What vocab word describes "a mix of mental and physical nervousness that interferes with your ability to perform well on tests"?
What is Test Anxiety
How many types of command of evidence questions are there?
What is 2?
What does explicit mean?
What is clearly stated?
When can you use a semicolon?
What is when joining independent clauses, or separating items in a complex series?
What vocab word is a judgment or decision that is reached based on reasoning, facts, and details.
What is a conclusion?
If you feel negative thoughts starting, you should stop what you are doing and ___
What is think positive?
What are the names of the different types of evidence?
What is Quantitative and Textual?
What does implicit mean?
What is not indirect/not clearly stated?
What other punctuation marks are dashes interchangeable with?
What are commas, parenthesis, and colons?
What is an inference?
What is a guess that a reader forms based on the information in the text and prior knowledge?
What should you do the night before and the morning of your test?
What is have a good night's sleep and have breakfast?
What is an example of quantitative evidence?
What are graphs or tables?
What is a common error with Central Idea questiosn?
What is having too narrow of a lens or focus, being too extreme, having outside or non-related information, or having conflicts or contradictions?
What are the seven coordinating conjunctions?
What is FANBOYS? (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so)
How can you find the premise of a text?
What is by looking at the facts presented in the text?
What is the most important thing to remember?
TRUST YOURSELF!!!
What is an example of textual evidence?
What are findings, quotations, facts, and details?
What are supporting details?
What are evidence, source data, facts, findings, or support?
What is an example of a subordinating conjunction?
What are that, which, because, when, since, and although?
What are you specifically not supposed to do on Inference based questions?
What is use any outside information?
What percentage of people have mild anxiety?
What is 40%?
What are the 4 steps to analyzing evidence questions?
Step 1: Identify the argument.
Step 2: Summarize the argument (and graphic).
Step 3: Compare your summary with the answer choices.
Step 4: Eliminate the choices that include information that is not directly addressed in the passage.
What is the TOPIC + the POINT made about the topic?
What is the central/main idea?
What are the customary practices of writing and speaking English that are widely recognized and accepted as correct?
What are the Standard Conventions of English?
What is the question the Digital SAT will as you when asking an inference question?
What is "Which choice most logically completes the text?"