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How is making brownies like learning how to write?. The NC Writing Test. Everything you did…and didn’t want to know about it!. Brownie Recipe ¾ cup flour ¼ tsp. salt 1 cup sugar ¼ cup cocoa ½ cup butter 2 eggs 1 tsp. vanilla
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How is making brownies like learning how to write? The NC Writing Test Everything you did…and didn’t want to know about it!
Brownie Recipe ¾ cup flour ¼ tsp. salt 1 cup sugar ¼ cup cocoa ½ cup butter 2 eggs 1 tsp. vanilla Sift flour, sugar, salt, and cocoa. Add butter, eggs, and vanilla. Preheat oven to 350 degrees and cook for thirty minutes until a toothpick comes out clean. The NC Writing Test Everything you did…and didn’t want to know about it!
The NC Writing Test Everything you did…and didn’t want to know about it!
Basic Information • The Writing Test will take place on March 9th, 2010. • The Writing Test preparation counts as 25% of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd quarters, and the test is 25% of your final exam grade. • It is graded on levels of 0 to 4, with 4 being the highest level. • You can get up to 20 points total. The range of points are as follows: -Level I: 0-7 -Level II: 8-11 -Level III: 12-16 -Level IV: 17-20
Basic Information • It is a timed test, with only 100 minutes being given to plan and write your essay. • You cannot write over two pages for your essay. • According to the state, a passing score on the Writing Test is a level 3 or above. A level 3 is a 12 on the scale. • The Writing Test is read by two scorers. • The formula for figuring your Writing Test score is as follows: (Total Content Score X4) + (Total Conventions ScoreX 2)=Total Score
Basic Information • Writing a non-scorable will make you fail the Writing Test, because a non-scorable is one of three things: 1. blank 2. in another language 3. only the prompt copied on the paper • The prompt for the Writing Test will be an informational prompt, which means that you could be asked to do one of two types of writing: 1. definition 2. cause and effect
Basic Information • The five main criteria the scorers are looking for are: 1. Main Idea 2. Support 3. Elaboration 4. Organization 5. Conventions • Grammar does count in your Writing Test score. • These are the main grammar conventions that you need to master: 1. fragments 2. run-ons 3. word choice error 4. pronoun misuse 5. spelling 6. punctuation 7. capitalization 8. subject-verb 9. verb tense
The Beginning • Hook—opening sentence that catches the reader’s attention (quote, question, story, description, startling statement) 2.Link-bridge between hook & thesis statement 3. Thesis Statement—purpose of paper and preview of points
The Middle 1.Topic Sentence—clearly identifies main point 2.Examples/facts—introduction of evidence 3.Analysis/Interpretation of evidence/examples 4.Transition sentence to next point (reviews current point and previews relationship with next point)
The End • Restate Thesis or main ideas NEVER BEGIN WITH “IN CONCLUSION” 2.Intensified Insight & Additional thoughts 3.Dynamic sentence to end (perhaps use a quote or some similar method as hook to tie paper together)