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![Page 1: Welcome Back! Find the paper with your name on it, and have a seat at your new desk Introduce yourself to your new neighbors Grab a book Predict the definitions.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062422/56649eb65503460f94bbfddc/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Welcome Back!
• Find the paper with your name on it, and have a seat at your new desk• Introduce yourself to your new
neighbors•Grab a book•Predict the definitions for your next
30 words
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Unit 3, Lesson 1Green Team12.12.14
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1. bolster (verb)
• to make something stronger or better
• synonyms: reinforce, support, carry
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2. disdain (noun)
• a feeling of strong dislike for someone or something
• synonyms: contempt, scorn
![Page 5: Welcome Back! Find the paper with your name on it, and have a seat at your new desk Introduce yourself to your new neighbors Grab a book Predict the definitions.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062422/56649eb65503460f94bbfddc/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
3. callous (adjective)
• not feeling or showing any concern about the problems or suffering of other people
• synonyms: cold-blooded, hard-hearted, compassionless, unsympathetic
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4. cajole (verb)
• to persuade someone to do something or to give you something by making promises or saying nice things
• Synonyms: coax, sweet-talk, charm
![Page 7: Welcome Back! Find the paper with your name on it, and have a seat at your new desk Introduce yourself to your new neighbors Grab a book Predict the definitions.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062422/56649eb65503460f94bbfddc/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
5. confound (verb)
• to surprise and confuse• to prove wrong
• synonyms: baffle, bewilder, disorient, vex
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6. delineate (verb)
• to clearly show or describe
• synonyms: define, outline
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7. elucidate (verb)
• to make something clear or easy to understand
• synonyms: clarify, demonstrate, demystify, explain
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8. laconic (adjective)
• using few words in speech or writing
• synonyms: brief, concise, succinct
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Practice Sentence Completion
• Complete sentence completion exercises 1-5 on page 544.• Predict an answer• Identify clue words and phrases• Use parts of words (prefixes/roots/suffixes) you recognize• Use process of elimination
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The EssayUnit 3
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Essay Scoring Rubric
• Read the essay rubric and highlight key words.
• What are the most important elements to focus on when you write your essay?
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The Big Three
1. Establish a Clear Point of View
“People are unwise to pursue love if it causes them pain.”
vs.
“There are many possibilities, really.”
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The Big Three
2. Support Your Position
• Provide reasons and specific examples (2).
• Explain how your example proves your point.
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The Big Three
3. Have a Logical Structure
• Introduction
• Two body paragraphs with two distinct examples
• Conclusion
Remember: Readers will spend about three minutes on your essay. Make your essay easy to score.
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What Would You Do?
Create a quick outline for the following prompt:
Are people unwise to pursue love even when they know it will cause them pain? Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue. Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from your reading, studies, experience or observations.
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What Would You Do?
• Read the samples for the previous prompt.
• What works? What doesn’t? What scores would you give?
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Working Through A Prompt
• Let’s do this one together:
Think carefully about the issue presented in the following quotations and the assignment below.1. While secrecy can be destructive, some of it is indispensable in human lives. Some control over secrecy and openness is needed in order to protect identity. Such control may be needed to guard privacy, intimacy, and friendship.
Adapted from Sissela Bok, “The Need for Secrecy”2. Secrecy and a free, democratic government, President Harry Truman once said, don’t mix. An open exchange of information is vital to the kind of informed citizenry essential to healthy democracy.
Editorial, “Overzealous Secrecy Threatens Democracy”Assignment: Do people need to keep secrets or is secrecy harmful? Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue. Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from your reading, studies, experience or observations.
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1. Understand the Prompt & Plan
• What do you have to do?
• What is your position?• Avoid “I agree that…” or “I disagree that…” Instead, take a strong,
clear position.
• What examples can you use?
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Introductions
• Read “Developing a Thesis” on page 158 of your SAT practice book.
• Read “Writing the Introduction” on pages 159-160.
• Write an introduction for our prompt.
• Compare introductions at your table and decide whose is the most effective.
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Developing Ideas
• What are specific examples you can use for this prompt?• Counterarguments and Qualifiers• Read “Developing Your Ideas” on pages 161-162
of your SAT practice book.• Write one body paragraph that fits with your
introduction.• Compare body paragraphs at your table and
select the one that is most effect.
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Conclusions
• Read pages 163-164 in your SAT practice book.
• Write a conclusion for our prompt.
• Compare conclusions at your table and select the one that is most effective.