They Say/I Say

Lakukan tugas rumah & ujian kamu dengan baik sekarang menggunakan Quizwiz!

Revision strategies

How do you represent what others say? What do you say? Naysayers? Metacommentary to clarify? Tied it all together? Why does your argument matter?

Summarizing

-any information from others that you present in your own words, including that which you paraphrase -requires balancing what the original author is saying with the writer's own focus -be true to what the original author says while emphasizing those aspects of what the author says that interest you

Three ways to respond to a "They Say"

-disagree and explain why: have to offer persuasive reasons why you disagree; to turn it into an argument need to give reasons to support what you say; something to contribute to move the conversation forward (duh, twist of logic) -agree but with a difference: need to do more than echoing the views you agree with; bring something fresh and new to the table (unnoticed evidence, personal experience) -agree and disagree simultaneously: agreeing and disagreeing places your argument on the map of positions while keeping it complex; can be tipped subtly toward agreement or disagreement

Maintaining your own voice

-draw upon kinds of expressions and turns of phrase that you use every day when conversing with family and friends -mix academic and colloquial styles: academic, professional language with popular expressions and sayings -think about audience and purpose

Using transitions

-help cross from one point to another in your text -at or near the start of sentences so they can signal to readers where your text is going

Entertain objections (planting a naysayer)

-nameless, faceless naysayer -when possible attribute to a specific ideology or school -add precision and impact by identifying what the labels of naysayers are

Connecting the parts

-need to gesture back to what you have just said or forward to what you plan to say -establishes a sense of momentum and direction by making explicit connections among their different parts -sets up what is to come and is clearly informed by what has already been said

Use pointing words

-point or refer backward to some concept in the previous sentence -this, these, that, those, their, and such; his, he, her, she, it, their -be careful of being ambiguous -make sure there is one and only one possible thing that pointer could be referring to

Quoting

-quoting gives credibility to your summary and helps ensure that it is fair and accurate -quotes have been taken from context and need to be integrated into their new textual surroundings -make sure they support your argument -frame them in a way that makes their relevance and meaning clear

Repeat key terms and phrases

-repeat throughout the text -synonyms and antonyms to prevent repetition -binds the passage together into a unified whole

Repeat yourself but with a difference

-saying the same thing you've just said but in a slightly different way that avoids sounding monotonous -build bridges between ideas by echoing and then moving text into new territory

Writing as a conversation

-state your own ideas as a response to others -entering a conversation with others' views -it is what others are saying and thinking that motivates our writing and gives it a reason for being

Voice markers

-subtle markers that indicate whose voice the writer is speaking in -lets the reader know when a particular view should be attributed to the writer or to someone else 7

Anticipate objections (planting a naysayer)

-tell readers what others might say against you to enhance credibility -more voice you give to critics' objections, more you tend to disarm those critics -make a preemptive strike -show respect for readers by seeing them as independent, critical thinkers

Developing a "They Say" and "I Say"

-to give writing a point writer also needs to indicate what the larger conversation conversation thesis is responding to is -needs to explain what he or she is responding to either before offering response or early in the discussion -start with what others are saying and then introduce your own ideas a response

Distinguishing what you say from what they say

-use voice markers -tone, phrasing both help -make sure readers can tell who is saying what -can use "I"

Metacommentary

-way of commenting on your claims and telling others how (and how not) to think about them -like the chorus in a Greek play -to clarify and elaborate -"in other words", "my point is not"

Signal verbs

-when summarizing or introducing a quotation use vivid and precise signal verbs -text will be more accurate and lively if you tailor your verbs to suit the precise actions you're describing -people tend to use tamer verbs when writing than when speaking

Saying why it matters

-who cares?-who has a stake, is it part of a larger conversation -so what?-linking argument to some larger matter that readers already deem important


Set pelajaran terkait

SkillsUSA - Criminal Justice Trivia Bowl Terms

View Set

SOC205 - Exam II - Chapter 8 Questions

View Set

life health and variable annuity

View Set

Chapter 13 Troubleshooting Methodology and resolving Core Hardware Problems

View Set

Communiquer sans les mots / lexique

View Set

Classifying Quadrilaterals (Quiz)

View Set

Business Law Chapter 8 Contract Nature and Terminology

View Set