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Read / Write Instruction . Danielle Reites Assistant Professor of English Lake-Sumter States College reitesd@lssc.edu. Agenda. How to get ready for the SAT / ACT Reading Sentence Completion Passage based
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Read / Write Instruction Danielle Reites Assistant Professor of English Lake-Sumter States College reitesd@lssc.edu
Agenda • How to get ready for the SAT / ACT • Reading • Sentence Completion • Passage based • Link to answers with explanations: http://whw.name/Resources/Test16_Crit_Read_Explans.pdf • Writing • introductions • thesis statements
What are some things you can do to get ready for the “big day”? • Set aside time each day to study • Studying can mean • Completing practice tests • Flash cards with vocabulary words or math formulas • Checking your Twitter feed for SAT College Board tips and questions • Look at your question of the day • Pairing with a friend • Explore free resources
What to expect from the readings and writing sections of the SAT / ACT • Reading • Sentence completion • Passage based • Writing • Improving sentences • Improving paragraphs • Identifying sentence errors
Sentence Completion Tip • Reading • Deciphering words in context • Examine the word in a sentence and try to find a synonym that might work there. • Examine root of word and/or think of other words like it • “Liberate” is like “liberty,” which means freedom. “Liberate” means “to free” • Eliminate words that have the same meaning as other choices and ones that wouldn’t fit in context
Passages are similar but may give you a little more context. Brief video walkthrough of how to think about this question.
Practice Talking Through These Questions with a Partner • See handout #1 • Discuss how you came to your answers Answers: Side 1 1. E. benefactors 2. A. rebellious 3. B. blended…discern 4. A. indulged…apportionment 5. A. circumscribed Answers: Side 2 • D. strenuous…debilitated • C. honored • A. depicted…traveled • B. an emblem • C. curative…toxic • C. simplistic • E. bent…analyzing • E. prodigious
How to Learn Vocab Words • Read, read, read • Word of the day • Flash cards • Make songs • Use them!
Critical Reading • Tips for doing well on the reading portion: • Build your inferences skills • Read every day—especially things you don’t want to read • Ask questions about what you read • What does this mean? • How does this connect to me?
Inferences • Jane smiled to herself as she warmed her hands by the fire and watched the snow gently fall outside. Soon her husband and children would be home and they could unwrap presents and go caroling. She couldn’t wait. • What time of year is it? • How do you know?
Inferences • Inference questions ask you to make a reasoned judgment about the passage that goes beyond the material on the page. • An “implication” is an idea that an author will suggest but not state directly; inference questions test your ability to spot the author’s implications without straying too far from the text.
Inference Video • Help decoding inference questions: video
Reading Practice Time • See handout #2 – Side 1 • Read through the passages and mark the correct answers • We will go over the answers together Answers Handout #2 – Side 1 6. E. highlight a concern 7. E. lay the foundation for a course of action 8. C. Hope that the same reasoning would be applied to all unsolicited e-mail 9. C. proposes a solution
More Reading Practice • Complete Handout #2 – Side 2A • Handout #2 – Side 2A Answers 10. A. great conviction 11. D. note an apparent inconsistency 12. C. One day begin to live with great passion • Handout #2 – Side 2B Answers 13. E. impression 14. D. an anticipated outcome 15. C. embarrassingly inapt 16. B. consider him to be vain
Writing • Examine the writing prompt on Handout #3. In small groups (3), talk through the following steps. Assign someone to transcribe as you talk. • Brainstorm topics for writing • Focus on a topic and have an opinion • Compose a rough thesis (write this down as a complete sentence) • Brainstorm supporting details • Compose an informal outline (write this down as a complete sentence) • Determine how you will conclude (prediction, warning, celebration, solution, hypothetical situation)
Critical Reading • Another thing that can help you do well on inference questions is understanding the connotations of words • Denotation • Connotation
Denotation Connotation • The literal, dictionary definition of a word • Snake: • All the thoughts, feelings, images (positive and negative) that a word evokes • Connotations are achieved through the way a culture uses a word
snake noun 1. any of numerous limbless, scaly, elongate reptiles of the suborder Serpentes, comprising venomous and nonvenomous species inhabiting tropical and temperate areas. 2. a treacherous person; an insidious enemy. Compare snake in the grass. 3. Building Trades. a. Also called auger, plumber's snake. (in plumbing) a device for dislodging obstructions in curved pipes, having a head fed into the pipe at the end of a flexible metal band. b. Also called wirepuller. a length of resilient steel wire, for threading through an electrical conduit so that wire can be pulled through after it. –verb (used without object) 4. to move, twist, or wind: The road snakes among the mountains. –verb (used with object) 5. to wind or make (one's course, way, etc.) in the manner of a snake: to snake one's way through a crowd. 6. to drag or haul, esp. by a chain or rope, as a log. Denotations
Snake Evil, danger, something deadly, the serpent in the Garden of Eden, smoothness, sibilant sounds, oily, creepy, a winding river, something that moves stealthily, the hippocratic oath Connotations
Refreshing – • Plain – • Clever – • Cackle – • Snob – • Cop -- • Skinny – • Statesman-- • Smile -- • Domineering -- • difficult -- • Headstrong-- • Nitpicking-- • Childish-- Chilly Natural Sly giggle Cultured Officer Slender Politician Smirk Assertive challenging Determined Meticulous childlike Explore the connotations
Directions: Replace the underlined words with synonyms and discuss how that changes the connotations. • Annette was surprised by the pop quiz. • David was very frugal with his money. • The Honda Civic she bought was inexpensive. • There was a problem when the cat got out of the house. • We were hungry after studying for three hours. • I couldn’t sleep last night, so I strolled along the garden path. Connotations continued…
Writing: Introductions • What are the goals of an introductory paragraph? • What are some different strategies?
Introductory Strategies • Tell a story • Ask a question or series of questions (and then answer the most provocative one) • Share a quotation (avoid clichés) • Describe an “imagine this” scenario • Share one or more everyday examples • Explain the history/background of your topic
Sample • Topic: Is euthanasia ever the right thing to do? • Intro: One October afternoon three years ago while I was visiting my parents, my mother made a request I dreaded and longed to fulfill. She had just poured me a cup of Earl Grey from her Japanese iron teapot, shaped like a little pumpkin; outside, two cardinals splashed in the birdbath in the weak Connecticut sunlight. Her white hair was gathered at the nape of her neck, and her voice was low. “Please help me get Jeff’s pacemaker turned off,” she said, using my father’s first name. I nodded, and my heart knocked. (Katy Butler, "What Broke My Father's Heart." The New York Times Magazine, June 18, 2010)
Prompt 1 • Think carefully about the issue presented in the following excerpt and the assignment below. • Most people tend to trust others too readily. To avoid being taken advantage of, however, it is generally wise to be doubtful and suspicious of others' motives or honesty. Many people would agree that if you find yourself doubting other people's sincerity or questioning their intentions, your instincts are probably correct. You are less likely to regret being cautious than being too trusting. Assignment: • Is it wise to be suspicious of the motives or honesty of other people, even those who appear to be trustworthy? Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue. Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from your reading, studies, experience, or observations. Prompt 2 • Think carefully about the issue presented in the following excerpt and the assignment below. • Learning and doing are their own rewards. No external rewards are required. Yet when external rewards are introduced—whether attention and praise from parents or prizes from teachers—these rewards exert a substantial influence. Instead of reading books to find out about the world, kids will read to win prizes. Kids will produce for rewards, but the quality of their activity and their interest in it will be dramatically altered. • Adapted from Barry Schwartz, The Costs of Living Assignment: • Is it wrong or harmful to motivate people to learn or achieve something by offering them rewards? Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue. Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from your reading, studies, experience, or observations.