ENC 1101- Chpt 2-5
Dangling Modifier
"dangles" because it cannot logically describe any word in the sentence.
Effective thesis has three characteristics
1. An effective statement clearly expresses your essays's main idea. 2. An effective thesis statement communicates your essay's purpose. 3. An effective thesis statement is clearly worded.
Unified
A paragraph is unified if each sentence relates directly to the main idea pf the paragraph.
Review Outline
Check your essays structure by making a review outline
Two kinds of run-ons
Comma splice fused sentence
Complex Sentence
Dependent clause, independent clause
Chronological Order
First event to last event, Past to present....
Examples of Narartion
Histories, biographies, and auto biographies follow a narrative form, as do personal letters, diaries, journals, and some of the content on personal wed pages or social networking sites.
Revision
It is a continuing process during which you consider the logic and clarity of your ideas as well as how effectively they are presented.
Stating your Thesis
It is a good idea to include a one-sentence statement of your thesis early in your essay.
Flashbacks
Shifts into the past to tell a story
Expressive Writing
You convey personal feelings or impressions to readers
Informative Writing
You inform readers about something
Well developed
a paragraph is well developed if it contains the support through examples, reasons, and facts that readers need to understand the main idea.
Types of Audience
*Individual- Your instructor or specific group Group- Classmates or coworkers Specialized- A group of medical doctors or economists *General/Universal-Audience members have nothing in common ( readers of a newspaper)
Body Paragraph should...
-Develop Thesis -Body Paragraph should be UNIFIED -Each sentence in the paragraph should develop the paragraphs main idea -Coherent,the sentences are smoothly and logically connected to one another -Each body paragraph should be well developed -Should follow a particular pattern of development -Clearly support the thesis
Narration
1st person tells a story a personal piece of writing MUST BE IN ORDER- PAST TO PRESENT/ PRESENT TO PAST Logical sequence of events Include rich specific details
Description
1st,2nd,3rd person Paint an image with words Utilize all senses Heavy in the details Order does not matter
Title
A descriptive tittle can print readers it is not detailed enough to reveal your essay's purpose or direction.
Coherent
A paragraph is coherent if its sentences are smoothly and logically connected to one another. by using key words, pronouns, and transitions.
Concise
A sentence that is efficient, it is not overloaded with extra words and complicated constructions.
Conclusion
Always end your essay in a way that reinforces your thesis and your purpose. It is rarely longer than a paragraph, it should be consistent with the rest of your essay.
Misplaced Modifier
Appears to modify the wrong word because it is placed incorrectly in the sentence.
Colons
Are used to introduced lists, examples, and clarifications. A colon should always be preceded by a complete sentence.
Dashes
Are used to set off and emphasize information within a sentence
Questions for Probing
Are useful because they reflect how your mind operates
Modifiers
Are words and phrases that describe other words in a sentence.
Eliminate monotony
By varying your sentence structure
Comparison and Contrast
Can be separated Third person
Recognizing a Pattern
Deciding how to structure an essay is easy when your assignment specifies a particular pattern of development. You must recognize the clues that an assignment gives to structure your essay.
Oral Comments
During a one on one conference an instructor can provide thoughts/ideas on revision.
Techniques/Strategies to plan/write essay
Freewriting Brainstorming Journal Writing Clustering Making an Informal Outline
Exemplification
Give examples Included in most essays Order does not matter
Format
How your paragraphs, sentences, and words look on the page
Implied Thesis
Implied thesis conveys an essay's main focus, but it does not do so explicitly. Instead the selection and arrangement of the essay's ideas suggest the focus.
Informal Writing
Informal Outline simply suggest the shape of your emerging business
What is you audience and purpose usually in college?
Instructor/your purpose in most cases is to demonstrate your mastery of the subject matter, you reasoning ability, and your competence as a writer
Parts of an Introduction
Introduces your subject creates interest states your thesis
What will your essay consist of?
Introduction ( presents your thesis statement) Several body paragraphs that develop and support your thesis Conclusion
Parts of Essay
Introduction usually 1Paragraph >>>Hook,Thesis,Background ( Intro) >>>Capture Readers attention >>>Assume audience knows nothing >>>Hook, Background, Attention Body Paragraph >>Develops P >>Supporting Details >>>Major( Directly support main idea) >>>Minor (Support, Enhance, Elaborate your major details) >>>Conclusion
Brainstorming
Is a way of discovering ideas about your topic by recording every fact, idea, or detail you can think that relates to your topic.
Clustering
Is a way of visually arranging ideas so that you can tell at a glance where the ideas belong and whether or not you need more information.
Comma Splice
Is an error that occurs when two independent clauses are connected by just a comma.
Fused sentence
Is an error that occurs when two independent clauses are connected without any punctuation.
Fragment
Is an incomplete sentence, one that is missing a subject, a verb, or Botha. subject or verb.
Parallelism
Is the use of matching grammatical elements (words, phrases, clauses) to express similar ideas.
First Draft
Is to get your ideas down on paper so you can react to them.
Purpose
Limits what you say and how you say it
Types of Patterns
Narration Description Exemplification Process Cause and Effect Comparison and contrast Classification and division Definition
Deciding on a thesis
No rules determine when you draft your thesis; the decision depends on the scope of your assignment, your knowledge of the subject, and your method of writing.
Why Brainstorming or Journal Writing?
Once you have narrowed your subject to a workable topic, you need to find something to say about it. Brainstorming/Journal Writing are useful tools for generating ideas.
Simple Sentence
One independent clauses
Process
Order Matters Step[s, Procedures, How to Third Person/Second Person
Cause and Effect
Order doesn't matter Cannot be separated Multiple causes and one effect Direct relationship
Occasion
Refers to the situation that leads someone to with about a topic. In academic writing situation the occasion is almost always a specific assignment.
Editing
Searching for grammatical errors, punctuation, and look over sentence style and word choice one last time.
Proofreading
Searching for surface errors, such as spelling errors, typos, incorrect spacing, or problems with your essay's format.
Peer-editing worksheet
Students maybe required to exchange papers and evaluate classmates work
Subjects and verbs agree
Subjects and verbs must agree in number; a singular subject takes a singular verb.
General Subjects/Specific Subject
Tablets/The benefits of tablets in elementary classrooms Herman Melville's Billy Budd/Billy Budd as a Christ Figure Constitutional Law/One unforeseen result of the Miranda Ruling Fracking/Should fracking be banned
Thesis
The main idea of your essay, its central point. It is more than a title, an announcement of your intent, or statement of fact. A judgement or opinion can be an effective thesis.
Body Of Paragraph
The middle section of your essay develops your thesis, they present support that convinces your audience your thesis is reasonable.
Focused Freewriting/Looping
The process of writing more specific free writing after initial free writing.
Antecedent
The word or noun that it replaces.
Compound Sentence
Two independent clauses
Journal Writing
Useful source of ideas at any stage of the writing process. Journal writing are likely to be more narrowly focused than freewriting/brainstorming
Faulty Parallelism
Using items that are not parallel in a context in which parallelism is expected-makes ideas difficult to follow and will likely confuse your readers.
Questions for Probing
What happened? When did it happen? Where did it happen? Who did it? What does it look like? What are the characteristics? What impressions does it make? What are some typical cases or examples of it? How did it happen? What makes it work? How is it made? Why did it happen? What caused it? What does it cause? What are its effects? How is it like other things? How is it different from other things? What are its parts or types?
Knowledge
What you know ( and don't know) about a subject determines what you can say about it.
What do probing questions yield?
When applied to a subject, some of these questions can yield many workable topics, including some you might never have considered had you not asked the questions.
Freewriting
When free writing you write for five to ten minutes without stopping, and without paying attention to spelling, grammar, and punctuation. The key is to keep writing. Once completed look through what you have written and find ideas that you can write about.
Persuasive Writing
You try to convince readers to act or think in a certain way
Written Comments
Your instructors thoughts or opinions on your essay, possible corrections, or restructure of sentences.
Nonrestrictive clause
a clause does not supply information that is essential to the sentences meaning
Restrictive clause
a clause that supplies information that is vital to the sentence's meaning
Process Essay
an explanation of a laboratory experiment, it outlines a series of steps in chronological order. ( like narrative)
Apostrophes
have to uses: to indicate missing letters in contractions and to show possession or ownership.