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ACING THE ACT ENGLISH SECTION Important Facts 75 questions 45 minutes (about 2 minutes per question) Tested on punctuation, grammar & usage, sentence construction, writing strategies, organization & style General ACT English Tips Skim the passage Answer the questions in the ORDER that they appear Use POE – Process of elimination When all else fails, GUESS & MOVE ON The English questions are broken into 3 categories Punctuation (10 questions): punctuation questions ask you to identify and correct any misplaced, misused, or missing punctuation marks. The punctuation marks most commonly tested on the ACT are: Commas (most questions) Apostrophes Colons Semi-colons The English questions are broken into 3 categories Basic Grammar & Usage (12 Questions): Usually targets a single incorrect word that violates the conventional rules of grammar. These are usually subject/verb agreement & pronoun and verb forms. The English questions are broken into 3 categories Sentence Structure (18 questions): These tend to deal with the sentence as a whole. They test you on clause relationships, parallelism and placement of modifiers. TIPS Avoid the “Sounds Good Method” These tend to be trick questions. Cut the fat! Eliminate PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES – this will put the subject and verb closer together, making it easier for you to identify the correct answer. COMMAS Commas are used in 4 ways on the ACT Around unnecessary information Between items in a list Between a complete and incomplete clause Before FANBOYS (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so) SEMICOLONS & DASHES Semicolons are used to relate independent clauses that are not joined by a conjunction. Dashes are used to indicate an abrupt break in thought, or to introduce an explanation. APOSTROPHES & COLONS Apostrophes are used to indicate possession or to mark the missing letters in a word Colons are used after a complete statement to introduce a list of related details. SUBJECT-VERB AGREEMENT Subject verb agreement is a simple idea, but ACT writers will make it tricky. Often, the ACT will put the subject at one end of the sentence and the verb at the other end. Subject/Verb Example The few times that I’ve helped a friend with yard work has given me the joy of touching the soil with an open palm, to get the earth under my fingernails, of patting down the berm around a newly transplanted sapling. A. No change B. Have given C. Has gave D. Have gave PROUNOUN ANTECEDENT An antecedent is a word to which a later pronoun refers to. When the pronoun does not agree in gender or number with its antecedent, there’s an agreement error. Pronoun Antecedent Example Whether its bright and jaunty or haunting and melancholic, the music of the Andes highlands has a mellow sound unique in the musical world. A. No change B. They’re C. It’s D. Its’ MODIFIER AGREEMENT Modifiers come in two forms, and must agree with the word that they are describing. Comparative – compares one thing to another Superlative – tells you how one thing compares to everything else. Modifier Example The Andean panpipe has its origins in the Incan civilization, once the more richer and more powerful empire in South America. A. No change B. One of the richest and most C. The richest and most D. The richer and more SENTENCE CONSTRUCTION These questions test your knowledge of how sentences and ideas should be joined, separated, or put together. These errors will typically be tested through clauses. INDEPENDENT CLAUSES DEPENDENT CLAUSES TIP THREE OF THE MOST FREQUENTLY TESTED QUESTIONS ARE ABOUT FRAGMENTS AND RUN-ONS, MISPLACED MODIFIERS, AND PARALLELLISM!!!!!!! FRAGMENTS & RUN-ONS Run-on sentences are usually pretty easy to spot because it will be immediately clear that the sentence is long and confusing! The run-on sentence occurs when independent clauses are joined without any punctuation. Fragments are incomplete sentences. Fragments & Run-Ons Examples At the very low tides of the full moon, when almost all the water was sucked away, we found the hideaways where crabs, snails, starfish, and sea urchins hid. A. No change B. away. Then we C. away. We D. away; we Example Due to the limited number of notes that can be played on an antara early musicians’ most likely worked in groups, coordinating the timing and pitch of their instruments to extend the range of sounds produced. A. No change B. antara, early musicians C. antara, early musicians’ D. antara early musician’s MISPLACED MODIFIERS Modifiers are descriptive words or phrases that are used to add depth or dimension to the phrase that they modify. Modifiers are misplaced if they do not actually refer to what they are modifying. Modifiers are dangling if you are unsure of what they modify. EXAMPLE Because he was tall, Carmelo was a great basketball player. “Because he was tall” is the modifying phrase in the sentence. It tells you why he was a great ball player. MODIFYING PHRASES GENERALLY MUST BE PLACED DIRECTLY NEXT TO THE PHRASE IT IS MODIFYING. EXAMPLE Many years later, living in an upstairs apartment, I am more often sorry I didn’t follow my father out to the garden. The best placement for the underlined portion would be: A. Where it is now B. After the word sorry C. After the word follow D. After the word garden (ending the sentence with a period). PARALLELISM In a parallel sentence, ALL VERBS must be in the same form TIP: When you see a list underlined on the test, look for a parallelism error!!!!!! Example: My father was an avid gardener, - he still is – and every Saturday morning he would put on his work clothes, pick up his hoe and trowel, and would head out the back door. A. No change B. Picked up his hoe and trowel, and headed C. Pick up his hoe and trowel, and head D. Picking up his hoe and trowel, and headed Example The few times that I’ve helped a friend with yard work have given me the joy of touching the soil with an open palm, to get the earth under my fingernails, of patting down the berm around a newly transplanted sapling. A. No change B. With getting C. Of getting D. Got RHETORICAL SKILLS The rhetorical skills comprise 35 of the 75 questions in the English section. They are divided into 3 categories: A. Writing strategies (12 questions) B. Organization (11 questions) C. Style (12 questions) WRITING STRATEGY This involves improving the effectiveness of a passage through revision and editing. These questions will test your ability to identify effective topic sentences, to flesh out the paragraph through adding evidence, and to determine the passage’s overall purpose. Example As a ten-year-old, I was supremely unenthusiastic about swinging a hoe in the garden when I could be out playing with my friends. Having tried and failed, my father was unable to make a gardener out of me. Which of the choices best emphasizes how much the father wanted his son to share his avid interest in gardening? a. No change b. Because of my indifference to his hobby, c. Contrary to his thinking, d. Despite his repeated attempts, ORGANIZATION These questions deal with the logical structuring of the passage on the level of the sentence, the paragraph, and the passage as a whole. These questions ask you to organize section to maximize their coherence, order and unity. (1) Often, my brother and I joined our mother on her adventures into tidal lands. (2) At the very low tides of the full moon, when almost all the water was sucked away, we found the hideaways where crabs, snails, starfish, and sea urchins hid in order not to be seen. (3) Sometimes we would dig with shovels in the mud, where yellow worms lived in their leathery tunnels. Which of the following sequences of sentences makes this paragraph most logical? A. No change B. 2, 1, 3 C. 2, 3, 1 D. 3, 1, 2 STYLE Style questions generally concern the use of effective word choice in terms of tone and clarity. These questions test your ability to choose the most appropriate word for a sentence in terms of its tone and clarity or redundancy. TIP The ACT English loves short, newspaper type writing. When it comes to editing sentences, THE SHORTEST ANSWER IS USUALLY RIGHT – as long as it makes sense!!!! Example Having studied, my mother is a marine biologist. A. No change B. As my mother’s interest is science, she is C. My mother’s occupation is that of D. My mother is POE (process of elimination). When you have a question with multiple errors, try to spot one error and use POE: Cathys’ friends left they’re bags in the room. Cathy’s friends left there bags in the room. Cathys friends left their bags in the room. Cathy’s friends left their bags in the room. • Don’t be afraid to choose “NO CHANGE.” This should be the correct answer approximately 20% of the time. • The answer choice “OMIT” means what is underlined should be removed. Use it when you know that the passage reads better with a redundant or irrelevant statement eliminated. NO CHANGE is the correct answer about one-fourth of the time that it appears. • Choose a letter of the day. If a question is too hard or time-consuming, use your letter of the day and move on. • Always read to the end of the sentence before working the question. Otherwise, you cannot correctly judge whether the ideas are complete or incomplete. • Think of punctuation as traffic signals: stop and go. If you cannot cite a reason to use a comma, don’t use it. • An idiom is a figure of speech that follows no rules. Most idioms on the ACT involve a preposition. • If you can count something (like dollars), use fewer, number, and many. If you can’t count something (like cash) use less, amount, and much. More works with both. • . OMIT is correct half the time it appears. If the underlined portion isn’t necessary to make the sentence Complete, Consistent, or Clear, get rid of it. ACT plays favorites with verbs, pronouns, apostrophes, and transitions Singulars and Plurals MOST common error in this area? The use of THEY When a friend borrows my car, I usually ask them to fill it with gas before they return it. When friends borrow my car, I usually ask them to fill it with gas before they return it. It’s or Its? Who’s? Whose or The apostrophe takes the place of a letter. It’s = It is Who’s = Who is STRATEGY: Slow down when you come to these. Read the sentence as “It is” or “Who is” to be SURE you’ve chosen the correct answer. There, their, and they’re There = Location There contains the word here. Their = Possession. They’re = They are Substitute “They are” in the sentence and see if it makes sense. Punctuation – Sample Problem On the day of the test, his over-protective mother packed him an ACT survival kit. Ten sharpened pencils, a pencil sharpener, a calculator, a pack of batteries, three different-weight sweaters, four pieces of fruit, a liter of spring water and a box of tissues. A. NO CHANGE B. kit, ten C. kit; ten D. kit: ten D. OMIT the Material When… • It is unnecessary • It is repetitious, or • It is wordy Correct more than half of the time. When in doubt, take it out! Example of Wordiness As I previously mentioned to you when explaining at last week’s meeting the incredible and undisputed advantages of combining our two clubs, The Poetry Society and the Poets Outside, I have written up here for your further study my thoughts on the matter, detailing the many benefits that will accrue to both organizations. At last week’s meeting, I said there were benefits to combining our two clubs. Here’s a note repeating why. The remarkable growth in increased attendance currently being enjoyed by such formerly moribund sports franchises as baseball’s Cleveland Indians shows that building a new stadium can have a powerful effect on the popularity of a team. C. A. NO CHANGE B. The growth in attendance remarkably being enjoyed currently C. The remarkable growth in attendance currently enjoyed D. The remarkable attendance boom currently enjoyed Later, Pike fell while valiantly defending America in the War of 1812. It goes without saying that this took place after he discovered Pike’s Peak. He actually died near York (now called Toronto)… F. NO CHANGE I. G. Clearly, this must have occurred subsequent to his discovering Pike’s Peak. H. This was after he found Pike’s Peak. I. OMIT the underlined portion. [1] The immigration laws led, ultimately, to a quota system based on the number of individuals of each national origin reported in the 1890 census. [2] The United States, which was founded mainly by people who had emigrated from northern Europe, had an essentially open-door immigration policy for the first 100 years of existence. [3] But starting in the 1880s and continuing through the 1920s, Congress passed a series of restrictive immigration laws. [4] The door to freedom hadn’t been slammed shut, exactly, but was now open only to the “right” sort of people. SEQUENCING Which of the following sequences of sentences will make this paragraph most logical? A. 4,3,1,2 B. 2,3,1,4 C. 1,3,2,4 D. 2,3,4,1 The first reason why the Denville school district should not be combined with the Jackson school district is the fact that the schools have been sports rivals for too long. Trying to unite the schools after so many years of competition would inevitably lead to friction. [2] 2. Is the author’s introductory paragraph effective? A. Yes, because it gets immediately to the problem B. B. No, because an introduction should outline the whole subject. C. No, because it doesn’t say how many other reasons there will be. D. Yes, because sports is the number one interest of most students. Important Points • 1/3 of English items concern redundancy, verbosity, and relevance. • NEVER let the passage repeat itself. • Stay true to the author’s tone. • Don’t try to “correct” EVERY sentence. • Trust your ear. CAUTION! • Don’t Add a New Mistake • Avoid Changing the Meaning When Editing Grammar Review Among those who played a crucial role in the Northern victory at Gettysburg were Joshua Chamberlain, a Union colonel from Maine who later enjoyed a distinguished career as an educator and politician. Among those who played a crucial role in the Northern victory at Gettysburg was Joshua Chamberlain, a Union colonel from Maine who later enjoyed a distinguished career as an educator and politician. Dismayed by the news that a top executive had suddenly accepted a job with a competitor, the price of the company’s stock fell sharply the next day. Problem: Dangling Modifier Possible correction: Stockholders were dismayed…,and the price… A fabled center of monastic life during the Middle Ages, each summer thousands of visitors travel to the island of Iona near the coast of Ireland. Problem: Misplaced Modifier Suggestion: Move “A fabled center of monastic life during the Middle Ages” after the phrase “the island of Iona”. Although the hospital administrators interviewed many staff members about the repeated cases of staph infections they had no explanation for the puzzling pattern of outbreaks. WHO had no explanation? The administrators? The staff? Possible Correction: Although the hospital administrators interviewed many staff members about the repeated cases of staph infections the staff had no explanation for the puzzling pattern of outbreaks. Each member of the tour group should have their tickets by the end of the week. Problem: pronoun usage Each member of the tour group should have his or her tickets by the end of the week. OR All members of the tour group should have their tickets by the end of the week. Representatives to the student senate were asked to pursue often contradictory goals: boosting student acceptance of more homework, developing explanations for adding two hours to the length of each school day, and the reduction of rampant poor morale. Problem: Parallelism Representatives to the student senate were asked to pursue often contradictory goals: boosting student acceptance of more homework, developing explanations for adding two hours to the length of each school day, and the reduction of rampant poor morale. “…reducing rampant poor morale.” In the Olympics the first place winner gets a gold medal, second place, a silver medal, and third place, a bronze medal. In the Olympics the first place winner gets a gold medal; second place, a silver medal; and third place, a bronze medal. Princess Diana, for who the song Candle in the Wind was written died tragically in an automobile accident. Princess Diana, for whom the song Candle in the Wind was written, died tragically in an automobile accident.