English - Writing Review

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Dependent clause

(also called a subordinate clause) contains a subject and a verb but does not express a complete thought

Five Domains Of the Writing Rubric

1. Focus 2. Content 3. Organization 4. Style 5. Convertions

Major Parts of an Essay

1. Heading (upper right hand corner) *(12-font; Times New Roman; double spaced) 2. Introductory Paragraph 3. Supporting Paragraph(s) 4. Concluding Paragraph

Three Major Forms of Writing

1. Narrative 2. Informational (Expository) 3. Persuasive

What are the steps in the Writing Process?

1. Prewriting 2. Writing 3. Revising 4. Editing 5. Publishing

Two parts of a sentence

1. Subject 2. Predicate

Research

Credible sources are...ones that are trustworthy and can be verified. • Examples: secure websites, encyclopedias, interviews, newspapers • Non-examples: non-secure websites (Wikipedia), propaganda, rumor, blogs Paraphrasing: incorporating the ideas from a source into one's own words

Content

Developing ideas through clear supporting evidence

Focus

Following the same controlling point throughtout an essay

Editing

• Check for correctness in spelling, capitalization, punctuation, and grammar • Prepare a neat, final draft

Writing

• Compose a first draft using the prewriting plan as a guide

Prewriting

• Explore possible topics • Collect facts and details • Organize the information collected • Plan how to used gathered information

Introductory Paragraph

• Grabs the reader's interest • Includes a thesis statement: the main idea of the essay • Previews details that support the essay • Includes a transition of some kind to next paragraph

Heading (upper right hand corner)

• Name • Due date • Class period • Title of assignment

Supporting Paragraph(s)

• Provides specific details that develop the thesis • Examples: facts, statistics, quotes, etc.

Revising

• Review the draft for clarity, word choice, and sentence variety • Have another person review the draft and offer suggestions

Publishing

• Share your finished product with an audience

Concluding Paragraph

• Summarizes the main idea of the essay • Does not introduce new information • Is usually the shortest paragraph of the essay

Formal Writing should not include

• The use of "I" or "You" • Slang or abbreviations • Contractions

Persuasive

• purpose is to defend/support your position on an important issue • can include facts and details • can include personal opinion (but should not be the author's sole basis of argument) • examples can include editorials, speeches, essays

Narrative

• purpose is to entertain, tell a story, or part of one's life • can include elements of story point of view: the perspective from which it is told • can include narration and/or dialogue • examples include novels, short stories, plays, poems

Informational (Expository)

• purpose is to share information • can include facts and details • does not include personal opinion • examples include essays, articles, letters, instructions

Rambling Sentences

a sentence that connects too many ideas with the word "and"

Wordy Sentences

a sentence that uses unnecessary words that creates repetition

Subject/Verb Agreement

a singular subject needs a singular verb and a plural subject needs a plural verb

Fragments

incomplete thoughts, they may be missing a subject, a predicate, or both

Misplaced Modifiers

when a descriptive phrase in improperly placed in a sentence and appears to describe the wrong word or idea

Subject

who or what is doing something

Run-ons

putting two or more sentences together (comma splice: putting two sentences together with only a comma)

Predicate

tells what the subject is doing or something about the subject

Organization

Presenting the supporting details in a specific order

Conventions

Properly using grammar, mechanics, and spelling

Five kinds of sentence problems

Run-ons, Rambling Sentences, Wordy Sentences, Misplaced Modifiers, and Subject/Verb Agreement

Style

The author's choice and use of words in a piece of writing (consider the audience)


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