Using Facebook to Prepare for the AP Persuasive Essay Milton Alan Turner, NBCT Saint Ignatius High School mturner@ignatius.edu http://faculty.Ignatius.edu/turner/ Overview Introduction to AP French Language & Culture Exam • AP Central Website • Free-Response Section Tasks • 2013 French Persuasive Essay • Persuasive Essay Rubric • Authentic Resources • French-language Media Web Sites • French-Language Media Apps for smartphones/tablets • AP French Language & Culture Facebook Group • AP Central http://apcentral.collegeboard.com • Course Description • Planning Guide • Teacher Community • Free-Response Questions •Scoring Samples and Commentary AP French Language & Culture Exam “The AP course provides students with opportunities to demonstrate their proficiency in each of the three modes in the Intermediate to Pre-Advanced range.” Overarching Premise “When communicating, students in the AP French Language and Culture course demonstrate an understanding of the culture(s), incorporate interdisciplinary topics (Connections), make comparisons between the native language and the target language and between cultures (Comparisons), and use the target language in real-life settings (Communities).” AP French Language & Culture Course and Exam Description Effective Fall 2011 AP Cultural Themes L’esthétique La science et la technologie La famille et la communauté Les défis mondiaux La vie contemporaine La quête de soi AP French Language & Culture Exam Format Section # of Questions % of Final Score 95 minutes Section I: Multiple Choice Part A Interpretive Communication: Print Texts Interpretative Communication: Print and Audio Texts (combined) Part B Interpretative Communication: Audio Texts 30 questions 35 questions 40 minutes 50% Interpersonal Writing: E-mail reply Task 2 Presentational Writing: Persuasive Essay Task 3 Interpersonal Speaking: Conversation Task 4 Presentational Speaking: Cultural Comparison 55 minutes 85 minutes Section II: Free-Response Task 1 Time 1 prompt 15 minutes 1 prompt 55 minutes 50% 5 prompts 5 minutes 1 prompt 7 minutes Task 2: Persuasive Essay Students must write a persuasive essay on a given topic clearly indicating their own viewpoint and defending it thoroughly • The essay topic is based on three sources 1. Printed article 2. Printed graph/chart/map 3. Audio source (podcast/interview) • Students have 6 minutes to read the print sources (article and graph) and 6 minutes to hear the audio source twice • Students have 40 minutes to write the essay • Task 2: Persuasive Essay Scoring Rubric Holistic scoring (“Alan’s shoulders”) • Task oriented • Progressive • integrates vs. summarizes information • Number of sources referenced • effective vs. suitable vs. unsuitable information • Multiple ways to successfully use sources • 2012 Scoring samples and commentary available at • http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/members/exam/ exam_information/4559.html Preparation Suggestions Regular exposure to authentic resources from Day 1 Level 1 • Web sites • Podcasts • Apps • Social media • Le Grand Concours • Practice Tests • Course and Exam Description • Practice Test (AP Audit) • Authentic Resources • My AP French Language & Culture Web Site http://faculty.ignatius.edu/turner/apfrenchlang.htm • French-language Media on Facebook • Le français avec TV5MONDEhttps://www.facebook.com/tv5mondelanguefrancaise • Le Monde- https://www.facebook.com/lemonde.fr • Les Observateurs de France 24https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.Observateurs • TV5 Monde- https://www.facebook.com/tv5mondeofficiel • La Presse (Canada)- https://www.facebook.com/LaPresseFB • Canoë.ca- portail francophonehttps://www.facebook.com/canoe-francais • Le Point- https://www.facebook.com/lepoint.fr • L'Express- https://www.facebook.com/LExpress • Agence France Presse- https://www.facebook.com/AFPfra • Libération- https://www.facebook.com/Liberation Authentic Resources French-language Media on Facebook (continued) • RTL Info (Belgique)https://www.facebook.com/RTLInfo • RTL (France)- https://www.facebook.com/RTL • TF1 News- https://www.facebook.com/TF1News • France Infohttps://www.facebook.com/France.Info • Le Figaro- https://www.facebook.com/lefigaro • Le Nouvel Observateurhttps://www.facebook.com/lenouvelobservateur • Smartphone Apps • Why Use Facebook? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Almost all students are on Facebook anyway. Facebook is available on multiple platforms (smartphones, tablets), not just computers. Students can easily access resources on the go. Facebook supports audio and video well. Students can find and access audio and video from French-language media sites to practice their interpretive listening as well as reading skills. Students can "like" and then the articles will show up in their news feeds. The students don't really have to go hunting for articles, articles are pushed to them. Any articles in their news feeds can be easily shared with the group. If the students find articles on their own, most sites have a Facebook button for sharing articles. Too cumbersome to cut and paste links into a Haiku LMS discussion board and the chances of making a mistake were too great. Creating Facebook Groups • Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/apfrenchlang/ • From Facebook home page, select “Create Group” • Name your group • List at least one member • Privacy (Open, Closed, or Private) Creating Facebook Groups • Membership approval (admin or any member) • Group address • Group Description • File with AP Themes • Posting Permissions/Post Approval Presentational Writing 70% 59% 60% 54% 50% 46% 40% 35% 30% 20% 10% 0% 6% 0% Lowest Fourth 0% Second Fourth 2012 Third Fourth 2013 0% Highest Fourth Facebook Group Considerations • Group size • Member limits • Sharing media sites • Verification • Suggestions • Q&A
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