13 Days to Go: AP English Language & Composition

Reminder: You’ve had an overview of the end of the year since April 12, when we had 40 days to go. Every assignment due over the next three weeks has been posted since May 17. As always, you’ve had in-class and online calendars, checklists, and so on.

We’re now down to 13 days. This post is another overview of what you’re responsible for. It acts as a final failsafe.


GAP Scores: Q4B


These scores will be online soon after this post. They are the last actionable scores of the year, i.e., the last scores that give you feedback you can use to improve your performance. Q4C scores will not be posted until after the last day of classes on June 17.

Use these scores wisely. You have another chance to build evidence of collegiality, amenability, critical thinking, etc., before the year ends.

Note that you should not complete the final GAP report until June 17. Follow directions1.


Turnitin.com Submissions


Submission to Turnitin.com is required for all remaining assignments. Read the instructional post here:

You must submit your writing for it to count toward your profile. You also won’t receive feedback until then. The Google Classroom requirements are unchanged.

Note that if your Turnitin similarity index is high enough, you’ll get help with citing your sources more effectively. It’s a learning tool, not a tool for punishment. The assumption will not be that you plagiarized; it will be that you wrote in good faith and need help incorporating what you’ve read2.


College Essays


Remember that you must submit this writing to Turnitin.com before it can be counted.

Drafts of your college essay are due on May 29. After that, you’ll have at least two weeks of interstitial and in-class feedback and peer revision. The goal is to send you into the summer with a finished essay.

Here is the writing process:

And here are the models:


Reader’s Response


Remember that you must submit this writing to Turnitin.com before it can be counted.

This essay is due on June 14. We will discuss it in class on Thursday, May 30, and Friday, May 31.

Here is a link to the instructional post:

Writing Process: Reader’s Response


Regents Exam Prep


Your AP exam prep, done properly, will have also prepped you for the ELA Regents. The two tests are similar, as you’ll see.

Start here:

The first link covers the three parts of the exam. It includes suggested time to spend on each, plus a detailed list of the kind of reading and writing expected of you.

To practice, you have been assigned the August 2018 exam through Castle Learning. The site automatically provides feedback: correct answers, answer explanations, sample writing, and so on.

You will find five assignments. Part 1 of the exam is split by text. You should see:

  • Aug. ’18 Practice: Part 1, Passage A
  • Aug. ’18 Practice: Part 1, Passage B
  • Aug. ’18 Practice: Part 1, Passage C
  • Aug. ’18 Practice: Part 2
  • Aug. ’18 Practice: Part 3

Pareto Projects


Your assessment of these projects will be guided reflection and metacognition. You cannot complete this until your project deadline has passed.

Here is the instructional post for those final self-assessments:

Pareto Projects: Final Self-Assessment

The forms are on Google Classroom. You also need the project schedule for Q4C:

Pareto Projects: 5/30/19–6/14/19

Lastly, you may benefit from looking over the FAQ and original project guidelines:


  1. Which goes for all assignments, of course, but most of all here. These are your evaluations, and you can’t self-evaluate without all the evidence. 

  2. The school rules regarding plagiarism apply if you did plagiarize, of course. 

Pareto Projects: 5/30/19–6/14/19


Setting the Schedule


Like last time, there is a master schedule for the culmination of these projects.

All students are on this document. Find the sheet for your period, and then find your last name. That slot indicates your project deadline, whether or not you are presenting. If you are presenting, that is when you will present. Otherwise, that is when you will submit your project.

Refer to the original project guide (embedded below) and FAQ (also below) for more details. When in doubt, ask questions here or in class.

Notes on the provisional nature of the schedule:

  • TBD means that the final product hasn’t been clarified yet. Are you writing? Presenting? Creating something else? Make that clear as soon as possible.
  • ??? means that you still do not have an idea/blueprint/etc. on record for this round of projects.
  • Any other changes you’d like to make must be suggested in person or over email as soon as possible. The deadline for changes will be given on Google Classroom.
    • Note: This includes changes to your project’s focus; changes to what you plan to do (e.g., changing to or from a presentation); and changes to your due date, which will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
  • If you want to use the iTheater, the DaVinci Lab, or any other space in the iLC, make that known as soon as possible, and I’ll look into it for you.

Remember to cross-reference these deadlines with the calendar for the end of the year.


Project Showcase



Recap: Background


The Pareto Project: Complete Guide

Pareto Project: FAQ


Final Self-Assessment


Pareto Projects: Final Self-Assessment

AP Exam: Glossolalic Cram Session

In our course, “cram” is a bit of a misnomer. It might even be ironic: You can’t cram the ability to read, think, and write at a college level into your short-term memory, so we mean something like the opposite of “cram.”

Instead, the days before our AP exam should see us revisiting Paul Graham’s “Age of the Essay,” which puts the goal like this:

[T]he more you learn, the more hooks you have for new facts to stick onto — which means you accumulate knowledge at what’s colloquially called an exponential rate.

This AP exam rewards you for working hard all year. Those “hooks” work for skills, too: The more you’ve invested so far, the easier this exam will be. The more you’ve read of the exam-related materials in March and April, the more the ones posted in May will help.

There are still some things you can do in the days before the exam, of course. That’s what this post provides: quick guides for the essays, prompts from over a decade of tests, and probably the best “quick” practice for Section I.


Exam Overview


The exam’s basic structure should be familiar to you before you open a post on cramming for the test, but the College Board’s website has you covered, if that isn’t the case. Then you should revisit the first four chapters from your summer reading:

Skim those, and then read this:

Go through that last document carefully, and notice that it connects what you’ve done all year, starting with the summer reading, to the more focused test prep of the last few weeks.


Section I


By the time you start cramming, you’ll have practiced a lot of multiple-choice, including a focused workshop on Section I of the 2012 exam. With about a week left, if you’d like more practice, you have plenty of options. You’ll have access to many of the more recent exams in class, but I would suggest going back to 2001:

That is a Google Drive folder locked to your BHS account (i.e., you can’t open it unless you are using a Brewster login). It offers a crash course in Section I of the 2001 exam. The official test, which is available in class, is not included. Instead, you’ll find

  • the four passages, reformatted as close-reading exercises;
  • the questions, organized by passage;
  • a lecture on how to deconstruct the second passage, which is arguably the hardest of the four;
  • the answer key; and
  • a complete analysis of every multiple-choice question, provided by the folks at the College Board.

The 2001 exam is helpful because it opens with a passage from 1862, and then it follows with a passage from 1848. There aren’t often two passages of archaic prose on the test, let alone in a row; 2012, for instance, only has one nineteenth-century excerpt, and it comes last.

Closer to the exam date, you can boost your score slightly on Section I by studying the glossary from The Language of Composition, the textbook assigned as summer reading. Use this handout, which is printed for you, too, despite losing some obvious efficacy offline:


Section II: Question 1


Remember that you’ve already practiced Section II in its entirety. You’ve also been given ETA workshops for each question on Section II. You can still cram, though, by reading through this old guide of mine:

Then set aside time to workshop some of the prompts given from 2007-2018. The idea is to know, even before you read the sources, what you’re thinking — to know what you know what you need to know to write the argument. Use the ETA workshop to practice the source work properly; use the PDF below to cram by analyzing only the prompts.


Section II: Question 2


Remember that you’ve already practiced Section II in its entirety. You’ve also been given ETA workshops for each question on Section II. You can still cram, though, by reading through this old guide of mine:

Then set aside time to read as many passages given from 2007-2018 as you can. Use the ETA workshop to analyze complete essays; use this PDF to practice identifying strategies. I wouldn’t do much more than outline a response for any of these.

You can also use the same glossary work given to you with Section I to cram a few terms into your short-term memory. That handout again:


Section II: Question 3


Last time: Remember that you’ve already practiced Section II in its entirety. You’ve also been given ETA workshops for each question on Section II. You can still cram, though, by reading through the last of these old guides:

The best practice for Question 3 is to write practice essays in full, which you’ve done often enough to understand what that pressure feels like. You can also use the ETA workshop on Question 3 to see what’s expected of you. The second-best practice is to decode prompts, brainstorm approaches, and discuss what you would write.

Here are all the Question 3 prompts from 2007-2018:

One of the best ways to use class time before the exam is to select one of these prompts, read it together, and then collaborate to list as many divergent approaches and examples as possible.


Q&A: How to Cram


If you have questions about these resources, ask those questions in the comment section below. Remember that “cram,” in our course, is mostly ironic. You are sharpening your sensibilities and reminding yourself just how prepared you already are. But “cram” is the verb that will do the most work for us, metaphorically speaking.

I’d actually invite those of you who’ve read this far to come up with a better verb/metaphor. What are you really doing? “Sharpening your sense of self-efficacy” is accurate but way too wordy. Add your thoughts below.

AP Exam: Section II, Question 3 — ETA Workshop

The main workshop post for these ETA exercises is here: AP Exam: Section II — ETA Workshop.

The full practice assignment for Section II is here: AP Exam: Section II — Workshop.


Section II, Question 3 — ETA Workshop


Argument: Students create an evidence-based argument that responds to a given topic.

You can find these materials on the College Board’s website. I am organizing them for you so we can discuss the exemplary essays interstitially.

For each prompt, look only at the highest-scoring essay. You can learn from the other ones, certainly, but it is a more efficient use of your time to deconstruct the essays that earn an 8 or 9. Each element of effective writing you would emulate in a timed setting is best demonstrated by those highest-scoring essays.

2018 Exam: Question 3 Prompt

The main reason for us to use this prompt as ETA practice is the abstract nature of the topic, which is “choosing the unknown.” The quotation in the prompt is difficult, too:

We tend not to choose the unknown which might be a shock or a disappointment or simply a little difficult to cope with. And yet it is the unknown with all its disappointments and surprises that is the most enriching.

The first sentence must be unpacked carefully, and the second one introduces the concept of enrichment. You have only a few minutes to turn that quotation into a workable approach.

2018 Chief Reader Report (Question 3 Only)

The real difficulty of this sort of prompt is that you must be able to draw from a wide range of experiences, readings, logic, etc., to defend any position effectively. In other words, you need to know a little bit about a lot of things.

The concept of the “unknown” opens up the possibilities. That’s why the details found in the best essays are so wide-ranging:

In upper-half essays, students responded to Lindbergh’s quote by calling on the likes of JFK, Galileo, and a laundry list of other scientists, explorers, and astronauts, as well as musicians, and philosophers. However, students also wrote about experiences traveling abroad, sailing for 17 days with a team of their peers, participating in a Mock UN, meeting the love of their lives, and rope climbing for the first time—all of which demonstrated for them what happened when the unknown is explored.

This is what you want to emulate: a balance between history, philosophy, pop culture, and personal experience.

2018 Exam: Question 3 Scoring Guide

To see what that balance looks like, you should study the essay that earned a 9. The scoring commentary especially emphasizes the arrangement of the student’s response:

The seamless transitions from the scientific to the musical (Bach and Shostakovich) and ultimately to the literary (Thoreau) are offered with appropriate and convincing explanations and extensive development (e.g., “Bach … created his own era of music … by exploring the possibilities of a chamber orchestra. He, by exploring new territory in music, changed the face of string and orchestral music, employing elements of fugue and countermelody”).

You should emulate as much of this student’s arrangement as possible when writing on exam day. You may not be able to predict the ability to balance scientific evidence with musical evidence — creating an effective balance and showcasing the breadth of your knowledge — but you can strive for some balance.

2017 Exam: Question 3 Prompt

If 2018’s Question 3 is difficult, 2017 seems to turn that difficulty up to 11. (Ignore, for the purposes of this ETA workshop, how linear time works.) The prompt is to respond to “[Chris] Hedges’ argument that ;the most essential skill . . . is artifice.'” The first two sentences of the excerpt to which you must respond mention “political theater,” “consumer culture,” and “faux intimacy.”

This is worth an ETA focus, however, because the prompt only seems difficult. It is very much in your wheelhouse. The topic is how an “image-based culture” deals in distorted narratives and performative, artificial emotions. More interesting is that you’re responding to the idea of artifice as a skill — “the most essential skill,” according to the excerpt. As students, you are told constantly which skills are most important.

Which means the real difficulty of this prompt isn’t the language, nor the seemingly abstract concept, but the requirement that you draw from a wide range of experiences, readings, logic, etc., to defend your position. You need to know a little bit about a lot of things.

2017 Chief Reader Report (Question 3 Only)

To understand how this is assessed, look at the Chief Reader’s explanation:

This year’s prompt casts a wide net. Responses ranged from political and historical approaches to responses that focused on consumerism, materialism, and advertising. The prompt drew many students into political discussions, but some of the best essays took on consumer culture. Students explored the artifice they found in advertisements and in pop culture: they wrote about reality television, glorification of sports icons, and media coverage of pop celebrities. Many students drew evidence from their experiences living in a world dominated by social media, a world in which images were frequently presentations of self.

That “wide net” is a test by itself. In the next paragraph of the report, the College Board notes that “most students focused on standard definitions of artifice and leaned on unsurprising examples.” Remember Paul Graham? You want to find the surprising and interesting approach to your topic. You want to find the river.

You can still do well on Question 3 by addressing Hitler’s rise to power, recent American elections, and the novels you’ve read in school. Those are “unsurprising examples,” but they could support a serviceable position. What you want, though, is to search your experience for what this report calls “apt examples,” which really means specific and noteworthy examples. Knowing a bit about “Rousseau and Machiavelli and… Plato’s Allegory of the Cave” will help you. Knowing history, especially “specific details of… policies and decisions,” will help you.

2017 Exam: Question 3 Scoring Guide

You are looking at the selection of detail, then, in these student essays. The one scoring a 6 is adequate, and rewarded as adequate, but it leans on The Hunger Games. Again, there is no prohibition on popular fiction, popular television, famous historical moments, etc.; it may be better, however, to stretch your thinking beyond the “unsurprising examples.”

It’s worth linking directly to the essay that earned an 8:

Take careful note of how this essay uses more unexpected references to history alongside recent presidential elections. The how is what separates it, not just the surprising knowledge of Machiavelli. This is a student with a sense of how Machiavelli’s ideas have played out in contemporary politics.

2005 Exam: Question 3 Prompt

We’re reaching back to 2005 to use a different kind of argument prompt. You’re given a controversial claim (“[W]hatever money you’re spending on luxuries, not necessities, should be given away”) from an article called “The Singer Solution to World Poverty.” You must then evaluate the pros and cons of that position before indicating, as part of your own argument, which is more persuasive.

The topic seems straightforward, but it requires you to navigate complex issues like human nature and politics. We will practice it because it is also easy to stray from the prompt — to forget to do exactly what the prompt asks you to do. You must evaluate Singer’s position, offering evidence in support of and against it.

2005 Section II Question 3 Scoring Commentary

Back in 2005, these materials were separated, so you won’t find the scoring rubric at the beginning of this document. That rubric (2005 Section II Question 3 Scoring Rubric) is identical to the current one for Question 3, however.

The most critical piece of information for our ETA purposes is this: “The task called upon students to flesh out the structure of Singer’s argument, especially its underlying assumptions.” All you are given in many of these argument prompts is an excerpt or summary of a position; in those cases, you must demonstrate your ability to think critically about what is assumed.

2005 Section II Question 3 Student Essays

Focus on the essays scored an 8. In almost any general argument, you can generate momentum by defining terms; in this case, the College Boards notes that “[p]articularly compelling is the essay’s questioning of the definitions of and distinctions between ‘luxury and necessity.'” This prompt requires you to make that distinction clear, but in most cases, you’ll be able to start your essay by setting parameters and defining terms. In 2017, it’s the definition of “artifice”; in 2018, it’s the definition of “the unknown.”

What you want to avoid is stylistic: Don’t write, “The definition of [x] is [y]”; instead, talk about the term in context. For this 2005 prompt, it’s the idea of drawing a line. Where should we make the distinction between luxury and necessity?


Q&A: Interstitial ETA Work


Start with whatever directions you are given through Google Classroom. That’s where you’ll find any formal work associated with this prompt. It’s up to you, however, to utilize this opportunity to prepare for the exam. Ask questions in the comment section below. Invite your peers and teacher into a discussion of how these high-scoring essays work and how you can emulate them.

AP Exam: Section II, Question 1 — ETA Workshop

The main workshop post for these ETA exercises is here: AP Exam: Section II — ETA Workshop.

The full practice assignment for Section II is here: AP Exam: Section II — Workshop.


Section II, Question 1 — ETA Workshop


Synthesis: Students read several texts about a topic and create an argument that synthesizes at least three of the sources to support their thesis.

You can find these materials on the College Board’s website. I am organizing them for you so we can discuss the exemplary essays interstitially.

When studying on your own, look only at the highest-scoring essay. You can learn from the other ones, certainly, but it is a more efficient use of your time to deconstruct the essays that earn an 8 or 9. Each element of effective writing you would emulate in a timed setting is best demonstrated by those highest-scoring essays.

For the 2018 exam, however, you should look at both the essay earning an 8 and the essay earning a 6. The prompt is introduced below and given some context.

Note that for the purposes of this ETA workshop, we are only looking at the question from 2018.

2018 Exam: Question 1 Prompt

The main reason for us to consider Question 1 from the 2018 exam is the prompt’s topic: eminent domain. Here is what the Chief Reader Report has to say about it:

While the language was accessible, students seemed to lack familiarity with the topic, and many struggled. The struggles suggest many classes are not asking students to engage in subjects that are not within teenagers’ immediate concerns. As a result of this lack, many students merely repeated the provided information, not interrogating it or using it as a means to support their own claim.

In other words, this is not in your wheelhouse. Questions about public libraries, honor codes, and technology in schools — all topics on Question 1 in past years — are likely easier for you to write about. You start your reading of the sources already sure that you have outside information and understanding to use. Eminent domain, however, deals with property ownership, which is not, as the College Board says, “within teenagers’ immediate concerns.” Even the Question 1 Introduction is off-putting:

Eminent domain is the power governments have to acquire property from private owners for public use. The rationale behind eminent domain is that governments have greater legal authority over lands within their dominion than do private owners. Eminent domain has been instituted in one way or another throughout the world for hundreds of years.

Your job is to move quickly and completely past the need for the topic to be one of your “immediate concerns.” The sources will do some of that work for you, but in this case, you have to prove that you are imaginative and empathetic enough to see turn the topic of eminent domain into a workable prompt.

2018 Exam: Question 1 Scoring Guide

For this ETA work, you should start with the Chief Reader Report:

The reason why: You must separate what you know about synthesis writing in untimed essays, what you’ve been taught about document-based questions in other subjects, and what is required for this timed essay. When you have time for the writing process, you will almost always find the nuance in other voices and perspectives. In other subject areas, a document-based question will be scored with a different rubric — one that does not stress the same qualities that are stressed here.

In brief, you must be able to piece together a nuanced argument of your own from these sources. As the College Board puts it in that Chief Reader Report:

Students often do not recognize nuance within the provided sources. They need to see not only what the provided arguments claim, but the context in which these arguments were created…
Students tend to create their arguments within a binary, as if the responses to the issues are either all good or all bad. Students need to recognize that most contested issues are contested because there often is sound support for all sides of the issue.

In our course, you have read widely and practiced exactly this sort of critical thinking. It’s now a matter of pulling it together in 40 minutes. The time constraints are unfair, at least in a writing-outside-of-tests sense, but it is still more than possible to work with these sources. As the Overview in the Scoring Guide puts it:

To do well, students were expected to understand that they were, in essence, creating an argument using the supplied information, as well as knowledge that they already possessed. Students also needed to understand that, with sources arguing among one another, students did not have to accept each source as “correct,” but rather, they needed to evaluate the provided information based on their own knowledge and perceptions of the world.

Emphasis mine. You are a thoughtful, experienced human being; your perspective must be on equal footing with the sources that are talking with each other (or, as that overview says, “arguing among one another”).

As for the scored essays themselves: Pay careful attention to the use of the counterargument in the essay earning an 8 (“Additionally, the fourth paragraph presents a counterargument regarding the constitutionality of eminent domain and then offers an effective rebuttal”), and note that the essay earning a 6 is successful in using multiple sources in a paragraph (“the third paragraph provides an adequate explanation of “false promises” and uses sources B and D to sufficiently support the argument”).


Q&A: Interstitial ETA Work


Start with whatever directions you are given through Google Classroom. That’s where you’ll find any formal work associated with this prompt. It’s up to you, however, to utilize this opportunity to prepare for the exam. Ask questions in the comment section below. Invite your peers and teacher into a discussion of how these high-scoring essays work and how you can emulate them.

How to Choose a Book

Choosing a Book

If this post has been assigned to you, you have been asked to choose a book to read as part of our English course. Each time you do this, read the entire post that follows; it is meant to apply even to choices outside of school, so revisiting the specifics may help you develop that habit.

To choose a book to read, you should start with this apt metaphor:

We should learn to treat [literature] as doctors treat their medicine, something we prescribe in response to a range of ailments and classify according to the problems it might be best suited to addressing. Literature deserves its prestige for one reason above all others: because it’s a tool to help us live and die with a little more wisdom, goodness, and sanity.

Continue reading

English 10: Help Yourselves


“Acted Ere They May Be Scanned”


Before spring break, on April 11, we published the following instructional posts:

Writing Process: Reader’s Response

Reading Macbeth

You could have read both over the break to prepare for the next unit. That was not the assignment, but it’s important to note that you had both posts with more than ten days to read them.

On April 12, we published the work you’d be doing on the day you came back from break:

40 Days: English 10 Regents

Again, this was not required over spring break. It is, however, important to note the ten days during which you could have done this reading. You also have (and have had for a long while) a preview of every day’s lesson and every assignment’s deadline:

That’s a screenshot of your course calendar, specifically the two weeks right after spring break and through the end of the first GAP panel of Q4. We repost it whenever we make changes, so you’ve also seen this calendar in your Google Classroom stream a few times as we adjust upcoming units.

What ought to stand out there in that screenshot: We gave you two days entirely for reading the summaries of Macbeth, organizing your resources for Macbeth, and preparing to watch — as you might expect — Macbeth.

We also gave you Friday, April 26, as a kind of intermission between halves of the play. Originally, that was to accommodate the field trip to Six Flags, which most of you signed up to attend. When the field trip was postponed, we kept this “intermission” to give you another day to read summaries, revisit resources, and so on.

All of this prep was built around writing a reader’s response, which is an essay only possible when you’ve invested in the reading. Macbeth is a great story, and as the instructional overview tells you, we’re interested in how it affects you and what insight you have into its story, not plot-based quizzes and tests.


“The Labor We Delight in Physics Pain”


Which brings us to the lecture.

Leaving aside the ten days of spring break, you’ve had more than a week to become familiar with Macbeth. You’ve had summaries and time to read them in class; you’ve watched a performance of the play; that performance was broken up so that you had plenty of time in class or at home to address confusion, review the summaries, etc.; and there is a post that contains every resource and tool you might need.

Your only other assignment was to write about the end of the year and the need to focus. That assignment was, therefore, set up to help you study Macbeth. It was a means of transitioning out of spring break and into the final two months of school.

While you watched Macbeth, we did two things: We responded directly to those Q4 plans, and we took notes on your attentiveness to the play. That gave us a mostly complete picture of your readiness to do the reader-response work attached to Macbeth.

To help you to see part of that picture yourself, here is a quiz, presented as all quizzes in a makerspace are:

Write down as much detail about Macbeth as you can. What happens? What are the major conflicts? How do the main characters develop? How does the story end? What are some of the obvious themes?

Again, you’ve had a week to read any of a half-dozen summaries; to watch a performance of the play; and to use various resources to translate, review, etc., any confusing elements of what you’re watching. Shakespeare is difficult, of course, but the English of his plays is still English — a different dialect, of course, but English, all the same. And, again, you were told to read those summaries first. You were given an intermission on Friday, April 26, to prepare for the second half of the play.

If you don’t know much detail about the plot of Macbeth, you haven’t done your job. Were you lost? Were you confused? Well, what did you do to fix those issues?

For example, consider Act V, Scene 1. (You can read it translated into modern English here.) This is Lady Macbeth’s “damn spot” scene, which is among the most famous moments in the play. It’s the last time we see Lady Macbeth on stage before she kills herself, and she spends the scene wracked with guilt and horror at what has happened. It’s somehow made worse by the fact that she’s sleepwalking — so consumed by anguish that she can’t escape, even in sleep.

The version of the play we watch zooms in on Lady Macbeth’s face to frame her emotional state. Then she does this:

Yet you laughed.

Here’s the thing: Out of context, that’s actually funny, in that it’s basically a meme. Look at the few comments on that particular upload:

But that’s out of context. Out of context, I’d actively encourage you to turn Lady Macbeth’s scream into a meme. There should be more Shakespeare memes, frankly. In context, as part of our look at the entire play, laughter is an inappropriate response to this scene. Laughter reveals that you aren’t paying attention to the plot, aren’t immersed in the action, and aren’t aware of the stakes.

That’s not soap-boxing, by the way. It’s reality: If you watch this scene while invested in the story, aware of what Lady Macbeth’s words mean, and focused on how the actor embodies her anguish, you won’t laugh. If, however, you aren’t paying much attention, haven’t done the prep work necessary to understand the gravity of the scene, etc., then you would laugh. The scream comes out of nowhere, in that case, because you’re not part of the audience; you’re in the next room, essentially, overhearing what someone else is watching.

So you outed yourselves. This was another test of your discipline and focus. If you don’t want to say that you failed, put it more empathetically: You still struggle to do your job as students.


“King-Becoming Graces”


That’s where we are: You need to do your job as students. That means paying attention to what we’re reading, completing the work you’re assigned, and using the feedback we give you.

In here, hitting those marks will earn a good-to-great grade, because we focus so much on growth, self-awareness, amenability, and so on. That ought to be one motivation. Another is that you have to develop good habits of mind now, before bad habits become permanent. The safety net we’ve given you won’t be there next year. To be frank, it’s not going to be there in June of this year, either. You’ll have another reader-response essay to write, a final exam to take, a Pareto Project to present — assignments that will determine, for some of you, whether or not you pass on to eleventh grade.

Ask us questions about how to refocus and make the most of this work. Remember that it’s not just about catching up with Macbeth now; it’s also about making sure you patch the holes in the hull of a capsized ship.

AP Exam: Section II, Question 2 — ETA Workshop

The main workshop post for these ETA exercises is here: AP Exam: Section II — ETA Workshop.

The full practice assignment for Section II is here: AP Exam: Section II — Workshop.


Section II, Question 2 — ETA Workshop


Rhetorical analysis: Students read a non-fiction text and analyze how the writer’s language choices contribute to his or her purpose and intended meaning for the text.

You can find these materials on the College Board’s website. I am organizing them for you so we can discuss the exemplary essays interstitially.

Start by reading the prompt carefully. Read the passage, taking brief notes as you go. Compare those notes to the Overview, which will highlight critical elements of the passage, prompt, and the best responses.

Then, for each prompt, look only at the highest-scoring essay. You can learn from the other ones, certainly, but it is a more efficient use of your time to deconstruct the essays that earn an 8 or 9. Each element of effective writing you would emulate in a timed setting is best demonstrated by those highest-scoring essays.

The 2018 exam is introduced below. The preceding years are presented in a list.

2018 Exam: Question 2 Prompt

The College Board’s Overview identifies one of the chief reasons to apply an ETA reading to this prompt: “This year’s task differed from previous iterations in that it was significantly lengthier; however, its language was very accessible to students.” It’s a long piece, but if you know what you’re doing, that ends up helping you.

The most important reason to start with 2018, however, is this sentence in the Overview: “While elements of style certainly merit consideration, they are not the first ingredient on which rhetors focus when developing strategies to persuade audiences: Style is the third canon of rhetoric, not the first or even the second.”

You probably don’t know what “rhetor” means (it’s the person engaging in rhetoric, and the term used by the folks who write and score your AP exam) nor exactly what is meant by the “canon[s] of rhetoric.” It’s information you have learned in a different context, however, making this the best place to apply an ETA perspective.

You can look at what these graders mean by “canons of rhetoric” in any of a dozen places. I suggest this one, because it’s a little more straightforward; the best source for this sort of thing, however, is the Forest of Rhetoric at BYU. Regardless of the source, what matters on Question 2 is that you understand what graders are looking for you to do: consider the relationship between the writer/speaker and the audience; consider appeals to logic and ethos that could persuade that audience; consider what details are included (and which are excluded); and consider the arrangement of the piece as it relates to the audience. Style (e.g., repetition, parallelism, figurative language) should be considered after the big stuff, so to speak.

Here’s how the College Board summarizes all that in the 2018 Overview:

To understand these choices and how they work, a student must first consider the rhetor’s relationship to the audience, as well as how this relationship necessitates both what this specific rhetor should include in — and exclude from — the speech to this specific audience. Additionally, a student must consider how the rhetor arranges the speech for the particular audience in the specific circumstances of the speech.

Because of its length, this passage invites you to consider those first two canons before any stylistic strategies.

2018 Exam: Question 2 Scoring Guide

Now that you’ve read all that, here’s why 2018 is so instructive in terms of test prep: The highest-scoring essay provided by the College Board focuses on style, specifically parallelism and diction, more than those first two canons. That’s important. It’s possible to do well with strategies like anaphora, if you connect those strategies to the audience, rhetorical context, etc.

It’s also possible to do well despite errors, as the scoring commentary notes. The essay earning an 8 needs “a more complete opening paragraph and some more clearly defined paragraph breaks,” but its analysis is accurate and apt. When you deconstruct this one to emulate its effectiveness, you must focus on that.

Other Places for ETA Work

2017 Exam: Question 2 Prompt | Useful because, as the College Board notes, it “challenged students to think about how Luce managed her difficult task (of being asked to speak about problems with the press) with her audience of fellow journalists, the very people she would be criticizing.” The analysis has to grapple with audience and context specifically, as the essay earning an 8 does.

2016 Exam: Question 2 Prompt | This one, like the 2018 prompt, invites a greater focus on audience and arrangement over style. It’s also an example of how important the prompt itself is. Often, the prompt will give you necessary information about the context of the piece. In this case, as the College Board notes in their Overview, most of the necessary information is in the prompt. The only thing not given, in terms of context/audience/speaker, is “the laudatory nature of Thatcher’s work.”

2015 Exam: Question 2 Prompt | Again, the College Board designed this prompt to force students to look at rhetoric “not merely as words on the page but as words in action, words intended to have a social impact.” Even the use of “choices” (over “strategies” or “devices”) is meant to focus on “the primacy of authorial agency and communicative purpose.” This is what makes Question 2 more authentic than you thought: the attempt to connect you to real people persuading others in real contexts.


Q&A: Interstitial ETA Work


Start with whatever directions you are given through Google Classroom. That’s where you’ll find any formal work associated with this prompt. It’s up to you, however, to utilize this opportunity to prepare for the exam. Ask questions in the comment section below. Invite your peers and teacher into a discussion of how these high-scoring essays work and how you can emulate them.

AP Exam: Section II — ETA Workshop

Not to be confused with the workshop that focuses on completing a practice run at Section II:

AP Exam: Section II — Workshop

This ETA or emulation-through-analysis workshop invites analysis of the exemplary essays provided by the College Board. This workshop takes Step #5 from that post (“Read all of the resources for that question: sample essays, scoring explanations, grader reports, etc.”) and converts it into a standalone but repeatable exercise. It does not require that you write your own response, although that would certainly be permissible.


Question By Question


Question 2 — Rhetorical Analysis: Students read a non-fiction text and analyze how the writer’s language choices contribute to his or her purpose and intended meaning for the text.

AP Exam: Section II, Question 2 — ETA Workshop

Question 1 — Synthesis: Students read several texts about a topic and create an argument that synthesizes at least three of the sources to support their thesis.

AP Exam: Section II, Question 1 — ETA Workshop

Question 3 — Argument: Students create an evidence-based argument that responds to a given topic.

AP Exam: Section II, Question 3 — ETA Workshop

CC ELA Regents Exam: Part 3 Prep

For this test prep, we are using the Regents Examination in English Language Arts that was given on January 22, 2019. All materials are taken from the same source:

Copies of all previously written Regents Exam are available there.


Part 3: Text-Analysis Response


Note: The deadline for the handwritten step is “as soon as possible,” because your teachers will give you feedback as soon you submit your response. Use the calendar to organize yourself: Daily Lessons (All Classes): March 11 to June 17. If you need a prescribed deadline, use Friday, May 3.

All materials:

Steps for students:

  1. Complete Part 3 of the January ’19 ELA Regents Exam as instructed in class. Use the essay booklets provided to write your response. A copy of Part 3 is included in the folder linked above.
  2. Submit your handwritten essay response as soon as possible, using the “artifact” worksheet provided in class to drive feedback. Complete this sheet as instructed.
  3. Your teachers will return this feedback sheet with comments and a score. You will also be given access to exemplary student responses to compare to your own. Copies of these essays are included in the folder linked above. A copy of the state’s rubric is also included.
  4. Use the resources you read in Step #3 to revise your Part 3 essay response. Type this revision in Google Docs, and then submit it through Google Classroom as instructed.

You will have plenty of class time to complete the process. Refer to the calendar for specifics. If you need more time, simply talk to your teachers in advance.

Ask questions below about any of these materials and/or steps.