Something the proctors of the AP exam give you, but not a pencil or a charger.
What is scratch paper?
Where Katy Perry went for 11 minutes last month; what you should consider in your head before you start C&C.
What is SPACE?
The amount of breakdowns your teacher has had this week; the amount of sources you need in your essay.
What are three sources?
What is doing your CHORES?
The amount of questions you will get on the MC on exam day.
What is 45?
What Bob the Builder does after building his thesis; you should do it too.
What is building out your topic sentences?
The impact of repetition/anaphora on the audience?
I'll cry if you don't do this; the phrase that represents repeating your thesis/topic sentence at the end of your paragraph to close it out.
What is "brining your dog home?"
You might be like this with your mama if you're a troublemaker; it's how your thesis should be.
What is arguable?
The name of the process one should follow when doing MCQs.
What is trash, trick, and true.
The process to describe going to war; the process to describe beginning your RA Essay.
What is command and conquer?
The strategy describing placing two words, phrases, ideas next to each other to compare or contrast.
What is juxtaposition?
The format of an intro; trust me!
What is a hook, background, and thesis?
The key to any good argument essay; you need to do this with your evidence to get above a 1 or 2 on evidence and commentary.
What students should NOT do so they can save on time:
What is reading the passage first.
The name of the third column in C&C; these will make up your RAPS; these will become your topic sentences to your body paragraphs.
What are clusters/clumps?
A strategy that could work best if your audience is more professional, politicians, or the scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz.
What is a logical appeal?
Not nice! What I might say to someone for cutting me off in traffic; what I might say to a student who doesn't give me a donut; the name of the rule to strengthen your argument essays.
What is "I hate 'YOU?'"
Demonstrates, highlights, exemplifies, if/then/therefore, because, since, universal truths...
What is commentary language?
The first steps one should take when tackling an MC question.
What is: to orient oneself to the passage and read the question?
During command and conquer, the columns students should complete at the same time.
or
What is collecting evidence and naming the strategy?
The reason considering SPACE is important.
How I like my chocolate cake; how I like my onions; how I like my body paragraphs.
What is layered?
What you're doing in your commentary.
What is: explaining how/why your evidence proves your thesis?
Half correct, but not all correct; overall correct but doesn't pertain to THAT part of the passage; it's right, but not the most-right answer.
What are common/lead distractors?