Double Jeopardy PEEC Grammar & Writing Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue UNRAVEL Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $600 Q $600 Q $600 Q $600 Q $800 Q $800 Q $800 Q $800 Q $1000 Q $1000 Q $1000 Q $1000 Jeopardy $200 Answer from PEEC A point and evidence for the following question: How were sharecroppers basically treated like slaves? $200 Question from PEEC Place student response here: $400 Answer from PEEC A point and evidence for the following question: How did the Great Depression affect minorities in the United States? $400 Question from PEEC Place student response here: $600 Answer from PEEC A point and evidence for the following question: How was the practice of segregation in schools unfair? $600 Question from PEEC Place student response here: $800 Answer from PEEC The answer for the following question: How did Jim Crow laws hinder minorities from enjoying many of their Constitutional rights? $800 Question from PEEC Place student response here: $1000 Answer from PEEC The answer for the following question: How did the Ku Klux Klan keep minorities (and other groups of people that it hated) from enjoying many of their Constitutional rights? $1000 Question from PEEC Place student response here: $200 Answer from Grammar & Writing The way to turn the following compound sentence into two separate simple sentences: “No one answered him, and he said no more” (Taylor 49). $200 Question from Grammar and Writing What is the following example? “No one answered him. He said no more.” $400 Answer from Grammar and Writing A way to turn the following simple sentences into one compound sentence: “Christopher John and I looked at each other. We had never seen Stacey look like this” (Taylor 48). $400 Question from Grammar & Writing What is the following example: “Christopher John and I looked at each other, for we had never seen Stacey look like this.” $600 Answer from Grammar & Writing The way to turn the following simple sentences into a complex sentence: “Jeremy Simms spied us from his high perch on the forest path. He ran hastily down and joined us.” $600 Question from Grammar and Writing What is the following example? “When Jeremy Simms spied us from his high perch on the forest path, he ran hastily down and joined us” (Taylor 49). $800 Answer from Grammar & Writing A way to turn the following example into a compound-complex sentence: “We crossed the school lawn. Stacey beckoned Christopher-John, Little Man, and me aside. He whispered, ‘Meet me at the toolshed right at noon.’” $800 Question from Grammar & Writing What is the following example? “As we crossed the school lawn, Stacey beckoned Christopher-John, Little Man, and me aside, and he whispered, ‘Meet me at the toolshed right at noon’” (Taylor 49). $1000 Answer from Grammar & Writing Five subordinating conjunctions and three coordinating conjunctions $1000 Question from Grammar & Writing What are any of the following answers? Subordinating conjunctions: when, whenever, although, where, if, as, as if, as though . . . (pg. 641) Coordinating conjunctions: and, but, or, nor, for, so, yet $200 Answer from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue The mistake within the following example: Stacey asked, “Why did you do that?” “I don’t know,” replied Cassie. $200 Question from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue What is the fact that, in dialogue, a new speaker’s quote should be indicated by beginning a new paragraph? $400 Answer from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue The mistake in the following example: “As we crossed the school lawn, Stacey beckoned Christopher-John, Little Man, and me aside, and he whispered, ‘Meet me at the toolshed right at noon” (Taylor 49). $400 Question from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue What is the following correction: that a single quotation mark is needed to show when Stacey stops speaking? $600 Answer from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue “As we crossed the school lawn, Stacey beckoned Christopher-John, Little Man, and me aside, and he whispered, ‘Meet me at the toolshed right at noon.’” (Taylor 49) $600 Question from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue What is the following correction: that the period should be placed after the parenthetical citation? $800 Answer from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue The mistake in the following example: The teacher asked, “Do you have your agenda”? $800 Question from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue What is the following correction: Because the quotation is interrogative, the question mark should be placed within the quotation marks? $1000 Answer from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue The mistake within the following example: Why did the teacher say, “Go sit down?” $1000 Question from Punctuating Quotations and Dialogue What is the following correction: Because the sentence outside the quotation is interrogative, but the quotation is imperative, the question mark should be placed outside the quotation in order to punctuate the interrogative portion of the sentence? $200 Answer from UNRAVEL The meaning and explanation of the “U” within UNRAVEL $200 Question from UNRAVEL What is underline the title? Then, make notes around the title that show what you know about the topics and what you expect to read. $400 Answer from UNRAVEL The meaning and explanation of the “N” within UNRAVEL $400 Question from UNRAVEL What is number the paragraphs? Number the paragraphs (or lines, rows, columns, or any other applicable items) in order to give yourself a reference point when asked specific questions or asked to provide parenthetical citations. $600 Answer from UNRAVEL The meaning and explanation of the “R” and “A” within UNRAVEL $600 Answer from UNRAVEL What is read the questions first? Also, are you circling the important words? Be certain to pick out the important words within the questions and also circle the key textual features within the text. Make notes as you do this so that you fully understand each aspect of the question and text. $800 Answer from UNRAVEL The meaning and explanation of the “V” within UNRAVEL $800 Question from UNRAVEL What is venture through the text? Read the text and mark it up by interacting with it. Ask questions, highlight evidence that will help you answer questions, and use symbols to indicate your understanding or confusion. $1000 Answer from UNRAVEL The meaning and explanation of the “E” and “L” within UNRAVEL $1000 Question from UNRAVEL What is eliminate the wrong choices? Also, what is let yourself answer the questions? Only choose a correct answer after you have closely considered all choices and have found evidence from the text that helps justify why you have decided that your choice is the best available answer.