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In order to score all the points on a short answer question or an SAQ,
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you really only need to do two things,
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understand what they're asking you to write about
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and write it using a three-part formula.
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Easy-peasy lemon squeezy. Except for a lot of students in AP world, AP Euro, and APUSH,
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the SAQ is emphatically not easy-peasy lemon squeezy.
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It's more like why is this seemingly simple thing
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causing my armpits to sweat and my bowels to
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squeal and causing no small amount of existential dread
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and the questioning of all my life choices.
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Lemon squeeze. But look, it doesn't have to be that hard.
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You just need someone to explain it up real nice for you.
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And hey, that's what I'm here for. So, if you're ready to get that brain
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cows milked. Well, let's get to it.
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Well,
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make sure you stay to the end because I need to tell you how my previous advice for
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SAQs has completely changed because of what happened at
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this year's scoring at the national exam. First
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let's just swoop in and figure out what we're dealing with here.
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A short answer question for APUSH, AP World, or AP Euro.
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And by the way, they're all scored the same,
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so everything I'm about to say here applies to them all.
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A short answer question can be classified into two species.
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The first as a stimulus,
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which will be a document to read or an image to
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interpret, and that will be followed by three prompts labeled "ABC."
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Now the second species has no stimulus and only three prompts. For each prompt,
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you either earn one point or zero points,
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and there's nothing in between. Every once in a while,
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they'll sneak in a prompt worth two points,
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but that's only when they're asking you to do two things. Now on your AP exam in May,
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they're going to give you four of these SAQs and you have to answer three of them.
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Your answers do not need to be essays.
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They just need to be somewhere in the neighborhood of 2 to 3 complete sentences.
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And I'll tell you exactly what I recommend in a moment.
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All right, first step, understand the stimulus and the prompt.
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So, the first thing you need to do to answer
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an SAQ is to understand the stimulus and the prompt.
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And I would highly recommend that you mark up these prompts because say it with me,
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"When you're under pressure, you are dumber than you think."
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Now, where should you begin?
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Well,
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where you're going to be tempted to begin is by reading or looking at the stimulus.
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If that's your temptation, I want you to open your hand,
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wet it down, and smack yourself in the face.
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That is not where you start, you start by reading the prompts they give you,
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and here's why. You've only got limited time to write your answers.
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And if you start by trying to analyze the stimulus,
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you're wasting time because you don't even know what you're looking for.
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So, start by reading the three prompts,
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marking them up, and then you can move to the
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stimulus after you know what to look for in it.
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Now, what should you be marking in those prompts?
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Well, three things, number one, the category or categories,
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they're asking you to write about.
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Number two, the time period they want you to write about.
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And number three, the historical thinking skill that needs to frame your answer.
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So, for example, here's the first SAQ from the 2022 AP World exam.
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First, mark the category. I want you to talk about
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an economic development here and a political development here.
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That's really important because if your answer doesn't fall in those categories,
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then no points for you.
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Second, you mark the time period. If your answer
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doesn't fall within those years,
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no matter how brilliant the answer is no points for you.
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And third, mark the historical thinking skill.
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And in this case,
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you can see here "led to" and that's a causation question. That means whatever
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evidence you use in your short answer question has got to show causation.
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So, now that you understand the prompts you can move to the stimulus if it has one.
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So, look at it and mark it up with what you need to answer the prompts,
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and now let's move on to how to answer that.
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Now everyone has their favorite acronym for answering SAQS.
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But for my money, the best one is TEAT: topic sentence, explanation
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of evidence, and analysis.
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And let me explain. Your topic sentence
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is a single declarative sentence that essentially restates
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the important parts of the prompt and names
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a piece of evidence and that's important.
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Not because it earns you a point, but because it ensures that you stay on topic,
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which does earn you the point.
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So, consider this prompt from the 2022 AP Euro Exam.
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Describe one significant cultural or intellectual change
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during the renaissance.
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My topic sentence would go like this: One significant intellectual
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change during the renaissance was the emphasis on humanism.
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So look, I restated the important parts of the prompt to keep me on task,
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and I named the evidence that she shows the change.
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The second part then is to explain my evidence,
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and really that just means to define it. So, mine would go something like this.
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"Humanism described the renaissance belief in the unlimited
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potential of human beings as ends in themselves."
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Now, if you did those two things,
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you're probably feeling pretty good about yourself,
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but you need to go one step further and then analyze that evidence.
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And that means you need to show how your evidence proves your topics in it.
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Now, look carefully,
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I'm talking about an intellectual change during the renaissance and
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I've said that it's humanism and then I've defined it.
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So, I've named the change,
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but I haven't shown how the change occurred and that is essential.
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Now my third sentence will go like this. Prior to the Renaissance
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the prevailing view of human potential was limited by
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the widespread belief of the doctrine of original sin,
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but because of the innovative work of Petrarch and other humanists,
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a new confidence and human potential began to emerge during the Renaissance."
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And those three sentences will get you a point.
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You may be objecting right now saying that's way too much to talk about highly like
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can it be any simpler than that?
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If you had asked me a year ago, I would have said "yes," it can be simpler.
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But today, my answer is "no."
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And let me explain.
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You may have noticed that you have
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basically three task verbs consistently showing up.
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You have identify,
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describe, and explain. What I have always taught is that for an identify prompt,
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all you had to do was write a topic sentence and that's it.
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So, for this prompt,
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I would have told you to write one economic
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development that led to the situation on the map was
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the forced free trade agreements between Britain and China
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following the Opium War. Just identified the economic development, done.
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But I am no longer advising that
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and here's why. Not even though the college board themselves told
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us what identify means in their own course and exam description,
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and that answer that I just gave meets that bar at the National Reading for AP World
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this year.
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The people who scored these did not give
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the point unless you also explained the evidence,
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and that is madness. Now, as far as I know that only happened at the AP world reading.
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But if it can happen there, it might happen in the other subjects as well.
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So, my advice is to "T" every answer that way you'll never be tricked
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by the AP overlords who don't even abide by their own standards.
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All right.
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Well, if you need more help with AP history writing,
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then click right here and grab my AP Essay Cram Course.
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And I've got way more writing videos right here.
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They're gonna help you with all the other essays as well.
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So, I'll catch you on the flip-flop. Heimler out.