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Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

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Page 1: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test

Ms. D’Lee PollockEMLA Department,

Bryan County High SchoolFall 2010

Page 2: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Juniors:• This year, you will take 5 graduation tests

(Writing, ELA, Math, Science, and Social Studies), unless the guidance office tells you otherwise.

• You MUST pass or exempt all five of these exams to graduate.

• The first graduation test is in writing; the others are administered in the spring.

• The writing graduation test is September 28th!

Page 3: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Test Administration

• On September 28th at the beginning of first block, you will report to your testing site assigned by the guidance office.

• You will receive a topic sheet, a planning sheet, drafting paper, and a test booklet on which to write your final draft. Only the final draft is graded, but you are strongly encouraged to go through the full writing process.

• You will have 100 minutes to complete the whole test. You will have to self-monitor how much you spend on each step of the writing process.

• The writing topic will require you to construct a well-developed persuasive essay.

Page 4: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Assessment:

• Your final draft will be graded based on:– Ideas (Content) which counts twice.– Organization (Structure)– Style (Word choice, sentence variety, sentence

arrangement)– Conventions (Grammar, spelling, punctuation,

sentence construction)

Page 5: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Basic Tips for Passing the Writing Test:

• Write a full two pages.• Use NORMAL-sized handwriting. The state only gives you two pages to

write your final draft on, and you must have a full final draft.• Write legibly! If they cannot read it, they cannot grade it. You do not

have to write in cursive, but your final draft does have to be in blue or black ink pen.

• Use paragraphs!• Paragraphs should have 5-6 developed sentences.• If you don’t know for sure how to spell a word, use a synonym.• Use a correct persuasive writing structure!• Use the writing process: plan, draft, edit, revise, draft again!• Do NOT say that both sides are correct or that the topic is unimportant.

Both of these are automatic failures!

Page 6: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

The easiest way to make sure that you pass the writing test is to use one of the following persuasive

writing structures.

This will increase your organization and ideas score!

Page 7: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Structure Option 1 For Students with Writing Disabilities or For

Students who Struggle with Writing:

• Paragraph 1: Introduction (with hook, transitional sentence, and thesis statement)

• Paragraph 2: Reason 1 (supported by two types of evidence)

• Paragraph 3: Reason 2 (supported by two types of evidence)

• Paragraph 4: Conclusion (using SAM – summarize, appeal to emotions or logic, make a plan)

Page 8: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Structure Option 2 For General Ed Students / Most Students:

• Paragraph 1: Introduction (with hook, transitional sentence, and thesis statement)

• Paragraph 2: Reason 1 (supported by two types of evidence)

• Paragraph 3: Reason 2 (supported by two types of evidence)

• Paragraph 4: Counterargument (prove exactly why the other side is wrong or prove their bias)

• Paragraph 5: Conclusion (using SAM – summarize, appeal to emotions or logic, make a plan)

Page 9: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Structure Option 3 For AP Students / Students Seeking to Exceed:

• Paragraph 1: Introduction (with hook, transitional sentence, and thesis statement)

• Paragraph 2: Reason 1 (supported by two types of evidence)• Paragraph 3: Reason 2 (supported by two types of evidence)• Paragraph 4: Counterargument (prove exactly why the other

side is wrong or prove their bias)• Paragraph 5: Antithesis (explain to your audience what you’re

not arguing about)• Paragraph 6: Conclusion (using SAM – summarize, appeal to

emotions or logic, make a plan)

Page 10: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Mastering Structure

Page 11: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Introduction

• Your introduction should be 5-6 sentences.• It should be written as one paragraph.• It should have three essential elements: Hook, Transitional

Sentence, Thesis Statement.• Use one of the five hooks to start your essay: give a fact or

figure, tell a story, define a term, quote someone, or ask questions.

• Your transitional sentence should link the hook and thesis.• Your thesis should show that you agree, disagree, agree under

certain conditions, or disagree under certain conditions. • Do not agree with both sides or state that the topic is

unimportant!• Do not list all of your reasons in the thesis statement.

Page 12: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Reason Paragraphs

• Each reason paragraph should be 5-6 sentences. You should have at least two fully developed reason paragraphs.

• Each reason paragraph should begin with a topic sentence arguing a reason that supports your thesis. Then, you need to prove that reason using at least two types of evidence. Finally, add a concluding sentence that emphasizes the ideas in the paragraph or transitions to the next paragraph.

• Types of evidence to include: analogies, facts, common knowledge, logical reasoning, case study, stories / personal anecdotes, appeals to emotion, rhetorical questions, expert opinions, quotes…

Page 13: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Counterargument

• If you are confused by the counterargument, don’t attempt it!

• Your counterargument should be 5-6 sentences.• It should be written as one paragraph.• You should first admit or identify one or more issues

that “the other side” would argue against you.• Then, you will prove those specific issues or claims

wrong or prove the other side’s bias.• Never ever admit that the other side is right or that

you agree with them!

Page 14: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Conclusion

• Your introduction should be 5-6 sentences.• It should be written as one paragraph.• Do not say “In Conclusion” or “The End.”• It should have two effective conclusion

techniques.• Remember SAM:– Summarize.– Appeal to emotions or logic.– Make a plan.

Page 15: Passing the Georgia High School Writing Test Ms. D’Lee Pollock EMLA Department, Bryan County High School Fall 2010

Reminders:

• Your test is September 28th!• If you need help, come to the

300 hall after school!• Your English teachers are

here, and we will help you!