For years, I have used a Poem of the Week as part of my poetry instruction in AP Literature. Last year, because the pandemic resulted in hybrid instruction and only 50% (or fewer) of my kids were in class at a time, I wanted to be sure that I put some significant emphasis on AP Lit thesis writing.
As part of our weekly poem study, the Friday prompt became an AP-style poetry essay prompt. Students only needed to write a thesis. And early in the year, it became evident that our thesis statements needed work.
AP Literature Thesis Statements and “The Point”
When the College Board came out with the new rubrics in 2019, they set aside a point that is designated for the thesis. It’s one point and students either get it or they don’t. And truthfully, it is not that hard to “get” the point. Students must simply “provide a defensible interpretation in response to the prompt” which could be supported by the text (for more, see AP Central). So in other words, students must be able to find *something* in the text that they can write about beyond a summary.
Early on, I observed two things: 1. Not all AP Lit thesis statement are created equal (even if they do earn the point) and 2. Students needed help moving from making a base claim to making a strong claims that lead to better analysis later in the essay.
AP Lit Thesis Starting Points
At the beginning of the year, my kids were writing things like
- The author uses metaphors to reveal that life gives you new, and endless opportunities each and every day.
- Merriam’s use of her metaphor for a new day in “Metaphor” reveals her positive outlook on life.
- eve marriam’s use of metaphor shows that she feels that every day is new day to write your own story.
And
- Love can cause pain
- Lowell uses diction and figurative language to show her intimate and spiritual connection to her partner in the poem
- Through Lowell’s uses of poetic elements and techniques, she’s able to carefully convert the speaker’s complex relationship with whoever they’re addressing.
While indeed some of these would earn the thesis point, they do no convey the depth that a good, strong AP Lit thesis will. We want students to address the complexity of the text and these just don’t cut it.
The Issue of Complexity
So the first step in helping students to develop a strong thesis is to get beyond just repeating the topic with a few elements of author’s craft thrown in. They have to be sure that they are fully addressing the complexity of the topic highlighted by the task.
The first set of thesis statements above go with Eve Merriam’s poem “Metaphor.” This is my favorite poem to start the school year with because it reflects where we are. Each school year is also like a “new sheet of paper.”
We spend the week discussing the poem (My daily prompts are available here.) Then on Friday, I present students with the following prompt:
In Eve Merriam’s poem “Metaphor” (1986), the speaker portrays the blankness of a new day. In a well written essay, analyze how Merriam uses poetic elements and techniques to convey the speaker’s complex attitude toward life.
And while all of the above thesis statements DO say something about her attitude toward life, none of them get to how it is complex. So the first step is to get students thinking about contrasts within the poem and other elements that help add to the depth of the text. A good way to do this might be through the Interstate, Microscope and Compass Technique from Gina at Lit and More.
AP® Lit Literary Argument
Once students see complexity in a text, they can move into developing a more complex AP® literature thesis statement.
It is also important to remind them that the College Board calls these essays “literary argument.” And an argument is by definition something that has two sides. When we teach argument writing to our English 11 students in preparation for the New York State English Regents we encourage them to include the counterargument in their thesis. And although a literary argument doesn’t necessarily have a counterargument, it should have two sides. In other words, complexity.
In these early stages, it is sometimes useful to give the students complexity starters that they can use as the basis of their thesis statements. This is a list that I provide to my students:
- even though x, y is also true
- not only j, but also k
- although d, also e
- while
- and yet
- despite
- however
- nevertheless
- notwithstanding
- in contrast
This list along with other helpful tips on writing AP Literature Thesis Statements is included in my AP Thesis Anchor charts here.
AP® Lit Thesis Examples
As we work through the year, thesis statements that once read “love can cause pain” become
“Even though Edith Matilda Thomas’s poem entitled “Winter Sleep” appears to be a simplistic take about growing old she also uses poetic elements such as symbolism, diction, and parallel structure to convey a complex attitude towards aging as she looks back on her life.”
And
“Although the speaker is reflecting on the spring-like happiness of her youth, she understands that death is coming as she moves into the metaphorical winter of her life due to her old age.”
Building on Complexity
The key to helping students earn the thesis point on the AP Literature Rubric is to help them understand that they are writing a literary argument and that an argument by its very nature has two sides or two part. Then include both of those sides in your thesis.
For more help in AP Lit Writing, be sure to check out these other AP Lit Essay Writing Anchor Charts.
4 Responses
Is there a way to get working links. Both the link to the poem and the link to the daily prompts are both broken and give an error message when clicked.
Thank you for bringing that to my attention. These links are fixed now.