Friday, September 27, 2019

ACT Prep & College Writing Class Notes -- Week 6 (Sept. 26)

Greetings!

We worked hard today and covered a lot of material.  I started with a short video about random reasons that colleges might not accept an application.  Knowing some of these dynamics can help students be proactive in avoiding the random whims related to the human element and the strategic inclinations of college development.  Some tips that we derived from this video included being memorable in a good way, expressing knowledge of and enthusiasm for the college, and finding advocates connected to the college of choice.  By the way, the videos by Brooke Hanson of SupertutorTV are really helpful, so I've included a link to her YouTube channel.

During the ACT Prep portion of today's class we continued to review for the Math portion of the test.  We reviewed basic strategies to be used for this test:  ballparking, POE (process of elimination), Plugging In, and Plugging in the Answers (PITA).  For each Math test question, students should follow the same Basic Approach:  1) Know the question; 2) Let the answers help; and 3) Break the problem into bite-sized pieces.  A challenge with a number of test questions is two-fold:  geometry questions combine algebraic reasoning, and many questions have so much information that they become word problems.

Our College Essays topic this week included an introduction to the ACT Essay Test.  This test is structured differently than the SAT, but both of the tests are designed with the types of writing required in college in mind.  Rather than analyzing and evaluating the persuasive writing of a passage, students are given a topic that elicits multiple perspectives.  They are to develop their own perspective and then compare it with 3 other perspectives.  In the course of their writing, they are to support their viewpoints with details, logical arguments, and persuasive elements.  A basic outline for this essay would look like this:
I.  Introduction -- state the idea presented in the passage and give your perspective as a thesis statement
II.  Explain your perspective and back it up with  details, logical arguments, and persuasive elements
III.  Compare your perspective with the perspective that you mostly agree with.  Unpack that perspective to explain its strengths and weaknesses.
IV.   Compare your perspective with the perspective that you kind of agree with.  Unpack that perspective to explain its strengths and weaknesses.
V.   Compare your perspective with the perspective that you mostly disagree with.  Unpack that perspective to explain its strengths and weaknesses.
VI,  Conclusion -- Summarize the main points of the body and reassert your perspective.
This type of writing can be really challenging, so lots of practice is important.  The students have a take-home ACT test for next week, and we will continue to brainstorm and talk through multiple tests.

Assignments for Next Week
-- Read through Chapter 12 - Plane Geometry
     -- Be an active reader and flag any math or strategy topics that are causing you trouble.
-- Read through the "Fun Facts" on p. 156 - 159
-- Review the formulas on p. 160 - 161
-- Complete the Geometry Drill on p. 163 and correct it.
-- Read the Summary on p. 164 - 165
-- Take the first ACT Essay Take Home Test
-- NOTE:  A couple of students mentioned that they were missing some homework.  If that is the case for any of you, please check past Class Note emails or blog entries for attachments or links.

Links for This Week
Class Notes


Have a great weekend!
Blessings,
Mrs. Prichard

Saturday, September 21, 2019

ACT Prep & College Writing Class Notes -- Week 5 (Sept. 19)

Greetings!

I began the class with a short writing task.  I asked the students to answer these 3 questions:  1) What are colleges looking for? 2) What do you have to offer to a college? 3) How can you best demonstrate who you are to a college?  After the students took some time to write their responses, we discussed the first question.  Their comments included such characteristics as dedicated, hard-working, committed, academically prepared, unique, etc.  As we progress to the application essay, later in the semester, we will discuss how the students can write about themselves in such a way that colleges will want them as part of their student bodies.

We've started on the Math section of the ACT and worked through Chapter 11, "No More Algebra."  In this chapter, the writers gave us strategies for answering some kinds of problems without specifically using algebra skills.  By using ballparking (a strategy from Ch. 10), POE (process of elimination), Plugging In (choosing workable numbers for variables) and PITA (plugging in answer options into equations), students can often solve problems more quickly.  As I've stated multiple times in class, the #1 enemy in the whole ACT test-taking process is the lack of time.  If students can employ some test-taking strategies that will buy them time, they will have more time for harder questions and will more likely raise their scores.

Following our work with the ACT Math prep, we talked about the SAT Essay.  I shared with them the parameters/rubric used for scoring the test.  The SAT Essay is scored in 3 categories:  Reading, Analysis, and Writing.  Scores range from 1 to 4 and 2 readers will score every essay.  The scores are added, so the student can score between 2 and 24 points on the SAT Essay.  For next week, students are to take home the SAT #1 Take Home test that they did for this week, and using the scoring definitions and the samples of scored essays, they are to score their own essays.  They are also to take SAT #2 Take Home Essay.

Note:  In the section below of helpful links, I've included links for some helpful math-related videos and for a link to the ACT policy about calculators.  If a student is reading through the Cracking the ACT book and finds that he/she needs more explanations or more practice, theses links would be really helpful.

Assignments for Next Week
-- Read Ch. 11 "No More Algebra"
-- Take the Algebra Drill (p. 130)
-- Correct the Algebra Drill 
-- Read handouts about scoring the SAT and sample essays
-- Score your SAT #1 essay
-- Take SAT #2 Take Home Essay
-- Extra Credit -- Score SAT #2

Links for This Week
Class Notes
Helpful Math-related Videos
Note:  Some of the videos are short explanations of strategies, and some are instructional videos that go through actual past tests.  There are also links for information about calculator policies and calculator use. 
     ACT Calculator Policy (pdf)
     15 Concepts you need to know
ACT Math 2018 (act.magoosh.com) (7:30)
   Strategies and common types of problems
     Using the Answer Choices
    Actual Problems from the Official ACT Prep Pack 2019-2020
Note:  The instructor in this video uses his calculator a lot, so if you are unfamiliar with various possibilities of your calculator, this would be a good video to watch to help you become more familiar.
Detailed explanations of problems from an ACT Math test

Saturday, September 14, 2019

ACT Prep & College Essays Class Notes -- Week 4 (Sept. 12)

Greetings!

We worked hard today and covered a lot of material.  I began the class with a Quick Write for which I asked the students to list the strategies that they remembered about taking the ACT.  They were also to write their thoughts about the Practice English Test.  Some of the students had run out of time for the test and some didn't.  Most of them felt that determining whether the question was a Now, Later, or Never question was a good strategy and helped with time management.

About the Practice Tests and Chapter Drills -- I will check to make sure that the students finish these, and it is important that they correct the tests and drills.  A very important part of getting ready for the ACT is understanding how the test works, and working through the answers is extremely helpful.

Our next section of the ACT is the Math Test.  This is always the second section of the test.  It is a 60 minute test that includes 60 test questions about Algebra, Geometry, Trigonometry, and Advanced Math.  I gave an overview of Chapters 9 and 10.  

Our College Essays topic this week included another SAT Essay.  For the SAT Essay, students will be reading and analyzing a passage as to its effectiveness.    This week as homework students are to finish one of the sample SAT Essays.  Next week we will discuss the scoring.

Assignments for Next Week
-- Read Chapters 9 & 10
-- Quiz yourself on the Vocabulary
-- Fundamentals Drill on p. 113 (Answers on p. 388)
-- Practice SAT Essay Exam (50 minutes)

Links for This Week
Class Notes


Have a great weekend!
Blessings,
Mrs. Prichard

Friday, September 6, 2019

ACT Prep & College Writing Class Notes -- Week 3 (Sept. 5)

Greetings!

We started this week in class with a little bit of a mystery -- where did Mrs. Prichard's reading glasses disappear to?  Somehow between the Grace Cafe and the classroom I lost my glasses.  We prayed, and Mrs. Johnson appeared at the door with my missing glasses.  

I dispensed with the Quick Write and Commonly Misused Words section of the class because I wanted more time for our SAT Essay discussion.  Most of the students will not take this test, but I feel that they engage in important critical thinking skills that will benefit them in higher education situations.  The SAT Essay requires students to read and analyze how effective and persuasive a particular piece of writing was.  As they read a prompt, they consider how the writer uses specific facts/data, logical reasoning, or persuasive style elements.  For this week, we used a sample prompt which was a transcript of a speech that Helen Keller gave in New York.  We discussed it paragraph by paragraph and then considered how we might structure a response.  I was really pleased with the thoughtful comments of each of the students.  Students were given the Take Home SAT Test #1, and they can do that test this week or next week.  

After our SAT discussion, we focused our attention on the ACT.  Last week and this week we've been learning strategies for the English portion of the test.  As your students can tell you, this English portion is 45 minutes long and includes 5 separate passages, each with 15 questions (75 questions total).  The questions will be a mix of grammar, usage, punctuation, style, and rhetoric topics. 

The chapters in the Cracking the ACT book are a blend of strategies for working the test and review of those topics the students will encounter.  I've encouraged the students to be active readers and to pay special attention to the areas that seem confusing or troublesome.  They might encounter information that they've never learned.  When this is the case, they should do some research to learn these topics, ask parents for help, send me an email, or ask in class for more information or for whole class review.  Chances are, they won't be the only ones with questions.

One of the homework assignments for this week is to take the Practice English Test.  For this, students are to go to Practice Test #2 in the back of their books.  Each test has a bubble in sheet; students should either tear that out or make a photo copy.  I feel that it's important to practice filling in those bubbles as they take the test, so they are NOT to write their answers on a separate piece of  notebook paper.  The Practice English Test should be taken in a quiet, undisturbed place.  No music or other distractions.  If your house is on the noisy side, headphones could be used to block out extraneous sounds.  This is also a timed test, so set a timer for 45 minutes.  

Assignments for Next Week-- Read Ch. 7 & 8 -- Be active by making notes, highlighting, and marking sections
-- English Drill 2 on p. 70 - 71 (Answers in Ch. 25, p. 385)
     Note:  These drills will need to be handed in or check in class
-- Rhetorical Skills Drill on p. 84 - 85 (Answers in Ch. 25, p. 387 - 388)
-- PRACTICE ENGLISH TEST -- 45 minutes in a quiet place
-- Take Home SAT Essay Test #1 -- due in 2 weeks

Links for This Week
Class Notes
Videos

Have a great weekend!
Mrs. Prichard

ACT Prep Class Notes -- Week 15 (May 5)

  Greetings! The students have done it!  They've reviewed (and re-reviewed) all of the strategies for taking the ACT.  I recently talked...