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>>QUICK NOTES & TIPS << R...A..B..C.. RESTATE THE QUESTION * When responding to open ended response questions you always want to restate the question in your first sentence. ANSWER * Give your response, but try to connect it with the first sentence. BACK IT UP * Evidence is the key factor in a good response. Always back up what you have written with a quote that relates. CONNECT ANSWER AND QUOTE * The last and most important part of your answer is to connect. Try to explain in your own words what the quote means and how it relates to the question. Most importantly why it relates.
HOW IS GUILT PART OF ISHMAELS LIFE?
STEP 1 >Restate the question *Guilt plays a major roll in Ishmaels life throughout the book.
STEP 2 >Answer * Ishmeals mind is plauged by so much guilt because he was the only one in his family to survive.
STEP3 >Back it up * He say in his room wondering''Why have I survived the War?''
STEP 4 >Connect * This shows that Ishmael feels so much guilt it's all he thinks about. Ishmael feels horrible because ''[He] was the last person in [His] immediate family to be alive.''
STEP 5 PUT IT ALL TOGETHER How is guilt part of Ishmaels life? * Guilt plays a major roll in Ishmaels life throughout the book. Ishmael's mind is plagued by so much guilt it's all he thinks about. ''He starees at the celing in his room wondering '' Why have I survived the War? This shows that Ishmael feels so much guiilt it's the only thing that goes through his mind,. He feels horrible becuase'' [He] was the last person in [His] immediate family to be alive.''
TAKS TEST STUDY AID -Answering Open Ended Questions
By: Kyle Marlow
OPEN ENDED RESPONSE PRACTICE > Read the following passeage. On a peice of paper answer the follwing question following the rules given above. ted ripples How did they feel about the place they were going to? *The Baudelaires themselves, as they rode in the back of a taxi driven by a woman they scarcely knew, might have been happy to jump into a pond themselves, had they known what sort of story lay ahead of them as the automobile made its way among the twisting streets of the city where the orphans had once lived. Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire gazed out of the windows of the car, marveling at how little the city had changed since a fire destroyed their home, took the lives of their parents, and created ripples in the Baudelaires' lives that would probably never become calm.