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ACT English vs. YOU
How to fight the battle without
      losing your cool
Goals for this week:

1. Learn and apply specific grammar and style skills that
   are found on the ACT:
•   Be concise in writing
•   Use the correct possessive and apostrophe forms within a sentence
•   Combine and coordinate ideas in sentences correctly
•   Correct errors in sentence structure and problems with clarity
•   Know how additions or deletions can improve or change an essay
•   Identify the purpose of an entire essay, paragraphs, or words/phrases
You make it happen!

2. Be more confident in my ability to “attack”
a question and read for information/errors
on the ACT English section
3. Reflect on my own skills to determine what
I need to improve or which strategies work
for me
What you need to know to make quick points on
                  the ACT


Six Skills to improve your English score by 10
                    points
                (10? Really?)
 Mr. Dan McDonell, College Boards Review
        (revised by Jennifer Sutton)
Six Skills

#1: Concision
#2: Personal Possessive Pronouns
#3: Possessive Forms
#4: SENTENCE COMBINING
#5: Keep your focus on the question
#6: 100% Rule

And, of course, read the entire test! This is not the
time to skim.
Why This Matters

The five strategies in this presentation
represent 38 questions on the ACT practice
exam 2MC. In a typical test administration,
students will get 50% of those correct. Had
students gotten all of them correct, their
scores would have increased approximately
19 raw points or 8-10 scaled points. This
alone would result in an overall composite
score increase of up to 2.5 points.
Strategy 1-Concision

There are between 8-12 concision questions on any
exam. ACT believes good writing is tight and direct.
Students too often think that adding words makes their
writing appear smarter. They need to understand
KISS- Keep It Simple. You can spot them by either the
progressively shorter or longer answer choices in which
words are added or deleted.
KISS
             Keep It Simple, Stupid

ACT believes that good writing is clear and to the point. A
good writer does not use more words when he or she can
use fewer. Therefore, shorter is usually better. In fact,
whenever the choice is OMIT or DELETE the underlined
portion in questions which are obviously dealing with
concision, you should be prejudiced towards that answer
until you can prove otherwise.
Begin with the shortest answer in concision questions. If
you cannot find a reason not to select it, then you should
opt for it. A warning though, this only holds for concision
questions, and then, not all of the time.
Question 6—shorter is better,
    avoid redundancy!
That’s a crucial part of the preparation to get
ready for morel hunting, because often the
same woods that yield morels produce
poisonous mushrooms, too.
4.F. NO CHANGE
   G. to make oneself fit
   H. of someone planning to be ready
   J. DELETE the underlined portion.
Question 6—shorter is better,
    avoid redundancy!
That’s a crucial part of the preparation to get
ready for morel hunting, because often the
same woods that yield morels produce
poisonous mushrooms, too.
4.F. NO CHANGE
   G. to make oneself fit
   H. of someone planning to be ready
   J. DELETE the underlined portion.
Question 32—shorter is better,
     but it has to fit the meaning!
Historians speculate that one of the world’s
oldest toys is the yo-yo, though they know for
sure that the oldest toy is the doll.
4. A. NO CHANGE
   B. yo-yo, but it hard to know for sure, considering the
yo-yo’s history.
   C. yo-yo, though no one is certain why some ancient
yo-yos were made out of terra cotta, a fragile clay.
   D. yo-yo.
Question 32—shorter is better,
     but it has to fit the meaning!
Historians speculate that one of the world’s
oldest toys is the yo-yo, though they know for
sure that the oldest toy is the doll.
4. A. NO CHANGE
   B. yo-yo, but it hard to know for sure, considering the
yo-yo’s history.
   C. yo-yo, though no one is certain why some ancient
yo-yos were made out of terra cotta, a fragile clay.
   D. yo-yo.
Can you identify concision
       questions?
Skim through the test to see if you can
find questions that are asking whether
or not more or less words are needed.
What are the features of these
questions? How would you describe
them?
LVHS Practice Test 1165D
4, 6, 18, 31, 32, 37, 56, 58, 61, 66
In pairs, review and discuss the
“thinking” behind why an answer is
correct or not.
Share your new insights about
“conciseness”?
Strategy 2-Personal Possessive Pronouns


Know the difference between it’s (= it is, a
contraction) its (the possessive pronoun) and its’
(which does not appear in English, but which ACT
offers as a choice with maddening regularity in
order to confuse students. Think his, her, its, their
—none of these take apostrophes. This question
appears usually three times on the exam.
Strategy 3- Learn the Possessive Forms




Since ACT can have as many as three or
four possessive questions on the exam, it
helps to understand the possessive form
of a noun.
Possessive forms

A possessive form of a noun
signifies that the noun owns
something:
A musician's talent
A woman's ambition
Most importantly for the ACT—
is the noun or pronoun singular
or plural?
Singular possessive

 The possessive form of a singular noun
 is an apostrophe followed by the letter
 "s."
 Kramer's hair
 Daphne's patience
 the car's engine
Words ending with s, z or x generally omit
 the "s."
 Dr. Seuss' sense of humor
Plural possessive

For plural nouns ending in "s," add
only an apostrophe:
 Singers' voices
The cousins' favorite uncle
 For plural nouns not ending in "s,"
add an apostrophe and "s."
 Men's clothing
Children's books
Question 26—Decide whether
   it is possessive or not
…and they’ve hiked to the overwhelming
sites on the Mexican Plateau…
17. A. NO CHANGE
    B. site’s
    C. sites’
    D. sites,
Question 26—Decide whether
   it is possessive or not
…and they’ve hiked to the overwhelming
sites on the Mexican Plateau…
17. A. NO CHANGE
    B. site’s (nothing belongs to the site)
    C. sites’ (not possessive or plural)
    D. sites, (not possessive and no
comma needed)
Question 49—should it be
     possessive or not?
When she was fifteen, she broke the
men’s and women’s record’s for
swimming the English Channel…
17. A. NO CHANGE
    B. records
    C. records’
    D. records,
Question 49—should it be
     possessive or not
When she was fifteen, she broke the
men’s and women’s record’s for
swimming the English Channel…
49. A. NO CHANGE (not possessive!)
    B. records
    C. records’ (not possessive!)
    D. records, (no comma needed)
Bell Ringer
Structure as many sentences as you
can, using correct punctuation, from
these parts of a sentence:
Despite wanting to become an artist
Felix enrolls in law school
Felix/he follows his parents’ wishes
Strategy 4-The Most Important Skill
              Sentence Combining
Know how to combine two sentences into
one. Variations on this question can appear
as many as 10-12 times on any exam. Often
the question is posed as a “Which of the
following is NOT an acceptable alternative
to the underlined portion.”
     Let’s review how we can do this.
Punctuation Strategy
How ACT Combines Two Sentences
Use a period at the end of one and start the other with
a capital letter.
Use a semi-colon between the two independent clauses.
Use a comma with one of the FANBOYS (for, and, nor,
but, or, yet and so). These are also called coordinating
conjunctions.
Make one a dependent and the other an independent
clause. (use: who, which, that)
Use a colon to provide a definition or list.
Use a dash to provide a dramatic statement.
Use a compound verb (one subject doing two or more
things).
Compound Sentence
    Use a comma before the coordinating
    conjunction (FANBOYS).
                              for
                              and
                              nor
                              but
    Sentence ,                 or      sentence .
                              yet
                               so
Felix follows his parents’ wishes, and he enrolls in law school.
Opener
  Use a comma to set off an opener
  (single words, phrases, or clauses that
  introduces or opens the sentence—
  before an independent clause)

  Opener , sentence                .
Despite wanting to become an artist, Felix enrolls in
law school.
Interrupter
    Use two commas to set off an
    interrupter (parenthetical or appositive
    phrases with nonessential information).


   Sent , interrupter , ence .
Felix, despite wanting to become an artist, enrolls in
law school.
Closer
Use a comma to set off a closer
(additional information that modifies or
describes the independent clause)

      Sentence             , closer .
 Felix enrolls in law school, despite wanting
 to become an artist.
Question 8—To combine or
       not to combine?
Every spring, there’s a contest where I
live in northern Minnesota to see who can
find the most morels, this year, I’m going
to enter.
1.F. NO CHANGE
   G. morels this
   H. morels. This
   J. morels, because this
Question 8—To combine or
       not to combine?
Every spring, there’s a contest where I
live in northern Minnesota to see who can
find the most morels, this year, I’m going
to enter.
1.F. NO CHANGE (comma splice)
   G. morels this (run-on)
   H. morels. This
   J. morels, because this (makes no
sense)
Question 36—NOT or LEAST
         acceptable
Which of the following alternatives to the
underlined portion would NOT be
acceptable?
36. F. States. Flores
  G. States, and he
  H. States; he
  J. States he
Question 36—NOT or LEAST
         acceptable
Which of the following alternatives to the
underlined portion would NOT be
acceptable?
36. F. States. Flores (2 Sentences)
  G. States, and he (FANBOYS)
  H. States; he (the same as F)
  J. States he (run-on)
Simple way to eliminate
If one answer has a period and the
other, a semi-colon, and everything else
is the same, THESE ARE NOT THE
CORRECT CHOICES. THEY ARE
THE SAME!!
LVHS ACT Practice 1165D
8, 9, 15, 20, 22, 24, 28, 29, 33, 36, 40,
41, 47, 52, 54, 59, 62, 72
Strategy 5
Keep your focus on the question
When reading the rhetoric questions,
which ask you to consider making
changes to what is written to create a
certain effect, underline the key
phrase you are to address so as not to
lose focus on what the question asks.
Question 5—Most relevant
5. Given that all are true, which one provides
the most relevant and specific information at
this point in the essay?
A.NO CHANGE
B.in between trips to and from the woods
C.to gain the expertise I wanted and needed at
this point
D.very carefully on the topic that pertains to the
activity.
Question 5—Most relevant
5. Given that all are true, which one provides
the most relevant and specific information at
this point in the essay?
A.NO CHANGE
B.in between trips to and from the woods (not relevant)
C.to gain the expertise I wanted and needed at this
point (not specific)
D.very carefully on the topic that pertains to the activity.
(too vague)
Question 34—Key words
34. Given that all the choices are true, which
one provides the most effective evidence of the
long history of enthusiasm for the yo-yo in the
Philippines?
F. NO CHANGE (have been a national pastime for
centuries)
G. have been a popular hobby for years.
H. were carved out of fine wood or animal horns.
J. resembled a toy that was popular in ancient China.
Question 34—Key words
34. Given that all the choices are true, which one
provides the most effective evidence of the long
history of enthusiasm for the yo-yo in the
Philippines?
F. NO CHANGE (have been a national pastime for centuries)—
National Pastime=enthusiasm; Centuries is LONG
G. have been a popular hobby for years. (no enthusiasm)
H. were carved out of fine wood or animal horns. (not relevant)
J. resembled a toy that was popular in ancient China. (not relevant)
LVHS Practice 1165D
3, 5, 11, 34, 51, 55, 60, 62
Strategy 6
       Apply the 100% Rule
ACT wants you to select the correct
answer from among choices that might
be correct. To do this, ask yourself if the
choice you have selected is 100%
correct in what it says. No portion of
your choice should fail to meet this
requirement.
Question 15—Addition
50. At this point, the writer is considering adding the following true
statement:
At its widest, the English Channel spans a distance of 150 miles.
Should the writer make this addition here?
A.Yes, because it reinforces the point that Cox swam a great
distance across the English Channel.
B.Yes, because it provides a logical transition to the rest of the
paragraph.
C.No, because the English Channel is only one place that Cox had
swum before going to Antarctica.
D.No, because it is irrelevant to the focus of the essay at this point.
Question 15—Addition
50. At this point, the writer is considering adding the following true
statement:
At its widest, the English Channel spans a distance of 150 miles.
Should the writer make this addition here?
A.Yes, because it reinforces the point that Cox swam a great
distance across the English Channel. (but who cares?)
B.Yes, because it provides a logical transition to the rest of the
paragraph. (no it does not)
C.No, because the English Channel is only one place that Cox had
swum before going to Antarctica. (Not true)
D.No, because it is irrelevant to the focus of the essay at this point.
 (100% correct)
Question 42—Delete?
42. If the writer were to delete the preceding sentence,
the essay would primarily lose information that:
F. proves Duncan was uncertain what would be the best
way to promote the yo-yo.
G. reveals how quickly demonstrations by Duncan Yo-
Yo professionals gained popularity.
H. illustrates one creative strategy that Duncan used to
promote the yo-yo.
J. suggests how Duncan Yo-Yo Professionals were
chosen fo the job.
Question 42—Delete?
42. If the writer were to delete the preceding sentence,
the essay would primarily lose information that:
F. proves Duncan was uncertain what would be the best
way to promote the yo-yo. (not 100%)
G. reveals how quickly demonstrations by Duncan Yo-
Yo professionals gained popularity. (not 100%)
H. illustrates one creative strategy that Duncan used to
promote the yo-yo.
J. suggests how Duncan Yo-Yo Professionals were
chosen for the job. (no proof)
Add or delete?
Either write or read the sentence in your head
as if you made the changes
What are the key words in the question?
Before reading the responses, what is your
instinct? Does it work or not?
Yes—then read the Yes answers.
No—then read the No answers.
Which is 100% true and matches your
thinking?
LVHS ACT Practice 1165D
42, 50, 61, 75
Beware the NOT or the LEAST


Questions 1, 40, 36, 40, 64, 69
One of the answers is doing its own
thing. Can you figure out which
one?

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Lvhs english 1165 d review new

  • 1. ACT English vs. YOU How to fight the battle without losing your cool
  • 2. Goals for this week: 1. Learn and apply specific grammar and style skills that are found on the ACT: • Be concise in writing • Use the correct possessive and apostrophe forms within a sentence • Combine and coordinate ideas in sentences correctly • Correct errors in sentence structure and problems with clarity • Know how additions or deletions can improve or change an essay • Identify the purpose of an entire essay, paragraphs, or words/phrases
  • 3. You make it happen! 2. Be more confident in my ability to “attack” a question and read for information/errors on the ACT English section 3. Reflect on my own skills to determine what I need to improve or which strategies work for me
  • 4. What you need to know to make quick points on the ACT Six Skills to improve your English score by 10 points (10? Really?) Mr. Dan McDonell, College Boards Review (revised by Jennifer Sutton)
  • 5. Six Skills #1: Concision #2: Personal Possessive Pronouns #3: Possessive Forms #4: SENTENCE COMBINING #5: Keep your focus on the question #6: 100% Rule And, of course, read the entire test! This is not the time to skim.
  • 6. Why This Matters The five strategies in this presentation represent 38 questions on the ACT practice exam 2MC. In a typical test administration, students will get 50% of those correct. Had students gotten all of them correct, their scores would have increased approximately 19 raw points or 8-10 scaled points. This alone would result in an overall composite score increase of up to 2.5 points.
  • 7.
  • 8. Strategy 1-Concision There are between 8-12 concision questions on any exam. ACT believes good writing is tight and direct. Students too often think that adding words makes their writing appear smarter. They need to understand KISS- Keep It Simple. You can spot them by either the progressively shorter or longer answer choices in which words are added or deleted.
  • 9. KISS Keep It Simple, Stupid ACT believes that good writing is clear and to the point. A good writer does not use more words when he or she can use fewer. Therefore, shorter is usually better. In fact, whenever the choice is OMIT or DELETE the underlined portion in questions which are obviously dealing with concision, you should be prejudiced towards that answer until you can prove otherwise. Begin with the shortest answer in concision questions. If you cannot find a reason not to select it, then you should opt for it. A warning though, this only holds for concision questions, and then, not all of the time.
  • 10. Question 6—shorter is better, avoid redundancy! That’s a crucial part of the preparation to get ready for morel hunting, because often the same woods that yield morels produce poisonous mushrooms, too. 4.F. NO CHANGE G. to make oneself fit H. of someone planning to be ready J. DELETE the underlined portion.
  • 11. Question 6—shorter is better, avoid redundancy! That’s a crucial part of the preparation to get ready for morel hunting, because often the same woods that yield morels produce poisonous mushrooms, too. 4.F. NO CHANGE G. to make oneself fit H. of someone planning to be ready J. DELETE the underlined portion.
  • 12. Question 32—shorter is better, but it has to fit the meaning! Historians speculate that one of the world’s oldest toys is the yo-yo, though they know for sure that the oldest toy is the doll. 4. A. NO CHANGE B. yo-yo, but it hard to know for sure, considering the yo-yo’s history. C. yo-yo, though no one is certain why some ancient yo-yos were made out of terra cotta, a fragile clay. D. yo-yo.
  • 13. Question 32—shorter is better, but it has to fit the meaning! Historians speculate that one of the world’s oldest toys is the yo-yo, though they know for sure that the oldest toy is the doll. 4. A. NO CHANGE B. yo-yo, but it hard to know for sure, considering the yo-yo’s history. C. yo-yo, though no one is certain why some ancient yo-yos were made out of terra cotta, a fragile clay. D. yo-yo.
  • 14. Can you identify concision questions? Skim through the test to see if you can find questions that are asking whether or not more or less words are needed. What are the features of these questions? How would you describe them?
  • 15. LVHS Practice Test 1165D 4, 6, 18, 31, 32, 37, 56, 58, 61, 66 In pairs, review and discuss the “thinking” behind why an answer is correct or not. Share your new insights about “conciseness”?
  • 16. Strategy 2-Personal Possessive Pronouns Know the difference between it’s (= it is, a contraction) its (the possessive pronoun) and its’ (which does not appear in English, but which ACT offers as a choice with maddening regularity in order to confuse students. Think his, her, its, their —none of these take apostrophes. This question appears usually three times on the exam.
  • 17. Strategy 3- Learn the Possessive Forms Since ACT can have as many as three or four possessive questions on the exam, it helps to understand the possessive form of a noun.
  • 18. Possessive forms A possessive form of a noun signifies that the noun owns something: A musician's talent A woman's ambition Most importantly for the ACT— is the noun or pronoun singular or plural?
  • 19. Singular possessive The possessive form of a singular noun is an apostrophe followed by the letter "s." Kramer's hair Daphne's patience the car's engine Words ending with s, z or x generally omit the "s." Dr. Seuss' sense of humor
  • 20. Plural possessive For plural nouns ending in "s," add only an apostrophe: Singers' voices The cousins' favorite uncle For plural nouns not ending in "s," add an apostrophe and "s." Men's clothing Children's books
  • 21. Question 26—Decide whether it is possessive or not …and they’ve hiked to the overwhelming sites on the Mexican Plateau… 17. A. NO CHANGE B. site’s C. sites’ D. sites,
  • 22. Question 26—Decide whether it is possessive or not …and they’ve hiked to the overwhelming sites on the Mexican Plateau… 17. A. NO CHANGE B. site’s (nothing belongs to the site) C. sites’ (not possessive or plural) D. sites, (not possessive and no comma needed)
  • 23. Question 49—should it be possessive or not? When she was fifteen, she broke the men’s and women’s record’s for swimming the English Channel… 17. A. NO CHANGE B. records C. records’ D. records,
  • 24. Question 49—should it be possessive or not When she was fifteen, she broke the men’s and women’s record’s for swimming the English Channel… 49. A. NO CHANGE (not possessive!) B. records C. records’ (not possessive!) D. records, (no comma needed)
  • 25. Bell Ringer Structure as many sentences as you can, using correct punctuation, from these parts of a sentence: Despite wanting to become an artist Felix enrolls in law school Felix/he follows his parents’ wishes
  • 26. Strategy 4-The Most Important Skill Sentence Combining Know how to combine two sentences into one. Variations on this question can appear as many as 10-12 times on any exam. Often the question is posed as a “Which of the following is NOT an acceptable alternative to the underlined portion.” Let’s review how we can do this.
  • 27. Punctuation Strategy How ACT Combines Two Sentences Use a period at the end of one and start the other with a capital letter. Use a semi-colon between the two independent clauses. Use a comma with one of the FANBOYS (for, and, nor, but, or, yet and so). These are also called coordinating conjunctions. Make one a dependent and the other an independent clause. (use: who, which, that) Use a colon to provide a definition or list. Use a dash to provide a dramatic statement. Use a compound verb (one subject doing two or more things).
  • 28. Compound Sentence Use a comma before the coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS). for and nor but Sentence , or sentence . yet so Felix follows his parents’ wishes, and he enrolls in law school.
  • 29. Opener Use a comma to set off an opener (single words, phrases, or clauses that introduces or opens the sentence— before an independent clause) Opener , sentence . Despite wanting to become an artist, Felix enrolls in law school.
  • 30. Interrupter Use two commas to set off an interrupter (parenthetical or appositive phrases with nonessential information). Sent , interrupter , ence . Felix, despite wanting to become an artist, enrolls in law school.
  • 31. Closer Use a comma to set off a closer (additional information that modifies or describes the independent clause) Sentence , closer . Felix enrolls in law school, despite wanting to become an artist.
  • 32. Question 8—To combine or not to combine? Every spring, there’s a contest where I live in northern Minnesota to see who can find the most morels, this year, I’m going to enter. 1.F. NO CHANGE G. morels this H. morels. This J. morels, because this
  • 33. Question 8—To combine or not to combine? Every spring, there’s a contest where I live in northern Minnesota to see who can find the most morels, this year, I’m going to enter. 1.F. NO CHANGE (comma splice) G. morels this (run-on) H. morels. This J. morels, because this (makes no sense)
  • 34. Question 36—NOT or LEAST acceptable Which of the following alternatives to the underlined portion would NOT be acceptable? 36. F. States. Flores G. States, and he H. States; he J. States he
  • 35. Question 36—NOT or LEAST acceptable Which of the following alternatives to the underlined portion would NOT be acceptable? 36. F. States. Flores (2 Sentences) G. States, and he (FANBOYS) H. States; he (the same as F) J. States he (run-on)
  • 36. Simple way to eliminate If one answer has a period and the other, a semi-colon, and everything else is the same, THESE ARE NOT THE CORRECT CHOICES. THEY ARE THE SAME!!
  • 37. LVHS ACT Practice 1165D 8, 9, 15, 20, 22, 24, 28, 29, 33, 36, 40, 41, 47, 52, 54, 59, 62, 72
  • 38. Strategy 5 Keep your focus on the question When reading the rhetoric questions, which ask you to consider making changes to what is written to create a certain effect, underline the key phrase you are to address so as not to lose focus on what the question asks.
  • 39. Question 5—Most relevant 5. Given that all are true, which one provides the most relevant and specific information at this point in the essay? A.NO CHANGE B.in between trips to and from the woods C.to gain the expertise I wanted and needed at this point D.very carefully on the topic that pertains to the activity.
  • 40. Question 5—Most relevant 5. Given that all are true, which one provides the most relevant and specific information at this point in the essay? A.NO CHANGE B.in between trips to and from the woods (not relevant) C.to gain the expertise I wanted and needed at this point (not specific) D.very carefully on the topic that pertains to the activity. (too vague)
  • 41. Question 34—Key words 34. Given that all the choices are true, which one provides the most effective evidence of the long history of enthusiasm for the yo-yo in the Philippines? F. NO CHANGE (have been a national pastime for centuries) G. have been a popular hobby for years. H. were carved out of fine wood or animal horns. J. resembled a toy that was popular in ancient China.
  • 42. Question 34—Key words 34. Given that all the choices are true, which one provides the most effective evidence of the long history of enthusiasm for the yo-yo in the Philippines? F. NO CHANGE (have been a national pastime for centuries)— National Pastime=enthusiasm; Centuries is LONG G. have been a popular hobby for years. (no enthusiasm) H. were carved out of fine wood or animal horns. (not relevant) J. resembled a toy that was popular in ancient China. (not relevant)
  • 43. LVHS Practice 1165D 3, 5, 11, 34, 51, 55, 60, 62
  • 44. Strategy 6 Apply the 100% Rule ACT wants you to select the correct answer from among choices that might be correct. To do this, ask yourself if the choice you have selected is 100% correct in what it says. No portion of your choice should fail to meet this requirement.
  • 45. Question 15—Addition 50. At this point, the writer is considering adding the following true statement: At its widest, the English Channel spans a distance of 150 miles. Should the writer make this addition here? A.Yes, because it reinforces the point that Cox swam a great distance across the English Channel. B.Yes, because it provides a logical transition to the rest of the paragraph. C.No, because the English Channel is only one place that Cox had swum before going to Antarctica. D.No, because it is irrelevant to the focus of the essay at this point.
  • 46. Question 15—Addition 50. At this point, the writer is considering adding the following true statement: At its widest, the English Channel spans a distance of 150 miles. Should the writer make this addition here? A.Yes, because it reinforces the point that Cox swam a great distance across the English Channel. (but who cares?) B.Yes, because it provides a logical transition to the rest of the paragraph. (no it does not) C.No, because the English Channel is only one place that Cox had swum before going to Antarctica. (Not true) D.No, because it is irrelevant to the focus of the essay at this point. (100% correct)
  • 47. Question 42—Delete? 42. If the writer were to delete the preceding sentence, the essay would primarily lose information that: F. proves Duncan was uncertain what would be the best way to promote the yo-yo. G. reveals how quickly demonstrations by Duncan Yo- Yo professionals gained popularity. H. illustrates one creative strategy that Duncan used to promote the yo-yo. J. suggests how Duncan Yo-Yo Professionals were chosen fo the job.
  • 48. Question 42—Delete? 42. If the writer were to delete the preceding sentence, the essay would primarily lose information that: F. proves Duncan was uncertain what would be the best way to promote the yo-yo. (not 100%) G. reveals how quickly demonstrations by Duncan Yo- Yo professionals gained popularity. (not 100%) H. illustrates one creative strategy that Duncan used to promote the yo-yo. J. suggests how Duncan Yo-Yo Professionals were chosen for the job. (no proof)
  • 49. Add or delete? Either write or read the sentence in your head as if you made the changes What are the key words in the question? Before reading the responses, what is your instinct? Does it work or not? Yes—then read the Yes answers. No—then read the No answers. Which is 100% true and matches your thinking?
  • 50. LVHS ACT Practice 1165D 42, 50, 61, 75
  • 51. Beware the NOT or the LEAST Questions 1, 40, 36, 40, 64, 69 One of the answers is doing its own thing. Can you figure out which one?

Editor's Notes

  1. Always weigh the shortest answers with one another, delete is the shortest. In this question, all of the other responses are redundant with the word preparation
  2. Always weigh the shortest answers with one another, delete is the shortest. In this question, all of the other responses are redundant with the word preparation
  3. Here, the other answers do not add information that is important. The simplest response also matches the sentence as a whole.
  4. Here, the other answers do not add information that is important. The simplest response also matches the sentence as a whole.
  5. At this point, you can have students look for more concision questions and share as a class.
  6. Now students should look carefully at their own choices for these questions. You may have them write why a response is correct or incorrect. This can be done for homework.
  7. If the closer is a dependent clause, you do not need to use a comma. For example, Iago does not just kill Othello when he sees him next.
  8. Usually breaking up sentences is the best option if it is correct.
  9. Basically, if the question is asking for the answer that is NOT or LEAST acceptable, you are looking for the answer that is wrong. All of the others are correct.
  10. Basically, if the question is asking for the answer that is NOT or LEAST acceptable, you are looking for the answer that is wrong. All of the others are correct.
  11. Underline the key words—focus on what the question is really asking. What does relevant mean? What does specific mean?
  12. What does relevant mean? What does specific mean?