Literary Analysis (The "What" and "How")
Informational Text (The "Facts")
Vocabulary & Context
Argumentation & Logic
The "PM3" Strategy (Test Skills)
100

This term refers to the central message or universal truth a story reveals about life.

Theme

100

This text structure explains why something happened and the results of that occurrence.

Cause and Effect

100

Words that have the same or similar meanings.

Synonyms

100

A statement that goes against the author’s main claim, which the author then "rebuts."

Counterclaim

100

The first thing you should do before reading a long passage on the computer.

Read the questions first

200

When an author uses an object, person, or situation to represent a deeper, abstract idea

Symbolism

200

A sentence, usually in the first paragraph, that states the main claim or purpose of an entire essay.

Thesis 

200

The emotional association or "vibe" a word carries (positive, negative, or neutral).

Connotation

200

A flaw in reasoning that weakens an argument, such as a "Slippery Slope" or "Ad Hominem.

Logical Fallacy

200

This PM3 question type requires you to select two or more correct answers.

Multi-select

300

The difference between what a character thinks is true and what the reader knows to be true.

Irony

300

This rhetorical appeal relies on the speaker’s credibility, ethics, or professional standing.

Ethos

300

Using the words surrounding an unknown term to figure out its meaning.

Context Clues

300

This rhetorical appeal uses logic, statistics, and facts to persuade the audience.

Logos

300

"Part B" questions usually ask you to do this to support your answer in "Part A."

Text Evidence

400

A reference to a well-known person, place, event, or literary work (like the Bible or Greek Mythology)

Allusion

400

Information that can be proven true and is used to support an author's claim.

Evidence

400

A word part added to the beginning of a root word to change its meaning.

Prefix

400

An argument that appeals specifically to the audience's emotions, like pity or fear.

Pathos

400

When two passages are presented together, the test will often ask you to ________ their themes or claims.

Compare and Contrast

500

The perspective from which a story is told, specifically when the narrator knows the thoughts and feelings of all characters.

Third-Person

500

The author’s attitude toward a subject, conveyed through word choice and style.

Tone

500

This occurs when an author uses "double meanings" or wordplay to create humor.

Pun

500

The specific group of people an author intends to reach with their writing.

Target Audience

500

If you aren't sure of an answer, you should do this to narrow down your choices.

Process of Elimination