A. C. E. the Short answer on STAAR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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A. C. E. the Short answer on STAAR

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Looking at another example In this excerpt from Anne of Green Gables, do you think the stage directions enhance your understanding of the scene? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A. C. E. the Short answer on STAAR


1
A. C. E. the Short answer on STAAR
2
  • To answer the Short Answer questions on the new
    STAAR test well enough to get a passing score of
    2, you will need to do the following things.

3
Answer the Question
  • Answer directly using the same wording from the
    question this will form your topic sentence.

4
Cite evidence
  • Cite evidence from the selection to support your
    answer. This needs to be a blended or embedded
    quotation (concrete detail). Do not just
    paraphrase this too often turns into just a plot
    summary.

5
Explain and expand your evidence
  • Explain and expand your evidence to support your
    answer (add commentary).

6
Sample Question
  • How does the narrators attitude toward his
    grandfather change over the course of the summer?

7
  • Notice how this is a two part question, and
    therefore you will need to provide a two part
    answer.
  • What was the narrators initial attitude toward
    his grandfather?
  • What change occurs in the attitude of the
    narrator?

8
Answer the question directly
  • Incorporate the question into your answer.
  • Use strong word choice and be specific.
  • Answer the question that has been stated

9
Sample Answer
10
  • The narrators attitude changes toward the
    grandfather over the course of the summer from
    his being ungrateful to be able to spend time
    with his grandfather to his being appreciative
    of this family member.

11
This sentence provides the A part of A. C. E.
  • The question has been restated.
  • A direct answer has been given to the question.
  • This is the topic sentence of your paragraph.

12
  • In the beginning of the story, the narrator says,
    I hate having to take care of my Grandpa
    indicating a dislike for being around him.
    However, when the summer is over, he excitedly
    writes in his journal, Grandpa used to be a
    basketball star! Thats so cool that he can teach
    me.

13
These two sentences provide the C part of A. C.
E.
  • A quote is provided to show how the narrator
    feels both in the beginning of the story and
    another is provided to show how his attitude
    changes.

14
  • This demonstrates the narrators attitude change
    as he learns new aspects of his grandfathers
    life. By the end of the summer, the narrator
    realizes that his grandfather is not just a
    burden he actually has the ability to affect the
    narrators life in a positive way.

15
These sentences provide the E part of A. C. E.
  • Directly tell your reader how the evidence you
    have just provided proves your answer.
  • You can begin our E with phrases such as
    This emphasizes, This demonstrates, This
    signifies that
  • This sentence explains how the quotes supports
    the answer to better prove the answer.

16
Putting it all together
  • The narrators attitude changes toward the
    grandfather over the course of the summer from
    his being ungrateful to be able to spend time
    with his grandfather to his being appreciative
    of this family member. In the beginning of the
    story, the narrator says, I hate having to take
    care of my Grandpa indicating a dislike for
    being around him. However, when the summer is
    over, he excitedly writes in his journal,
    Grandpa used to be a basketball star! Thats so
    cool that he can teach me. This demonstrates the
    narrators attitude change as he learns new
    aspects of his grandfathers life. By the end of
    the summer, the narrator realizes that his
    grandfather is not just a burden he actually has
    the ability to affect the narrators life in a
    positive way.

17
Looking at another example
  • In this excerpt from Anne of Green Gables, do you
    think the stage directions enhance your
    understanding of the scene? Explain your answer
    and support it with evidence from the selection.

18
3 Point Answer
  • The stage directions most definitely help to
    present an image of the scene in the play. In a
    short story or novel, authors use words to
    describe the setting that the characters are in,
    which helps to paint a visual image in the
    readers mind. When the stage directions offer
    descriptions like a small figure, a child, sits
    on a battered suitcase, directions as to who a
    character is turned talking to as in to Anne,
    and directions as to how a line should be
    delivered as in Puzzled, these help the reader
    see what is happening, like descriptions in a
    novel or a short story. With these directions,
    the reader can definitely see the play being
    acted out in their minds, which helps them to
    understand the scenes better and connect with the
    characters just by reading.

19
Short Answer for Paired Selections
  • How are the themes of Those Winter Sundays and
    All My Babies are Gone Now similar? Support
    your answer with evidence from both selections.

20
Look at what the question is asking exactly
  • You must first figure out what the theme is of
    these two selections. What controlling idea
    appears in both?
  • Then you must find a quote from both selections
    that prove that this theme exists.

21
3 Point Answer
  • Both themes are similar in the sense that both
    speakers have a feeling of remorse for not being
    able to appreciate who they had in front of them
    until the moment had passed and could not be
    recaptured. The adult speaker in Those Winter
    Sundays says of his fathers sacrifices, No one
    ever thanked him after acknowledging the his
    father with cracked hands that ached from labor
    would wake up in the blueblack cold to provide
    warmth for his family, yet the speaker, as a
    child, did not seem grateful for it. In All My
    Babies are Gone, time flew by too quickly for
    this mother as she looks at her three
    almost-adults, she realizes that she did not get
    to cherish her three treasures because she did
    not live in the moment enough, and she wishes
    she had treasured the doing a little more and
    the getting it done a little less. Both speakers
    realize what they missed only after it is too
    late.
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