2. Final Exam
Final Exam opens on Wednesday, May 10, at 12:00
a.m.
Final Exam closes on Thursday, May 11, at 11:59 p.m.
50 questions
90 minutes
3. Exam Overview
Quiz-based questions
10 questions based on the multiple-choice quizzes in
the course (Lecture on Good)
Module-based questions
5 matching questions drawn from the key terms and
reviews for each module (with 3-8 terms for each
matching segment)
Two reading passages
Non-fiction passages
10 AP-style multiple choice questions for each
passage
4. How to Prepare:
Quiz-Based Questions
Determine which quizzes in your course are multiple-
choice based quizzes (NOT passage-based)
For Lang B: Lecture on Good, rhetorical terms
For Lang AB: subject-verb agreement, rhetorical
terms, and Lecture on Good
Review the section of the module that deals with that
content
Review the quiz questions and be sure you understand
the correct answers—could you explain WHY the
correct answers are correct?
5. How to Prepare:
Module Review Questions
Go through each module one at a time
Identify the key terms (from the first few pages of the
module)
Don’t forget the rhetorical terms (in the section with Julius
Caesar)
Study the definitions
Complete all the review activities in the module
(crossword puzzles, matching, etc.)
6. How to Prepare:
Passage-Based Questions
Review the Multiple-Choice Tests that deal with reading
passages cold and answering the multiple choice
questions
For Lang B: Multiple Choice Test 2
For Lang AB: Multiple Choice Test 1 and Multiple Choice
Test 2
Make sure you understand how to answer questions
like these
Review rhetorical terms
Review the AP-style question stems
7. Practice Questions:
Quiz-Based Questions (AB)
Example 1: Either my sisters or my brother ______
going to the party tonight.
A. is
B. are
Example 2: Each of you ________ an equal chance of
doing well on the exam if you study.
A. has
B. have
8. Practice Questions:
Module Review Questions
(AB)
Example 1: A story that focuses on the human side of
the news and appeals to the readers’ emotions
A. newspeak
B. human interest
C. feature
D. hard news
9. Practice Questions:
Module Review Questions
(AB)
Example 2: terminology that is especially defined in
relationship to a specific group or activity
A. critique
B. cinematography
C. diegesis
D. jargon
10. Practice Questions: Module
Review Questions (B)
Teleology
Logos
Empirical
Ontology
1. The rational principle that
governs and develops the
universe
2. the doctrine that there is
evidence of purpose or design in
the universe
3. The branch of metaphysics
that studies the nature of
existence or being
4. Knowledge gained by
experience and not by a theory
11. Practice Questions:
Module Review Questions
Parallelism
Example 1: She was pretty, sweet, and a good reader.
A. Parallel
B. Not parallel
Example 2: The plan is creative but risky.
A. Parallel
B. Not parallel
12. Practice Questions: Passages
My Lord and Dear Husband,
I commend me unto you. The hour of my death draweth fast
on, and my case being such, the tender love I owe you forceth
me, with a few words, to put you in remembrance of the health
and safeguard of your soul, which you ought to prefer before all
worldly matters, and before the care and tendering of your own
body, for the which you have cast me into many miseries and
yourself into many cares. For my part I do pardon you all, yea, I
do wish and devoutly pray God that He will also pardon you.
For the rest I commend unto you Mary, our daughter,
beseeching you to be a good father unto her, as I heretofore
desired. I entreat you also, on behalf of my maids, to give them
marriage-portions, which is not much, they being but three. For
all my other servants, I solicit a year's pay more than their due,
lest they should be unprovided for. Lastly, do I vow, that mine
eyes desire you above all things.
13. Question 1:
Queen Catherine’s greeting
A. prepares her husband for an outlandish request.
B. establishes her respect for her king first and foremost.
C. illustrates her coolness and anger toward her husband.
D. is intended to show her audience familiarity rather than
formality of communication.
E. illustrates her superiority to her audience through the use of
the possessive pronoun “My.”
14. Question 2:
A modern reader can infer each of the following EXCEPT
A. King Henry has wronged Queen Catherine in some way.
B. King Henry and Queen Catherine are physically separated.
C. Queen Catherine worries about King Henry’s physical
health.
D. Queen Catherine has concerns about King Henry’s role as a
father.
E. Queen Catherine wants to ensure financial provision for
those closest to her.
15. Question 3:
In context, “marriage-portions” are
A. money
B. husbands
C. wedding gifts
D. marriage advice
E. marriage counseling
16. Question 4:
Which set of words best describes Queen Catherine’s
tones in this short letter?
A. effusive, distressed, bitter
B. frank, warning, businesslike
C. nostalgic, serious, frivolous
D. self-pitying, hollow, egotistical
E. vitriolic, condemning, beseeching