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AP English Language & Composition

Digital Exam • Section I: 45 MCQ (45%) • Section II: 3 FRQs (55%) — Synthesis / Rhetorical Analysis / Argument
Unit 1: Rhetorical Situation + Claims & Evidence
  • RHS 1.A: Identify exigence, audience, writer, purpose, context, and message
  • CLE 3.A: Distinguish claims vs. evidence (what is asserted vs. what supports)
  • CLE 4.A: Build a body paragraph: claim → evidence → commentary
  • Annotation routine: label claim / evidence / commentary (3-color method)
  • Quick snapshot: write 1–2 sentences on purpose + audience + tone
📝 Practice Unit 1
Unit 2: Audience, Appeals, & Thesis
  • RHS 1.B: Explain how writers tailor choices to audience beliefs/values/needs
  • RHS 2.B: Write with audience awareness (tone, examples, assumptions)
  • Appeals: ethos, pathos, logos (how the text persuades this audience)
  • CLE 3.B: Identify thesis and key structural signals (roadmap moves)
  • CLE 4.B: Write a defensible thesis (arguable, requires proof)
  • MCQ Writing-Questions: revise sentences/paragraphs/organization MCQ
📝 Practice Unit 2
Unit 3: Line of Reasoning + Intro to Synthesis
  • REO 5.A: Trace the line of reasoning and how it supports the thesis
  • REO 6.A: Write deeper commentary: how/why evidence proves the claim
  • REO 5.C: Identify methods of development (comparison, cause/effect, definition, examples, classification)
  • REO 6.C: Use development patterns to create forward momentum
  • Synthesis moves: introduce sources, select key evidence, connect it to your argument
  • Mini Synthesis: 2–3 sources → 1 strong paragraph FRQ
📝 Practice Unit 3
Unit 4: Introductions/Conclusions + Strong Development
  • RHS 2.A: Craft introductions and conclusions that match the rhetorical situation
  • CLE 3.B: Recognize how authors frame and forecast their argument
  • CLE 4.B: Upgrade thesis clarity (stance + direction for reasoning)
  • REO 6.C: Design paragraph goals and develop them strategically
  • Outlining: topic sentences + paragraph purpose (each paragraph “does a job”)
  • Commentary ladder: what → how → why it matters
📝 Practice Unit 4
Unit 5: Organization, Coherence, & Style (Tone)
  • REO 5.B: Analyze unity & coherence (why the organization “works”)
  • REO 6.B: Use transitions to guide the reader through reasoning
  • STL 7.A: Explain how diction, comparisons, and syntax shape tone
  • STL 8.A: Write with purposeful style (choices match purpose/audience)
  • Revision pass: cut clutter, add logic bridges, tighten paragraph flow
📝 Practice Unit 5
Unit 6: Rhetorical Analysis Writing Lab FRQ
  • Identify rhetorical choices: diction, syntax, comparisons, structure
  • Choice → purpose: connect the choice to meaning and audience effect
  • Write a clear RA thesis + roadmap (how the writer achieves the purpose)
  • Evidence selection: short quotes, keywords, syntactic features
  • Commentary depth: move beyond “emphasizes” to specific effects
  • Timed Q2 drill: 40 minutes, 2 high-quality body paragraphs FRQ
📝 Practice Unit 6
Unit 7: Complexity, Qualification, & Mechanics
  • CLE 3.C: Identify qualifiers (conditions, exceptions, limitations)
  • CLE 4.C: Write qualified claims (avoid absolutes; show nuance)
  • STL 7.B: Analyze clause relationships (cause, contrast, concession)
  • STL 8.B: Craft clear sentences (emphasis, logic, readability)
  • STL 7.C & 8.C: Grammar and punctuation support meaning & clarity
  • Counterargument kit: concede → rebut / refute
📝 Practice Unit 7
Unit 8: Audience-Driven Style & Sentence Craft
  • Audience re-check: tone, examples, and assumptions must fit the audience
  • Style control: precise diction + purposeful rhetoric (contrast, repetition, analogy)
  • Sentence patterns: parallelism, periodic sentences, strategic fragments
  • Conciseness: remove redundancy; prefer strong verbs and concrete nouns
  • Voice & register: academic but not empty (sound smart by thinking clearly)
📝 Practice Unit 8
Unit 9: Advanced Argument + Exam Polish FRQ
  • Enter the “ongoing conversation” (respond to what others believe/say)
  • Evidence roles: support, qualify, complement, complicate, contradict
  • Credibility moves: concede, rebut, refute (turn complexity into strength)
  • CLE 3.C/4.C mastery: sophisticated qualification and alternative perspectives
  • Timed Q3 drill: 40-minute Argument with counterargument integration FRQ
  • Full rotation: MCQ set + 3 FRQs on an exam schedule EXAM
📝 Practice Unit 9
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