Comprehensive Peer Editing Strategies for AP Language and Composition

Slide Note
Embed
Share

Engage in a structured peer editing process for an AP Language and Composition essay within 60 minutes. Tasks include MLA formatting, title evaluation, attention getter analysis, thesis and preview review, error identification, and pronoun assessment.


Uploaded on Sep 26, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Peer Editing Carousel AP Language and Composition: Snell Estimated Time: 60 minutes

  2. MLA Formatting (1 minute) Look at the heading Make changes to anything that doesn t follow MLA formatting. Example: ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Ann Dover Mrs. Snell AP Language and Composition 18 January 2013 Scintillating Title Dover 1

  3. PASS

  4. Title (1 minute) Look at the title Make sure their title is original and clever and give suggestions to make it stronger _________________________________ Example: In Cold Blood Final Essay vs. Biting the Bullet

  5. PASS

  6. Attention Getter (1 minute) Read the attention getter Is it effective? How could it be more effective? __________________________ BANNED: Have you ever wondered....

  7. PASS

  8. Thesis and Preview (3 minutes) Read the introduction paragraph Highlight their claim and put a box around their preview statement(s). Give positive or improvement feedback in margin.

  9. PASS

  10. Careless Errors (3 minutes) Read the first page Check for careless errors Put a box around such carlesnesness ________________________________________ Examples: Possessive apostrophes (gun s kill people vs. guns kill people) Misused homonyms Their, There Fragments incomplete sentences without a subject/predicate It ,It s To, Too, Two

  11. PASS

  12. Pronouns (5 minutes) Read the body paragraphs Circle pronouns Put a slash through strings of pronouns over multiple sentences. Put a slash through pronouns used as the first word in a sentence. _______________________________ Examples: He, She, It, Them, They

  13. PASS

  14. Active vs. Passive (5 minutes) Read the body paragraphs Underline helping verbs/ to be verbs was, were, is, was going, would have been going Eliminate as many as possible in favor of more precise, active verbs. ___________________________________ Examples: He did go vs. He went He had thought vs. He thought

  15. PASS

  16. Verb Tense (3 minutes) Pick a paragraph Watch for shifts in verb tense Circle and link such shifts ----------------------------------------------------- Example: Obama speaks to congress regarding how gun control needed reform.

  17. PASS

  18. Quote Sandwich (4 minutes) Focus on their first two body paragraphs Check to make sure they have a quote sandwich Put a check mark next to Top Bread: Introduction to the quote/ lead-in to the quote Meat: Quote itself and Parenthetical Documentation Bottom Bread: Analysis of Quote/ Impact Circle and make notes in margin when a top or bottom piece of bread is soggy or missing.

  19. PASS

  20. Quote Sandwich (3 minutes) Focus on the remaining body paragraphs Check to make sure they have a quote sandwich Put a check mark next to Top Bread: Introduction to the quote/ lead-in to the quote Meat: Quote itself and Parenthetical Documentation Bottom Bread: Analysis of Quote/ Impact Circle and make notes in margin when a top or bottom piece of bread is soggy or missing.

  21. PASS

  22. Transitions (3 minutes) Read the last and first sentence of all paragraphs Is there a smooth transition? Give feedback about improving transition. -------------------------------------------------- Avoid: firstly, secondly, thirdly, lastly ; first, second, third ; in conclusion

  23. PASS

  24. Variety (3 minutes) Read the first words in all sentences of their body paragraphs Draw lines to sentences that begin with the same word.

  25. PASS

  26. Diction (5 minutes) Read the body paragraphs Cross out as many dead, excess words as possible. Example: very, really NO FLUFF! Are there any words that are repeated too often or too closely to each other? Draw lines between such words. Replace vague words with VIVID words Gun control is bad vs. Gun control strips citizens of their second amendment rights.

  27. PASS

  28. Sentence Variety (3 minutes) Pick one paragraph to focus on Count the number of words in each sentence. Are there a variety of sentence lengths? Give feedback in the column. Combine simple sentences to make a compound or complex sentence. _______________________________________ Example: Gun control laws are outdated. +Gun control laws need reform. __________________________________ = Gun control laws are outdated and in need of reform.

  29. PASS

  30. Absolutes (3 minutes) Read the last page Highlight any absolutes used. __________________________________ Examples: Every, Never, Always, Everything, Everybody, Americans, Christians, etc. (these tend to fall into logical fallacy territory)

  31. PASS

  32. Point of View (2 minutes) Look at their introduction and conclusion paragraphs. Circle and Slash any evidence of second person pronouns (you, your, you re) Circle and put a ? next to all personal pronouns (I, me, we, our, us)

  33. PASS

  34. Contractions (3 minutes) Briefly skim the body paragraphs and circle and slash any contractions While they make our life easier, contractions aren t acceptable in academic voice ________________________________ Example: Can t = Cannot Wouldn t= Would not They d = They would

  35. PASS

  36. Parenthetical Citation (3 minutes) Briefly skim the essay and look at all parenthetical citations Be sure that they are properly formatted. _____________________________________ Examples: According to Thomas Smetclock in his Psychology Today article, Gun Control, teachers will not be equipped with fire arms, nor will they be trained (56). Many agree that teachers will not be equipped with fire arms, nor will they be trained (Smetclock 56).

  37. PASS

  38. Coherence (7 minutes) Read the entire essay Put squiggly lines under confusing/out of order/off topic sentences.

Related


More Related Content