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AP FRENCH LANGUAGE with audio CDs
Completely aligned with today’s AP exam
Are you prepared to excel on the AP exam?
* Set up a study schedule by following our results-driven timeline
* Take the first practice test to discover what you know and what you
should know
* Use REA's advice to ready yourself for proper study and success
Practice for real
* Three audio CDs provide excellent preparation for the exam's listening comprehension section
* Create the closest experience to test-day conditions with 3 full-length practice tests
* Includes pre-exam exercises that target the key testing areas of listening, reading, writing, and speaking
* Chart your progress with full and detailed explanations of all answers
* Boost your confidence with test-taking strategies and experienced advice
Sharpen your knowledge and skills
* The book's full subject review features coverage of all AP French Language areas, such as an explanation of the French alphabet, grammar, conjugations, reflexive verbs and more.
* Smart and friendly lessons reinforce necessary skills
* Key tutorials enhance specific abilities needed on the test
* Targeted drills increase comprehension and help organize study
Ideal for Classroom, Family, or Solo Test Preparation!
REA has provided advanced preparation for generations of advanced students who have excelled on important tests and in life. REA’s AP study guides are teacher-recommended and written by experts who have mastered the course and the test.
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About this book
This book provides a thorough review for the Advanced Placement French Language Examination written in a way that high school students will readily grasp and appreciate. REA's mission is to explain the subject matter in terms the student can understand and benefit from.
The full-length practice exams included in this book help you get ready for the actual exam. Use them, along with the detailed explanations of answers, to help determine your strengths and weaknesses, and to prepare yourself to score well on exam day.
About the advanced placement program
The Advanced Placement program is designed to provide high school students with the opportunity to pursue college-level studies. The program consists of two components: an AP course and and AP exam.
Students are expected to gain college-level skills and acquire college-level knowledge of French through the AP course. Upon completion of the course, students take the AP exam in French Language. Test results are used to grant course credit and/or determine placement level in the subject when entering college.
AP exams are offered every May. For more information contact the College Board at:
AP Services
P.O. Box 6671
Princeton, NJ 08541-6671
Phone: (609) 771-7300 or (888) 225-5427
Fax: (609) 530-0482
E-mail: apexams@info.collegeboard.org
Web site: www.collegeboard.com
About the exam
The AP French Language Exam is approximately two and a half hours long. It tests your ability to understand both written and spoken French. It also tests the ease and fluency with which you can respond in speaking and in writing. No dictionaries or reference materials are permitted during the exam.
The test is divided into four sections. Each one represents a targeted skill area: listening comprehension, reading comprehension, writing ability, and speaking ability. Each of the four sections has the same value and therefore represents one-fourth of your total score.
Multiple-Choice Test Sections
Listening and reading skills are tested with multiple-choice questions. You will be expected to choose the correct answer from a field of four different possibilities for each multiple-choice question. You will mark your choice as A, B, C, or D on an answer grid that is provided in your test booklet.
In the listening portion of the exam, you will hear a series of short exchanges between speakers. Each exchange is heard twice. While you listen, you will have four possible rejoinders in front of you. You are expected to pick the remark most likely to follow if the conversation were to continue.
The listening section then goes on to present a series of longer dialogues. After each dialogue you will hear four or five questions. Each question is heard twice. You will answer the questions by choosing the best response among the four choices provided. You have about 25 minutes to complete the listening portion of the exam.
You will then have approximately one hour to complete the reading segment of the test. The passages vary in length and subject matter. They usually come from French literature (mostly prose), newspaper or magazine articles, or virtually any non-technical, nonfiction text.
Each passage is followed by a series of questions for which you are given four possible answers. Again, you mark your choice by blackening the corresponding letter on the answer sheet in your text booklet. The writing and speaking segments of the test are not multiple-choice. They are both free response.
Writing Test Sections
There are three writing exercises. First you will be given a passage that has single words missing here and there. The missing words are represented by numbered blanks. You are expected to write out the missing word in a column of blanks to the right of the text. None of the answers in this first fill-in segment will be verbs.
Next, you will have a similar passage devoted entirely to verbs. This time, the blank indicates the infinitive form of the verb you are to use. You must provide the correct tense. The verb could also be a command form, or you may have to determine whether to use the indicative or the subjunctive. The verb you supply must match its subject. If the verb is reflexive, you will need to include the reflexive pronoun that matches it. If the verb is in a compound tense, you will need the correct auxiliary verb, the correct past participle, and possibly agreement.
The final writing segment is the essay. There is no choice of topic. Only one essay question is given. You are expected to write a coherent and well-organized essay in French in response to the given question. Your answer should showcase your mastery of verbs and grammatical structures. Your vocabulary should be varied, well-chosen, and as idiomatic as possible. That means you should not think in English and then try to translate into French. Being idiomatic means thinking like a French person, or at least asking yourself how a French person would say what you mean. Plan to write a minimum of three paragraphs and at least 200 words. You will have one hour and five minutes to complete the writing section of the test.
Allot at least 40 minutes for the essay; use the rest of the time for the fill-ins. Always read over what you have written, checking your spelling, accent marks, and agreement. Don't be nervous about the essay; the questions are always very open-ended and generally require your thoughtful opinion rather than specific facts. You will definitely be able to think of an answer; your challenge will be to express it as best you can.
Speaking Test Sections
You will be recording your own voice in the speaking segment of the exam. It is entirely free-response-that is, you may say whatever you think best answers the question. You will have approximately 15 minutes for this segment of the exam.
You will have 90 seconds to look over some drawings. You will then answer three questions based on what takes place in the sketches. You have exactly 60 seconds to record each answer. The first question asks you to tell what takes place in the sketch or series of sketches. The second and third questions use the drawings as a point of departure for a more general discussion.
There will be two sets of sketches on which you must comment. The first set is generally a series of five events that take place in sequence. The second set will have only two pictures, which you are usually asked to compare or contrast. Sometimes the second set has only one sketch with a split-screen effect. Look over the sketches carefully and jot down details as you note them and ideas as they come. The sketches invariably depict a typical life experience, and in that respect, they are not difficult at all.
It is imperative that you make an effort to familiarize yourself with whatever recording equipment you will be expected to use. Ask about this well in advance. If your testing location is your own school, ask to see exactly what you will be using. Get permission to practice using the device well before the exam. This will help you so much! If you are experienced in using the equipment, you will be calm. You will be able to concentrate on what you are going to say, rather than worrying whether the volume is adequate or whether you're close enough to the microphone. Work out all of those details before the exam, and practice over and over until using the equipment is a cinch for you. Some schools allow students to use their own tape recorders. This is ideal. Buy your recorder well ahead of time and get comfortable using it.
tools to help you prepare for the exam
Read and study this book thoroughly and do all of the drills provided. Keep a little notebook in which you can compile all of your written answers. Keep track of what you have completed and what you have yet to cover. Make notes on things you've mastered. Identify your weaknesses and devote extra effort to those areas. Take your time. Work no more than two or three hours at a sitting. Come back to it later when you are fresh. You will have the best possible results from a steady series of two-hour sessions spread over a long period of time. The first and most important answer to the question "What will you need?" is time! Schedule time to work with this book on a regular basis, just as you might schedule a regular workout or run. When you have completed the drills, try your hand at the pre-exam exercises, and then move on to the three practice tests. Explanations are provided for every answer! Go over them carefully.
You should invest in the best and most complete French-English dictionary you can afford. There are many good ones available. Le Robert and Oxford-Hachette are both excellent choices. My personal all-time favorite dictionary is Harrap's. It is the best French-English dictionary I have come upon in over 40 years of studying French. There is one caveat: Harrap's is written for British speakers of English, and you may consider that a drawback. Definitions may include terms that are not readily familiar to American speakers of English.
If you have the inclination, it is also very useful to have access to an all-French dictionary, such as the inimitable Petit Larousse. This is a wise investment, especially if you will be continuing with your study of French in college. Looking up a word in an all-French dictionary allows you to study the way the word is explained, as well as its meaning. It exposes you to authentic expression. You glimpse the actual choreography of the words in use. The more you delve into this all-French milieu, the easier it is to come away with a truly Gallic turn of phrase.
You should acquire a tape recorder with which to record your voice or use your voice mail or answering machine to practice speaking French. Call yourself up and leave a message in French! Do it every day. The more you do it, the easier it becomes. Recording your voice allows you to hear how you actually sound. You can then evaluate what you hear. Is your accent authentic? Are your vowels pure? Are your nasal sounds accura...
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