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9th Citation Common Assessment Q3

Prompt/Claim:

In Act I, Shakespeare shows that love and hate


are the most passionate emotions. Find an
example that shows one of these emotions and
how it motivates and drives a characters
behaviors.
Write a paragraph to support your position with textual
evidence. Remember to include a TAG line, brief summary
of scene, claim, evidence, signal phrases, and correct
parenthetical citations for Shakespeare. You will also need
to warrant or explain the relationship between your
evidence and your claim.
Below Standard [1]

Citation of
Borrowed
Material

Reference to
Source

Reference to
Location

Citation
Punctuation

Quotation
Punctuation

Not applicable

Approaching Standard [2]

Not applicable

At Standard [3]

Above Standard [4+]

ALL borrowed material is cited,


with both a signal phrase and
parenthetical citation. If this
criterion is not met, all remaining
criteria must be marked at No
Evidence of Standard.

ALL criteria AT STANDARD are met.


Additionally:
Quotations of four or fewer lines are
placed within double quotation marks.
Quotations of more than four lines are
indented two tabs (1 inch) from the left
margin. Text is double-spaced and uses a
comma or a colon after the last word in the
text to mark the beginning of the quotation.
The parenthetical citation for block
quotes follows the punctuation at the end of
the last sentence of the quoted material.

The authors name


or the title is not included
in a parenthetical citation
if more than one source
AND there is no signal
phrase leading into the
quotation. Authors name
and title of poem does not
appear in the analysis.
Page or line
number(s) (if applicable)
are not included in the
parenthetical citation.

The authors name or the


title is misused in a parenthetical
citation if more than one source
OR there is no signal phrase
leading into the quotation.
Authors name and the title of
poem introduces analysis.

The authors name (or an


abbreviated title) is correctly located
in a parenthetical citation if more
than one source OR in a signal
phrase leading into the quotation.
Authors name and the title of poem
introduces analysis.

Page or line number(s) (if


applicable) are always correctly
placed in the parenthetical citation.

Question marks and exclamation marks


not originally in the quotation go outside the
quotation marks.

Parenthetical
citations at the end of the
sentence do not include
the correct form of
punctuation mark
(comma or period).
Periods and commas
are not placed inside
quotation marks if there
is no parenthetical
reference.

Page or line number(s) (if


applicable) are included in the
parenthetical citation, but
additional words (page, pg., etc.)
or commas are also included.
Parenthetical citations at the
end of the sentence include a
punctuation mark (comma or
period), but are misplaced.

Parenthetical citations at the


end of the sentence are followed by
the appropriate punctuation mark
(comma or period).

Use single quotation marks to set off a


quotation within a quotation.

Periods and commas are


inconsistently placed inside
quotation marks if there is no
parenthetical reference.

Periods and commas are


ALWAYS placed inside quotation
marks if there is no parenthetical
reference.

An ellipsis ( . . . ) is used when omitting


words, phrases or sentences from quoted
material and the omission of content does not
substantially change the meaning of the quote.

If borrowed material is not cited, mark No Evidence of Standard [0]

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