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AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton
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AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

AP Test Tips!

Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008.

Condensed by L. Thornton

Page 2: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Write a Conclusion

Summarize your argument / message

Restate (in a different, interesting way) the most salient point of your argument

Page 3: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

ORGANIZE!

Paragraph (don’t just write two gigantic paragraphs; organize your thoughts)!

1 idea per paragraph

Page 4: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

DO NOT…

Summarize! AACK! – Summary is a waste of time– and I quote, “Summary is DEATH.”

Page 5: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

DO NOT…

Do NOT DEFINE!– Your reader will know what a villanelle is or

what an apostrophe is. It is a waste of time to write, “John Donne uses the apostrophe to personalize his poem about death. An apostrophe is when a poet speaks to something or someone who really isn’t there.”

Page 6: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Use EVIDENCE!

Use the text!

Use the words!

Use the poem!

Use the passage!

SHOW!!

Page 7: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Literary Merit

Use a BIG WORK of LITERARY MERIT for Q3. – NO MOVIES– NO SHORT STORIES– NO “current, popular” BOOKS

Page 8: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Do NOT…

Do NOT Use line numbers…briefly quote.

DON’T: In line 13, the poet uses blood imagery to assert the evilness of the boy’s thoughts.

DO: With the poet’s use of blood imagery, such as “clot,” “burgundy fluid,” and “flow,” he ….

Page 9: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Don’t moralize or judge the quality of the work.

Page 10: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Avoid Purple Prose!

Avoid long, flowery (purple prose), showy, catchy introductions.

stick to a few sentences and get to the point (aka your thesis).

Page 11: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Creative writing is not academic writing.– NEVER USE A FRAGMENT, even to

make a point.• NEVER.

Page 12: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Reeeeepeeaaattttt….

Avoid the re-run.– DON’T BE REPETITIVE!!– DON’T Say the SAME THING over and

over again!– DON’T be a RE-RUN!

Page 13: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

NO TITLE

Do not TITLE your essays.

Page 14: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Some Writing Tips :)

Write fairly big, but don’t cram lines from top to bottom.Don’t use :) or hearts, or circles for your isWRITE NEATLY. No Kidding.

Use BLACK PEN

Page 15: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

AP…

Means ANSWER THE PROMPT!

Page 16: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Address the Work as a WHOLE…

Yes, here’s imagery in the first stanza…how does it affect the work as a WHOLE???

Page 17: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

In a poem, the title is part of the text, also. Don’t forget about it…USE IT!

Page 18: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Compare / Contrast

Compare or contrast MEANING, not device usage

Page 19: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Don’t be a SHOW-OFF

Don’t write about anything that cannot be related to the PROMPT and the THEME.

Don’t refer to OTHER works, EVER, it diminishes your major argument.

Page 20: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

If you…

Think a passage is too easy? Look again.

Page 21: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Don’t write…

“the poems are the same and different.”

“vivid”

“uses diction”

- the readers are sick of these…:(

Page 22: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Blech to Jargon!

Do not use high-fallutin’ jargon…simple, clear language is fine…and usually better.Pretentious writing is pompous writing…and turns your reader OFF.

Good vocabulary is ONE THING…and being pedantic is another.

Page 23: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

The play’s the thing…

A play is a play.

A poem is a poem.

A novel is a novel.

A poet writes poems.

An author writes novels.

A writer writes plays.

Page 24: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Misssspellling…

DON’T misspell– Titles– Authors– Characters

– YES, it is important and reflects your knowledge of the work.

Page 25: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Feelings…nothing more than…feelings…

Avoid saying how something makes the reader FEEL.

Avoid feelings altogether:

Page 26: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

…and more feelings…

Don’t talk about the effect something has on the reader’s feelings or emotions. In fact, avoid the word feel altogether.

Example: “to make the reader feel”

“a story-like feel versus a rhythmic feel…”

“As one reads, it will make the reader flow through the poem and feel like he is there.”

Page 27: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Jelloishy

Don’t make up new words.

Page 28: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

AVOID…

SimilarDifferentUniqueNegativePositiveGood Bad

…these are WEAK WORDS!! Look at your lists!

Page 29: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

No “vivid diction”

The readers are tired of seeing this.

What does it really MEAN?

Vivid diction? Vivid how?

Page 30: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Leave me out of it…

USE the poem, the passage, the text.

LEAVE TODAY’S SOCIETY out of it. LEAVE IT AT HOME!!

Page 31: AP Test Tips! Compiled by AP Readers 2007 / 2008. Condensed by L. Thornton.

Words, words, words…

Are not poetic devices :)

Diction is not a poetic device :)