Crash Course AP Literature

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

A: I READ AND UNDERSTOOD THE TEXT. WHY DID I


GET A LOW SCORE?


Even if you have read the passage correctly and you’ve accurately grasped the main point of the text,
you still may fail in your analysis if you have any of the problems listed below:


Problem

The writer.

..


Solution/Strategy

Fails to
support claims
with textual
evidence.

You cannot simply state claims without proving them. If your reader constantly
needs proof, you have not done your job. If you say something is so, then you have
to show how it is so by citing your proof from the text.

Relies on only
one or two
claims and
simply repeats
those again and
again.

Even if the points are excellent, repeating them again and again shows you don’t
really have anything else in your bag of tricks. If you find yourself relying on one or
two claims, go back to the text. What did you miss?

Provides too
little analysis.

The writer doesn’t go far enough. Some students are happy with a minimum effort.
This attitude will not help you earn a high score. You should never just say, “good
enough.”

Is
disorganized.
His/her points
are
disconnected,
illogically
place and
inconsistently
argued.

Disorganization seems to be the result of not having thought your essay out at the
beginning. It is important to make a mini-outline in the margin of your page. While
you may not follow it exactly, this outline will help you reconnect to thoughts you
had and points you wanted to make.

It should also help you avoid digression.

Find a good list of transitional words and phrases and learn to integrate them
naturally into your writing. This will help you with organization.

Has too many
errors, such as
blatant
misspellings
(author’s name,
title,
character’s

If a word is in the prompt or the passage, there is no excuse for misspelling it.
Simply give a visual backward glance before proceeding. Misspelling easy words
is not good for AP-level students. Be careful. If you’re using a difficult word, one
you can use fluently when you speak, but you simply forget how to spell it, put a
little “(sp.)” behind it, indicating that you forgot. It’s one thing to misspell
“ignominious” and another to write “metafor.”

You simply must know how to write complete and fluent sentences and punctuate
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