave your reader with a smile. EXERCISE Create an outline for the essay portion of practice test on page 564—go paragraph by paragraph and include your thesis in the intro, the evidence you will use in the body paragraphs, and a possible “golden nugget” for the conclusion. SENTENCE COMPLETION: STRATEGIES 3 & 4 PP 123-126 STRATEGY #3 TRY TO COMPLETE THE SENTENCE IN YOUR OWN WORDS BEFORE LOOKING AT THE CHOICES STRATEGY #4 PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO THE KEY WORDS IN THE SENTENCE I.E. WORDS INDICATING OPPOSITION, SUPPORT, OR RESULT EXERCISE • Using strategies 3 and 4, complete the following practice problems: • Page 691 #1-5 • Page 774 #1-8 • Page 790 #1-5 EXERCISE ANSWERS Page 691 1. C 2. D 3. C 4. E 5. A Page 774 1. C 2. A 3. E 4. B 5. D 6. A 7. A 8. A Page 790 1. D 2. B 3. C 4. B 5. C VOCABULARY LIST 2 • Benevolent- ADJ- characterized by or given to doing good • Bourgeoisie- NOUN- middle class • Brevity- NOUN- Quality or state of brief duration • Cacophony—NOUN—jarring, discordant noise • Caste—NOUN—hereditary social class • Cathartic—ADJ—purgative; inducing catharsis • Cessation—NOUN—bringing or coming to an end VOCABULARY LIST 2 (CONTINUED) • Clandestine—ADJ—kept or done in secret • Cognizant—ADJ—fully informed • Coherent—ADJ—sticking together; fully understandable • Cohesive—ADJ—act or process of cohering/ sticking together • Condone—VERB—to overlook, forgive, endorse • Countenance—NOUN—expression of face • Credible—ADJ—believable • Cumulative—ADJ—all together READING COMPREHENSION: STRATEGIES #4 AND 5 PAGE 141-143 STRATEGY #4 BEFORE YOU START ANSWERING THE QUESTIONS, READ THE PASSAGE CAREFULLY STRATEGY #5 GET THE MEANINGS OF “TOUGH” WORDS BY USING THE CONTEXT METHOD EXERCISE •Using strategies 4 and 5, complete the following: •p 792 #10-15 •pp 893-894 #16-24 EXERCISE ANSWERS Page 792 10. B 11. D 12. B 13. C 14. E 15. E Pages 893-894 16. A 17. E 18. D 19. D 20. A 21. C 22. B 23. A 24. D IMPROVING SENTENCES AKA “GRAMMAR/STYLE ASSESSMENT” COMMON ERRORS •Passive v. Active Voice •Run-on Sentences •Comma Splices •Sentence Fragments ACTIVE V. PASSIVE VOICE Active voice p 493 • SUBJECT PERFORMS ACTION • He hit the ball. • She knocked over the vase. The SUBJECT is emphasized Passive voice p 493 • SOMETHING DONE TO SUBJECT • The ball was hit. • The vase was knocked over. The ACTION is emphasized WHICH IS BETTER? Active voice is preferred, except when the actor is unknown SENTENCE FRAGMENT P 463 • SENTENCE= Group of words with subject, verb, and complete thought • FRAGMENT= Cannot stand by itself (does not include an independent clause) • EXAMPLES= • Even though he had the better arguments and was by far the more powerful speaker. • Some of the students working in Professor Espinoza's laboratory last semester. • Working far into the night in an effort to salvage her little boat. COMMA SPLICE • Incorrectly connect independent clauses • Two or more clauses are incorrectly connected with ONLY a comma • THREE ways to easily correct comma splices: • 1. Two different sentences • 2. Comma + Coordinating Conjunction • 3. Semicolon COMMA SPLICE CORRECTION #1 1. Two separate sentences • Comma Splice: My family bakes together nearly every night, we then get to enjoy everything we make together. • Correction 1: My family bakes together nearly every night. We then get to enjoy everything we make together. • Source: Purdue OWL Engagement COMMA SPLICE CORRECTION #2 2. Comma and Coordinating Conjunction • Comma Splice: My family bakes together nearly every night, we then get to enjoy everything we make together. • Correction 2: My family bakes together nearly every night, and we then get to enjoy everything we make together. • Source: Purdue OWL Engagement COMMA SPLICE CORRECTION #3 2. Semi-colon • Comma Splice: My family bakes together nearly every night, we then get to enjoy everything we make together. • Correction 3: My family bakes together nearly every night; we then get to enjoy everything we make together. • Source: Purdue OWL Engagement COMMA SPLICE PRACTICE 1. I didn’t like the movie, it was way too long. 2. She and Jerry are getting married in the fall, they didn’t want a summer wedding. 3. My favorite bands are all really loud, playing loud music is good for stress relief. • Source: Purdue OWL Engagement RUN-ON SENTENCE • Also incorrectly connect independent clauses • Two or more independent clauses are connected without proper punctuation • Example: The grocery store was really packed with people there must have been a big sale today. • We correct these sentences in mostly the same way as comma splices– make sure independent clauses are connected properly. RUN-ON SENTENCE PRACTICE 1. Andrea loves to roller-blade she hates to ride her bike. 2. Jeremy loved going to Ohio he thought Florida was too hot. 3. The girls played basketball the boys played tennis. 4. My car broke down I need to buy a new one. 5. Americans shake hands when they meet the Japenese bow. WRITING: COMMON ERRORS PRONOUNS WHAT ARE PRONOUNS? P 473 • Pronouns are words that replace nouns PRONOUN ERRORS •Agreement (gender, number, person) •Case (subjective, objective, possessive) •Ambiguous PRONOUN AGREEMENT • Pronouns must agree with antecedents in • Gender (The boy washed his bike) *not on SAT • Number (The girl mailed her application; The girls mailed their applications) • Person (Once we graduate from school, we should have 120 credits). –SHIFTS occur when pronoun reference changes person (ex: Once we graduate from school, you should have 120 credits). NUMBER DISAGREEMENT **Expect the pronoun and its antecedent to be far from each other. While the definition of Generation X is hotly debated concerning the age ranges of its members, culturists generally agree that they describe a group of selffocused adults. (A) is hotly debated concerning the age ranges of its members, culturists generally agree that they describe (B) is hotly debated concerning the age ranges of its members, culturists generally agree that it describe (C)is hotly debated concerning the age ranges of its members, culturists generally agree that it describes (D) are hotly debated concerning the age ranges of their members, culturists generally agree that they describe (E) is hotly debated concerning the age ranges of their members, culturists generally agree that they will be describing ANSWER C TRICKY SINGULAR PRONOUNS • Anyone • Anybody • Each • Everyone • Everybody • One • Someone • Somebody • No one • Nobody INDEFINITE PRONOUN AGREEMENT Every one of the soldiers reported that they (A) had completed (B) the training exercise prior to the incident, although the lieutenant claimed several members of the (C) squadron were (D) not present. No error (E) ANSWER A PERSON DISAGREEMENT PERSON AGREEMENT PERSON AGREEMENT EXAMPLES • When a person drives, you should not use your cell phone. [Incorrect] • When you drive, you should not use your cell phone. [Correct] • When a person drives, she should not use her cell phone. [Correct] • One must become a citizen before you can vote. [Incorrect] • One must become a citizen before they can vote. [Incorrect] • One must become a citizen before one can vote. [Correct] • One must become a citizen before he can vote. [Correct] • You must become a citizen before you can vote. [Correct] SAT EXAMPLE Although (A) you (B) might choose to research symptoms on the internet, one should really see a doctor if he (C) believes he has been exposed (D)to the foreign virus. No error(E) ANSWER B PRONOUN CASE PRONOUN CASES Subjective Case: pronouns used as subject Objective Case: pronouns used as objects of verbs or prepositions Possessive Case: pronouns which express ownership Pronouns as Subjects Pronouns as Objects I you he, she, it we they who me you him, her, it us them whom Pronouns that show Possession my (mine) your (yours) his, her (hers), it (its) our (ours) their (theirs) whose CASE STRATEGIES 1. In compound structures, where there are two pronouns or a noun and a pronoun, drop the other noun for a moment. Then you can see which case you want. • Not: Bob and me travel a good deal. (Would you say, "me travel"?) • Not: He gave the flowers to Jane and I. (Would you say, "he gave the flowers to I"?) • Not: Us men like the coach. (Would you say, "us like the coach"?) • Source: OWL Purdue CASE STRATEGIES 2. In comparisons. Comparisons usually follow than or as: • He is taller than I (am tall). • This helps you as much as (it helps) me. • She is as noisy as I (am). • Comparisons are really shorthand sentences which usually omit words, such as those in the parentheses in the sentences above. If you complete the comparison in your head, you can choose the correct case for the pronoun. • Not: He is taller than me. (Would you say, "than me am tall"?) • Source: OWL Purdue CASE STRATEGIES • 3. In formal and semiformal writing: • Use the subjective form after a form of the verb to be. Formal: It is I. Informal: It is me. • Use whom in the objective case. Formal: To whom am I talking? Informal: Who am I talking to? • Source: OWL Purdue SAT EXAMPLE During my acceptance speech, I thanked (A)my brother, Brett, without who (B) I would have (C)never been able to build the model rocket that helped me (D)win the science award. No error (E) ANSWER B PRACTICE •Complete the pronoun mastery handout (front and back) •When finished, work on workbook #7, 9, 12, 14, 20, 23, 28 on pages 879-882 VOCAB LIST 3 Cursory—adj—going rapidly over something, without noticing details; superficial Deduce—verb—to derive as a conclusion from something known or assumed; infer Deference—noun—respectful submission or yielding to the judgment, opinion, will, etc. of another Definitive—adjective—most reliable or complete, as of a text, author, criticism, etc.; serving to define, fix, or specify definitely Deleterious—adjective—injurious to health; harmful Derogatory—adjective—tending to lessen the merit or reputation of a person or thing; disparaging Dichotomy—noun—division into two parts; division into mutually exclusive, opposed, or contradictory groups Didactic—adj—intended for instruction; inclined to teach or lecture others too much; tending to teach a moral lesson Discourse—noun—communication or thoughts by words; talk; a formal discussion of a subject in speech or writing Disparage—verb—to speak of or treat slightingly; belittle; to bring discredit upon Divergent—adj—differing; deviating Drudgery—noun—menial, distasteful, dull, or hard work Dubious—adj—doubtful; questionable; of uncertain outcome; inclined to doubt Echelon—noun—a level of command, authority, or rank; a level of worthiness, achievement, or reputation Edifice—noun—a building, especially one of large size or imposing appearance PRACTICE: SENTENCE COMPLETION SENTENCE COMPLETION PRACTICE •p 801 #1-6 •pp 873-874 #1-8 SENTENCE COMPLETION ANSWERS P 801 1. E 2. B 3. D 4. E 5. A 6. E P 873 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. D C D D B A C B READING COMPREHENSION PRACTICE •p 891 #10-15 •p 875 #9-12 SENTENCE COMPLETION ANSWERS P 891 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. D A D B E C P 875 9. E 10. C 11. B 12. B