CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.11-12.1

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

Reading and Writing Nonfiction Assessment II

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.

Listen to "Excerpt from "Citizenship in a Republic";

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Source 1

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Nonfiction Reading and Writing Assessment

Many high-stakes assessments test your ability to read nonfiction and write analyses about it. You'll find these types of tasks on the high school tests for the Common Core, the ACT and SAT, and the AP tests for English Language and Composition, U.S. History, and World History.

Of course, these assessments seek to measure the reading and writing ability you have gained over the whole of your schooling so far, so simply cramming won't spell success. However, taking a practice test that requires the same skills will help you know what kinds of questions to anticipate, allowing you to score your best.

How Can I Practice for Assessment?

Writing a Process Essay
© Thoughtful Learning 2018

Listen to "How Can I Practice for Assessment?"

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In this unit, you'll get to practice closely reading nonfiction texts. After each, you'll answer a bank of multiple-choice questions that check your comprehension but also require you to infer shades of meaning. Then you'll need to analyze a writing prompt about the texts and write an on-target essay response. You'll find three such practice tests.

You'll also find a practice test that requires you to view advertisements, answer questions about them, and write an essay response. Finally, you will find a practice test for answering document-based questions (DBQs) like those on the AP history exams. You'll analyze a writing prompt, closely read seven documents related to it, and write a response to the prompt.

At the end of this unit, you'll find sample argument and explanatory rubrics showing the way that essays are scored on high-stakes assessments. You can find the specific rubrics used for a given high-stakes writing assessment at these locations:

For practice with high-stakes literature assessments, see the units "Reading and Writing Literature for Assessment" and "Practice Tests for Reading and Writing Literature."

Reading and Writing Nonfiction Assessment I

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.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Editing Narrative Arguments

After you complete major revisions to your narrative argument, you should edit it to make sure every word and punctuation mark is correct. Among other issues, you'll want to look closely at pronoun agreement and punctuation of dialogue. The activities that follow will help. You'll also use a checklist to finalize your editing.

Editing for Pronoun Agreement

A pronoun is a word that stands in the place of a noun or another pronoun (its antecedent). The most familiar pronouns are I, me, my; we, us, our, ours; you, your, yours; he, she, it, they, their, theirs. A pronoun needs to agree with its antecedent. That means both need to have the same person (first, second, or third), the same number (singular or plural), and the same gender (masculine, feminine, neuter, or indeterminate).

Agreement

Merida drove her car. (Merida and her are both third person, singular, and feminine: they agree.)

I rode my bike. (I and my are both first person, singular, and indeterminate.)

Other friends relied on ride-share apps using their phones. (Other friends and their are both third-person, plural, and indeterminate.)

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Revising Narrative Arguments

Now that you have combined the argument and narrative portions of your work into one essay, you can take a look at the whole document. Some ideas may be stretched thin, needing more elaboration. Others may be redundant, needing cuts and better pacing. The two activities that follow will help you revise your combined draft.

Revising to Elaborate Ideas

When ideas feel thin, you can elaborate by imagining what questions a reader would ask. Then you can answer the reader’s main questions using a variety of details at a variety of levels. The writer of “Equity Matters” imagined the following interview, answering the reader’s questions in a number of different ways.

Writer: Like female students, male students get tagged with gender stereotypes that affect everything from what classes they are expected to take to how comfortable they are expressing their feelings.

Reader: Aren’t gender stereotypes based on actual differences between males and females?

Writer: Standard IQ tests as well as tests of mathematical aptitude show no significant difference between female and male students.

Reader: But aren’t women more social than men, and aren't men more aggressive than women?

Writer: Studies have a difficult time determining whether differences in sociability and aggression have more to do with biology (X and Y chromosomes and hormonal differences) or with cultural expectations. But scientists can definitively say that gender stereotypes strongly impact the behavior of males and females.

Reader: And what are the effects of these gender stereotypes?

Writer: The stereotype that men are more aggressive excuses some forms of harassment as "boys will be boys" and discourages women from taking dominant roles. Stereotypes also stigmatize social men and solitary women.

Reader: What can be done to challenge these stereotypes?

Writer: We can begin by recognizing that gender roles are culturally dependent, differing around the world and throughout time. Then we can examine the gender roles prevalent in our own culture and work to reduce stereotypes and improve openness.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Assembling Your Narrative Argument

By now you have completed drafts of an argument essay and a narrative. Great work! The two main components of your narrative argument are ready to go. Now comes the fun part—combining both forms into a single paper. Finding the right mix is not an exact science. You'll need to experiment with different arrangements to create your strongest argument. The activities in this lesson will help.

Combining Argument and Narrative

Follow these steps to blend your two separate essays into a narrative argument. As you work through the steps, remember that you can add, cut, rewrite, and rearrange parts of both original pieces as needed.

  1. Make your original argument essay the base of your paper.
  2. Read over both pieces one more time.
  3. Decide what portions of your narrative support your argument.
  4. Experiment with different combinations of narration and argumentation. Here are three common ways to organize a narrative argument:
    • One-After-Another: Start with your full narrative and transition to your full argument or vice versa.
    • Start-and-End: Start with a portion of your narrative, transition to your argument, and then return to your narrative.
    • Back-and-Forth: Start with your narrative or argument and transition back and forth multiple times between both pieces.

Narrative Argument Organizer

  1. Evaluate the results. Which pattern most effectively strengthens the argument? Which pattern is easiest to follow? Which pattern will most likely get readers to empathize with your position?
  2. Choose a pattern.
  3. Add parts (or all) of your narrative to your argument essay. If you are working in a word-processing program, you can simply copy and paste the parts. Reword sections as needed to improve the flow.
By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Writing an Argument Essay

You've researched controversial topics in your school, community, nation, and world. You've stated a position and explored reasons for and against it. You've even outlined your argument and responded to objections. Now it's time to write your first draft. The following activities will guide you.

Writing the Argument Beginning

The beginning first needs to grab the reader's attention. Then it should introduce your topic and provide background leading up to your position statement. To get started with your beginning paragraph, you can experiment with different lead-writing strategies.

Write a lead sentence.

Write a different lead sentence(s) for each strategy to capture the reader's attention. Use the examples as inspiration.

  1. Ask a provocative question.

    Why is gender such a taboo subject in high school?

  2. Provide a fascinating quotation.

    "True equality means holding everyone accountable in the same way, regardless of race, gender, faith, ethnicity, or political ideology."
    ― Monica Crowley

  3. Provide a surprising fact.

    Did you know more than half of female students in grades 7-12 report experiencing some form of sexual harassment?

  4. Directly address the issue.

    Recently a wave of women's empowerment has swept across the country, but it hasn't seemed to reach high schools.

Write your beginning paragraph.

Start with your lead, and then provide background and develop a paragraph leading to your position statement.

Writing the Middle Paragraphs

Develop a middle paragraph for each reason that supports your position statement. Organize these paragraphs using your outline (for a receptive audience) or follow a pattern for a resistant audience.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Prewriting for Argument Essays

To write a narrative argument, you first have to create two separate compositions—an argument essay and a narrative. You will need to complete the steps of the writing process for both before combining the pieces into a narrative argument. What form you begin with is up to you, but we recommend completing your argument essay first since it will form the basis of your final paper. If you wish to start with your narrative, skip ahead to the "Prewriting for Narratives" lesson and circle back to this one after you've completed your narrative.

The prewriting activities in this lesson will help you plan your argument essay—identifying a controversial topic, researching the issue, developing a position about it, and gathering reasons, evidence, and responses to objections.

Prewriting to Consider Controversies

Effective argument essays focus on controversial issues. A controversy is a subject about which people disagree. Facts don't leave much room for disagreement because they can be directly proven. Controversial topics involve the following:

  • Opinions are personal preferences such as the best U.S. president or the most important qualities of a video game. One person states an opinion and provides reasons to support it, but someone else can have an opposing opinion.
  • Proposals are suggestions about what should be done in the future. Since no one knows for certain the future outcome of any action taken now, proposals cannot be directly proven until after they have consequences.
  • Hypotheses are explanations for how something might be working. They are "educated guesses" about what is going on. Arguments and experiments can provide reasonable support for them, but hypotheses only become scientific theories or laws after extensive experimentation.

You can think about controversies locally, at your school and in your community, or more broadly, in your country and around the world. What do people feel about the controversies? What opinions, proposals, or hypotheses are most commonly linked to them? One student jotted down the following controversial positions that he encountered at school, read about in local and national newspapers, and discovered on Google News.

By Anonymous (not verified), 12 March, 2026

Revising Résumés and Cover Letters

So you've done the hard part, actually writing the résumé and cover letter. Take a little break if you can. Then come back to them. You want to make sure these two documents do the best job of representing you to a potential employer. Is there some critical piece of information that you forgot to include? Is there some extraneous piece of information that you don't need? In revision, you can make sure your documents have all the "right stuff."

Revising for Key Details

Remember that your cover letter and résumé are really meant for the employer, not for you. You already know who you are. The employer needs to know, so these documents should provide the key details without distraction. You can check for details by reviewing item 3 on the prewriting activity "Take the Employer's Perspective."

3. What kind of employee would make life better for this contact person?

A part-time reporter who can take any assignment, attend an event, interview those involved, take photos, research carefully, check facts, write a news article or feature article, create an effective headline, and digitally submit materials on or before deadline.

What employer needs did you fail to address in your cover letter and résumé? For example, Joyce realized that she forgot to mention that she is a skilled photographer, so she can provide images for her articles. She added a line to the "Skills and Qualifications" section of her résumé.