<p>I was reading over some student-sample FRQs and I see a lot of variation.</p>
<p>For questions involving part A and part B, it'd be to your advantage to label A)blahbalh and B)bldfaj. This way, the readers can clearly see which part of the question you're answering. Additionally, I think I'll be indenting each subsection of Part A and Part B, just so the readers know exactly what I'm answering. </p>
<p>How do you guys answer FRQs?</p>
<p>it would be nice if we knew which test you’re talking about :</p>
<p>Particularly ES, Psych, HuG…</p>
<p>But FRQs that include “Part A” and “Part B” of a question are applicable.</p>
<p>my teacher is a reader for psych and he said that it’s best to divide each concept into paragraphs and underline the particular concept as well.</p>
<p>For Human Geo, I would label it. I don’t think it really matters as long as you address all the parts of the question but it does make it easier for the grader because they might overlook it and think you didn’t answer part B. </p>
<p>But still, if you are good and write complete answers…shouldn’t be much of a problem. My teachers always tell us to label it clearly so that graders can see exactly what part of the question you are addressing. </p>
<p>Also, keep in mind that if you’re BSing and just making stuff up (like if you just plain don’t know an answer), you should DEFINITELY label. Just to make it clear in case you’re completely wrong and everything. Even if it makes a little connection to the right answer, you might be able to squeeze out a point. On Human Geo, even if you don’t know the question, you can probably answer it using some common sense and general knowledge.</p>