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AP English Language — Claims and Evidence — Writing Drill 3

Drill 3 · Writing · Claims and Evidence — Writing

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About This Drill

AP English Language — Claims and Evidence — Writing Drill 3 is a Writing practice drill covering Claims and Evidence — Writing. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.

Writing drills ask you to read like a writer — analyzing a student draft and choosing revisions that strengthen its argument. This drill emphasizes the difference between evidence that illustrates a claim and evidence that actually supports it — a distinction that separates adequate AP essays from strong ones.

Passage

The following is a draft of a student argumentative essay defending arts education in public schools, written for an AP English class. [1] Arts education is frequently the first thing cut when school budgets tighten, and this pattern reflects a misunderstanding of what the arts actually teach. [2] Music, visual art, theater, and dance are not extracurricular enrichment. [3] They are academic disciplines that develop skills essential to success in school, work, and civic life. [4] The research on arts education consistently finds benefits that extend well beyond artistic skill. [5] Studies have found that students who participate in arts programs show stronger performance in reading and mathematics, higher graduation rates, and lower rates of chronic absenteeism. [6] These correlations are especially pronounced among students from low-income households, for whom arts programs frequently provide the only structured opportunity for creative problem-solving, collaborative work, and sustained attention to a complex task. [7] Arts education also develops capacities that are difficult to teach through conventional academic subjects: the ability to tolerate ambiguity, revise work in response to feedback, and produce something original under constraints. [8] These are not soft skills. [9] They are precisely the capacities that employers in fields ranging from engineering to healthcare to business consistently identify as most lacking in new hires. [10] Critics argue that schools face pressure to prioritize tested subjects — reading, mathematics, and science — and that arts courses divert time from these priorities. [11] But this framing misunderstands the relationship between arts education and academic performance. [12] Arts programs do not compete with academic achievement; the research suggests they support it, particularly for students who are disengaged from conventional academic formats. [13] The decision to cut arts programs is rarely based on evidence. [14] It is based on a budget logic that assigns value only to what can be directly measured, and arts outcomes are harder to put on a standardized test than reading scores. [15] But 'harder to measure' is not the same as 'less valuable.' [16] A school system that eliminates what it cannot measure is not being rigorous. [17] It is being incurious.

Questions in This Drill

  1. The writer wants to revise sentence 5 to add more specific and credible evidence to support the claim about academic benefits of arts participation. Which revision best accomplishes this?
  2. The writer wants to revise sentence 8 — 'These are not soft skills' — to make this rebuttal of the implied dismissal more persuasive. Which revision best accomplishes this?
  3. The writer wants to add a sentence after sentence 12 to more effectively bridge the rebuttal back to the essay's central claim. Which addition best serves this purpose?
  4. The writer wants to revise sentence 14 to make the critique of budget logic more precise and harder to dismiss. Which revision best accomplishes this?
  5. The writer wants the final two sentences — 'A school system that eliminates what it cannot measure is not being rigorous. It is being incurious' — to land with more force. Which revision best accomplishes this while preserving the two-sentence structure?