Explanatory Writing

By Anonymous (not verified), 16 March, 2026
This essay explains the difference between English and metric measurement.
By Anonymous (not verified), 16 March, 2026
This explanatory essay provides numerous details about the legendary ship Titanic,
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This good analysis draws data from government Web sites to determine statistical correlations between income, race, and voting preferences.
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In this fair statistical analysis, a student compares poverty rates and percentage of non-Hispanic white populations to votes for the Republican candidate in the 2016 presidentential election.
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In this poor statistical analysis, a student records data but does not explain it.
By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Assessing with Rubrics

Test graders will use a rubric to judge the quality of your writing for assessment. They typically provide a score of 0–4, 0–6, or even 0–8 for each category on the rubric, such as Focus, Organization, Evidence, Language, and Conventions. Then they add up these scores and divide by the number of categories to get the overall average score. By using the following rubrics to judge your own assessment writing, you can become aware of what testers are looking for and can improve your scores in the future.

Assess with an argument rubric.

Use the following rubric to score argument or persuasive essays for assessment.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Viewing and Writing Nonfiction Assessment IV

Some Common Core and AP assessments present you with visuals that you must analyze and respond to. Remember that every visual is a form of communication with a sender and receiver (who), a message (what and why), a medium (how), and a context (where and when).

View and analyze source 1.

Closely read the ad from the Seattle Brewing and Malting Company, which originally appeared on the back of a brochure for the Argus Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, 1909. Note especially the ideas presented visually through illustrations, type selection, layout, and so on. Afterward, analyze the visual by answering the questions.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Reading and Writing Nonfiction Assessment III

Closely read the following articles and answer the questions afterward. Then you will need to analyze a prompt about these models and respond by writing an insightful essay.

Closely read and respond to source 1.

Read and/or listen to the following text, focusing on the topic, purpose, and main points. Answer the questions afterward.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Editing Comparison-Contrast Essays

After making the large-scale improvements of revision, you can focus on specific words and punctuation marks. The following activities will help you correctly use comparative and superlative modifiers and punctuate compound sentences. You'll also find a checklist to help you catch any errors in punctuation, capitalization, spelling, usage, and grammar.

Editing Comparatives and Superlatives

Modifiers have special forms that help you compare topics. A comparative adjective can show which of two topics is bigger, faster, less messy, or more cost-effective. A superlative adjective can show which of three or more topics is biggest, fastest, least messy, or most cost-effective. Add er to most one-syllable words to make the comparative form, and add est to make the superlative form.

Most One-Syllable Adjectives

Positive

deep

old

strange

Comparative

deeper

older

stranger

Superlative

deepest

oldest

strangest

For most adjectives of two syllables or more, add more or less for comparative forms and most or least for superlative forms. (Note that some two-syllable adjectives can still take er and est.)