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Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

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Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test. Should high school students be asked to declare majors and take specialized classes?. Should high school students be asked to wear uniforms?. If you could visit any time and place in American history, what would it be and why?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test Should high school students be asked to wear uniforms? Should high school students be asked to declare majors and take specialized classes? If you could visit any time and place in American history, what would it be and why?
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Page 1: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Monday, April 18The ACT Writing Test

Should high school students be asked to wear uniforms?

Should high school students be asked to declare majors and take specialized classes?

If you could visit any time and place in American history, what would it be and why?

Page 2: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

So that you don’t end up with a case of brain freeze, you should…

• Learn how the ACT writing test works• Understand how it can help your composite score• Learn how the rubric works• Grade some sample essays so you know how the readers assess your essay.

Page 3: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

How to Write a Stellar Essay in 30 Minutes or Less After 3 hours of mind-

numbing testing

Seriously?

Page 4: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

What’s the ACT Writing

Test?

Page 5: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

It assess writing skills that should be emphasized in high school and that are

required for college success.

Some colleges are even starting to require this test,

using it to make admissions decisions!

Page 6: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

According to the ACT:“The ACT Writing Test is designed so that the prompts can

be properly answered in the time allowed. The test is a different type of assignment than a college paper, but it measures skills students use when writing a college paper—such as

the ability to focus on a topic (thesis), to develop ideas (topic sentences), and to write logically and coherently (examples), with proper sentence structure (style, grammar),and sound reasoning (analysis).”

30 minutes? You’re kidding, right?

Page 7: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

What Do I Have To Do?

Write on ONE prompt that will define an issue and describe two points of view on that issue.Ex: Some academics are making an argument

that high school should last 5 years, while others maintain the reasoning that 4 years is just fine. In your opinion, should high school be extended to 5 years?

State and defend your position on the issue described in the writing prompt.

Page 8: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Rest assured…

Your score will not be affected by your point of view; you will only be scored based on the effectiveness and structure of your argument!!!

Page 9: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Wow! Thanks to those helpful

writing tips, my essay is really going to ROCK

the ACT graders!

Page 10: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Step 1: Read the instructions in your test booklet.

Page 11: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

What If I Don’t Have An Opinion on the Topic?

Bull

Page 12: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Step 2: Plan your essay! Read: Closely examine the prompt,

underlining key words. Formulate an Answer: How would

you answer the question posed by the prompt? This will be your thesis. Pick ONE side.

Brainstorm: 3 minutes on the unlined pages (thesis, sub-arguments, Es)

Oppose: Consider how you will address the other side

Page 13: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Step 3: Write the Essay

Write the essay on the lined pages.

Do not skip lines, and do not write in the margins.

Write legibly!

Page 14: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 1: At the beginning of your essay, make sure the readers can tell that you understand the issue.

Page 15: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 2: If possible, discuss the issue in a broader context or evaluate the implications or complications of the issue.

Page 16: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 3: Address, but don’t support, the opposing point of view.

*Make sure you aren’t maliciously attacking the opposition; you don’t want to sound like an ignorant writer!

Page 17: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

If applicable, use examples, not only from contemporary culture, but also from literature.

The people grading your essay are writing/literature teachers, and will appreciate

references to texts.

Page 18: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 5: Vary the structure of your sentences, and use varied and

precise word choices.

Varied sentence beginnings, lengths, and structure will make you

sound educated and ease your reader from one idea

to the next.

Page 19: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 6: Make logical relationships clear by using transitional words and phrases.

• Use transitions between paragraphs and within paragraphs (between examples)

• First Initially…, First and foremost…, For instance…, It is important to first note..., On way this is true is…, To begin with…

• Second Furthermore…, In the same way…, Likewise/Similarly…, Another strong quote/example/etc. of this is…, In the same light…, On the other hand…

• Third Lastly…, Most importantly…, Yet the best example to support…, A final way to prove this true is…, Moreover…

Page 20: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 7: Don’t Wander!

Make sure you are always focused on your main point – your thesis. Everything should always connect and relate back to your thesis!!!

Page 21: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 8: End with a strong conclusion that summarizes or reinforces your position.

Avoid starting conclusion with cliché transition: ‘In conclusion…’ or ‘To sum it all up…’

Restate thesis in a fresh, different way; follow with references to or mention of main point from each body paragraph

End the essay with a !!! Your conclusion should recap the main ideas presented in the intro and body, but more importantly, it needs to “pack a punch” to leave the reader with a lasting impression.

Page 22: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Writing Tip 9: Proofread Leave a few minutes to look over your essay. Correct any mistakes you notice in grammar, usage,

punctuation, and spelling. Don’t know how to spell something? Use a synonym. If you notice any words that are hard to read, erase and

recopy them so readers can easily read them. Make any corrections and revisions neatly, between the

lines (but not in the margins).

Poofreading is defiantly impotant.

Page 23: Monday, April 18 The ACT Writing Test

Misc. tips

Use personal references sparingly. Know your its vs. it’s and the difference

between there, their, they’re. Remember parallel structure and agreement. Structure: mini intro., 3 body paragraphs (2

Es each), mini conclusion


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