Conquer the New SAT Essay: A Skilled Professor Teaches the 2016 SAT Essay Section
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About this ebook
Master the new SAT essay for 2016 and beyond! In this book are fifty original SAT passage questions, plus the rhetorical tools you'll need to answer them perfectly. Strategies, skills, sample essays, and much much more!
Valerie Estelle Frankel
Valerie Estelle Frankel has won a Dream Realm Award, an Indie Excellence Award, and a USA Book News National Best Book Award for her Henry Potty parodies. She's the author of 75 books on pop culture, including Doctor Who - The What, Where, and How, History, Sherlock: Every Canon Reference You May Have Missed in BBC's Series 1-3, Homages and the Highlands: An Outlander Guide, and How Game of Thrones Will End. Many of her books focus on women's roles in fiction, from her heroine's journey guides From Girl to Goddess and Buffy and the Heroine's Journey to books like Women in Game of Thrones and The Many Faces of Katniss Everdeen. Once a lecturer at San Jose State University, she's a frequent speaker at conferences. Come explore her research at www.vefrankel.com.
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Conquer the New SAT Essay - Valerie Estelle Frankel
Introduction
As a university English instructor and SAT skills tutor in the San Francisco Bay Area – a high-pressure academic area near Stanford – I understand the stress and importance of the SAT, which can determine students’ futures. Now in 2016 it’s changing once more. The vocabulary has been cut, replaced by reading passages that ask how this word is used (not its dictionary meaning) and what evidence from the passage shows this. Basically, reading lots of fun novels or doing lots of practice problems are the best way to improve skills in this area. There’s a redesigned writing section, now with short essays filled with errors. Many of these are grammar (subject-verb agreement, colons and semicolons, verb tense, pronouns, and so on), while others deal with essay organization – each paragraph must make a single point, support the thesis, and so forth. There are two levels of math sections too. However, this book doesn’t teach any of these but focuses specifically on one of the biggest changes – the essay.
The new SAT includes a 50 minute essay – optional, but many colleges require it for admissions. This book explains how to master it, with 50 practice passages and 30 pages of instruction.
The book begins by explaining the question and scoring guide, along with how to read the passages, budget time, annotate, and finally construct a clear essay.
A large part of this book is rhetorical devices – metaphor and simile, yes, but also more unusual ones. You sound more educated and precise saying The author uses anaphora
rather than The author starts multiple sentences the same way.
Diction, syntax, tone, point of view, and all the special nuances of these are explained clearly, along with much new vocabulary to help you present ideas clearly. Of course, as this book explains irony, symbolism, allegory, and many terms from high school English class, it can help readers improve there as well.
Part III takes this a step further – terms only taught at a higher level of education, less required for the SAT and more sophisticated, for those who would like to give their essays additional polish. It contains links to even more rhetorical devices to aid study.
The last section offers 50 original sample prompts, taken from classic literature and historical writings instead of existing textbooks. The first five are followed by sample essays and the next fifteen have a list of sample thesis statements one might use to explicate these passages. The passages are of course intended for individual practice – necessary in order to excel.
There are several ways to use this book. Certainly, a tutor might use it as an in-class text. At home, a student or group of students might practice with it. The best strategy is to write practice essays, and then perhaps discuss their strengths and weaknesses with a peer, parent, or teacher. The real grading rubric is included. Lacking time for writing practice essays, at least writing thesis statements and short outlines, defining how one could write the essays, is a valuable practice activity. My own students preferred to do this open book – looking up the literary devices in order to practice using them correctly. The best way to prepare is really practicing – writing many essays and outlines, using the new rhetorical terms, so that the real passage on the SAT will be no trouble at all.
Part I: Understanding the New SAT Essay
Overall Changes
* The essay is now 50 minutes long instead of 25 minutes.
* Now instead of agreeing or disagreeing with an open-ended question and providing outside evidence, you must analyze a passage written by an author who is taking a stance on an issue. Specifically, you don’t take your own stance on the issue but instead analyze how the author builds the argument.understanding how evidence and rhetorical devices contribute to an argument is central.
* The essay is scored on a scale of 1-4 (by two readers for a total out of 8) in the areas of Reading, Analysis, and Writing. This score is not combined with the Reading and Writing section score of 800.
The new SAT essay is much more analytical and argument focused. These are the new instructions:
As you read the passage below, consider how [the author] uses
* evidence, such as facts or examples, to support claims.
* reasoning to develop ideas and to connect claims and evidence.
* stylistic or persuasive elements, such as word choice or appeals to emotion, to add power to the ideas expressed
Following this comes the passage. After, the question is phrased like this:
Write an essay in which you explain how [the author] builds an argument to persuade [his/her] audience that [author’s claim]. In your essay, analyze how [the author] uses one or more of the features listed above (or features of your own choice) to strengthen the logic and persuasiveness of [his/her] argument. Be sure that your analysis focuses on the most relevant features of the passage. Your essay should not explain whether you agree with [the author’s] claims, but rather explain how the author builds an argument to persuade [his/her] audience.
Here’s a sample:
College Board adds that all passages have these things in common:
* Written for a broad audience
* Argue a point
* Express subtle views on complex subjects
* Use logical reasoning and evidence to support claims
* Examine ideas, debates, or trends in the arts and sciences, or civic, cultural, or political life
* Always taken from published works
* All the information needed to write your essay will be included in the passage or in the introduction before it.
Study Tips
Learn to understand and analyze components of essays:
Evidence: Understand how the author uses data and facts to support the main argument. Understand different types of data – research numbers, surveys of people, statements from authority figures – and why the author cites these examples.
Reasoning to develop ideas: Understand how the author draws inferences from information and extrapolates to build larger arguments.
Stylistic or persuasive elements: Learn the major rhetorical devices, like simile, metaphor, hyperbole, etc. Also learn about word choice, use of logic, ethics, and emotional appeals to affect the readers.
How to read:
* Annotate – underline interesting rhetorical devices, from unusual style to metaphors, repetition, and questions. Write beside them what effect they have – how is the text different or stronger because they’re included.
* Directly after reading, ask yourself what the author’s main point was.
* Can you find ways the rhetorical devices enhance the meaning?
* Try determining a way to organize your answers – can you lump the strategies into categories? Is there a way you’d rather organize, such as going through the passage in order or splitting it into two halves to compare?
Practice:
Take sample passages (including but not limited to the ones in this book). Try applying these strategies, at least to the point where you have a thesis and basic outline. If you can do that each time, the actual SAT will be no problem.
Essay Scoring (quoted directly from the College Board website)
SAT Essay responses are scored using a carefully designed process:
* Two different people will read and score your essay.
* Each scorer awards 1–4 points for each dimension: reading, analysis, and writing.
* The two scores for each dimension are added.
* You’ll receive three scores for the SAT Essay — one for each dimension — ranging from 2–8 points.
4 Advanced Reading Score: The response demonstrates thorough comprehension of the source text. The response shows an understanding of the text’s central idea(s) and of most important details and how they interrelate, demonstrating a comprehensive understanding of the text. The response is free of errors of fact or interpretation with regard to the text. The response makes skillful use of textual evidence (quotations, paraphrases, or both), demonstrating a complete understanding of the source text.
4 Advanced Analysis Score: The response offers an insightful analysis of the source text and demonstrates a sophisticated understanding of the analytical task. The response offers a thorough, well-considered evaluation of the author’s use of evidence, reasoning, and/or stylistic and persuasive elements, and/or feature(s) of the student’s own choosing. The response contains relevant, sufficient, and strategically chosen support for claim(s) or point(s) made. The response focuses consistently on those features of the text that are most relevant to addressing the task.
4 Advanced Writing Score: The response is cohesive and demonstrates a highly effective use and command of language. The response includes a precise central claim. The response includes a skillful introduction and conclusion. The response demonstrates a deliberate and highly effective progression of ideas both within paragraphs and throughout the essay. The response has a wide variety in sentence structures. The response demonstrates a consistent use of precise word choice. The response maintains a formal style and objective tone. The response shows a strong command of the conventions of standard written English and is free or virtually free of errors.
3 Proficient Reading Score: The response demonstrates effective comprehension of the source text. The response shows an understanding of the text’s central idea(s) and important details. The response is free of substantive errors of fact and interpretation with regard to the text. The response makes appropriate use of textual evidence (quotations, paraphrases, or both), demonstrating an understanding of the source text.
3 Proficient Analysis Score: The response offers an effective analysis of the source text and demonstrates an understanding of the analytical task. The response competently evaluates the author’s use of evidence, reasoning, and/or stylistic and persuasive elements, and/or feature(s) of the student’s own choosing. The response contains relevant and sufficient support for claim(s) or point(s) made. The response focuses primarily on those features of the text that are most relevant to addressing the task.
3 Proficient Writing Score: The response is mostly cohesive and demonstrates effective use and control of language. The response includes a central claim or implicit controlling idea. The response includes an effective introduction and conclusion. The response demonstrates a clear progression of ideas both within paragraphs and throughout the essay. The response has variety in sentence structures. The response demonstrates some precise word choice. The response maintains a formal style and objective tone. The response shows a good control of the conventions of standard written English and is free of significant errors that detract from the quality of writing.
2 Partial Reading Score: The response demonstrates some comprehension of the source text. The response shows an understanding of the text’s central idea(s) but not of important details. The response may contain errors of fact and/or interpretation with regard to the text. The response makes limited and/or haphazard use of textual evidence (quotations, paraphrases, or both), demonstrating some understanding of the source text.
2 Partial Analysis Score: The response offers limited analysis of the source text and demonstrates only partial understanding of the analytical task. The response identifies and attempts to describe the author’s use of evidence, reasoning, and/or stylistic and persuasive elements, and/or feature(s) of the student’s own choosing, but merely asserts rather than explains their importance, or one or more aspects of the response’s analysis are unwarranted based on the text. The response contains little or no support for claim(s) or point(s) made. The response may lack a clear focus on those features of the text that are most relevant to addressing the task.
2 Partial Writing Score: The response demonstrates little or no cohesion and limited skill in the use and control of language. The response may lack a clear central claim or controlling idea or may deviate from the claim or idea over the course of the response. The response may include an ineffective introduction and/or conclusion. The response may demonstrate some progression of ideas within paragraphs but not throughout the response. The response has limited variety in sentence structures; sentence structures may be repetitive. The response demonstrates general or vague word choice; word choice may be repetitive. The response may deviate noticeably from a formal style and objective tone. The response shows a limited control of the conventions of standard written English and contains errors that detract from the quality of writing and may impede understanding.
1 Inadequate Reading Score: The response demonstrates little or no comprehension of the source text. The response fails to show an understanding of the text’s central idea(s), and may include only details without reference to central idea(s). The response may contain numerous errors of fact and/or interpretation with regard to the text. The response makes little or no use of