lesson 9: example text i

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Lesson Nine Example Text I

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  • 1. Lesson Nine Example Text I

2.

  • I will collect the following:
  • First Draft
  • Rough Outline
  • Include you thesis statement at the top of your paper.
  • Also,labelyour assignments at the top of the page or mark the page.

Ne x t Week 3. Short Reflection Preparation for Final Exam Week 18 Final Portfolio Argument in Life Week 17 Peer Review 2 Peer Review / Editing Week 16 Second Draft / Formal Outline / Reading notes Example Text Week 15 Introductions / Conclusions Week 14 Peer Review 1 Peer Review / Revision Week 13 First Draft / Outline Quotations & Citations Week 12 Example Text Week 11 4. Your portfolio will count as yourmidterm . 10% Participation 20% Portfolio 70% Final Exam Grad i ng 5. Although we will be looking at many writing skills, we will pay special attention to how the writer develops her ideas by using body paragraphs. TodaysO bjective 6. Elements of a P a ragraph

  • Unity
  • Coherence
  • Topic Sentence
  • Adequate Development

7.

  • Argum e ntative Body Paragr a phs
  • Supporting evidence (think: courtroom)
  • Valleys and mountains (think: tour guide)

8. Methodso f Guiding

  • Methods of using supporting evidence and guiding your reader through the valleys and hilltops:
  • Exposition
  • Interpretation
  • Signposts

9. Methods of G u iding

  • Exposition:
  • Discourse designed to convey information or explain what is difficult to understand.
  • facts / individual bits / evidence

10. M e thods of Guiding

  • Interpretation:
  • To explain or tell the meaning of something.
  • inductive / deductive reasoning

11. Methods of Gu i ding

  • Signposts
  • Signposts are internal aids to assist readers; they usually consist of several sentences or a paragraph outlining what the article has covered and where the article will be going.

12. E x position

  • The most important material for exposition is source material.How do we effectively incorporate source material into our body paragraphs?

13. Using Sour c es

  • Use your sources as support for your insights, not as the backbone of your paper.

14. Using Sourc e s

  • 2.Summarize(condense a text by stating the main ideas in your own words) andparaphrase(say the same thing in a different way) much more often than you use direct quotes (same words as the original, in quotation marks).

15. U s ing Sources

  • 3.Don't use direct quotes as fillers but because the author says something so aptly or dramatically that a paraphrase would lose that power. Or, if you're analyzing the language of a passage.

16. Usi n g Sources

  • 4. Explain direct quotes. Readers have to knowwhyyou include source material where you do.

17. Using Sourc e s

  • 5. If multiple sources say the same thing, summarize what they say and put a few key names in brackets at the end of the sentence.

18. U s ing Sources

  • 6. When you do use direct quotes, the most fluid way to integrate them is to incorporate key words right into your text.
  • Example
  • "We can see this change when Othello calls his wife a 'strumpet' (4.2.81) . . . ."

19.

  • 7. Don't summarize plots of primary sources. Assume your audience has read the work. Only explain as much as you need in order to establish context for an example.

Usin gSources 20. Computer Assist e d Instruction: Blessing or Bane? By Susan Sexton 1987 21. Subject:Computer Assisted InstructionPurpose:Argumentative / Informative Audience:Teachers / Parents Writ i ng Triangle 22. Educational institutions should seriously analyze advocacy of Computer Assisted Instruction because educational researchers have yet to prove that CAIin schools substantially increases learning. Th e sis Statement 23.

  • Introduction
  • Courseware
  • Projects/Experiments
  • Conclusion

O u tline 24.

  • Paragraph 1
  • Builds a context and defines the issue for the audience.
  • Direct quotations used to establish the issues importance.

Introducti o n 25.

  • Paragraph 2
  • Continues to build background and context.
  • Beginning to build informed and knowledgeable persona (ethos).

Introducti o n 26.

  • Paragraph 3
  • Moves reader toward thesis and focus by questioning value of CAI.
  • Longer quotation to establish authority of facts and figures, building informed persona.
  • Informative aim for audience.
  • Notice this isnotemotional or irrational.

Introducti o n 27.

  • Paragraph 4
  • Focuses the thesis statement even more.
  • Notice the thesis is notentirelyexplicitly stated or connected.
  • Thesis/focus comes at the end of the introduction.

Introducti o n 28. Educational institutions should seriously analyze advocacy of Computer Assisted Instruction because educational researchers have yet to prove that CAIin schools substantially increases learning. Th e sis Statement 29.

  • Note: each section of the body will prove the thesis.
  • Introduction
  • Courseware
  • Projects/Experiments
  • Conclusion

O u tline 30. The following section oncoursewarewill prove, according to the focus stated earlier in the introduction, that CAI may work, but only in ideal circumstances with ideal students . O u tline 31.

  • Introduction
  • Courseware
  • A. Tutorial
  • B.Drill/Practice
  • C.Simulation
  • D.Problem Solving
  • III. Project / Experiments
  • IV. Conclusion

O u tline 32.

  • Paragraph 5
  • Use of definitional thinking.
  • Paraphrased material in sentences 5 and 6.Note how authors name is part of the paraphrase.
  • Final sentence is a signpost.

B o dy 33.

  • Paragraph 6
  • Two paraphrases in sentences 2 and 3 bring informative aim into paragraph.
  • Longer quotation provides insight into how CAI programs work.
  • Final sentences uses paraphrase and writers own ideas toanalyze significanceof long quotation

B o dy 34.

  • Paragraph 7
  • Argumentative aim evident.
  • Paragraph summarizes two pages of source material with Susans analysis interspersed.
  • Elements of a reasonable persona added.

B o dy 35.

  • Introduction
  • Courseware
  • A. Tutorial
  • B.Drill/Practice
  • C.Simulation
  • D.Problem Solving
  • III. Projects / Experiments
  • IV. Conclusion

O u tline 36.

  • Introduction
  • Courseware
  • III. Projects / Experiments
  • A. Bass/Perkins Experiment
  • B.Shalvoy Study
  • C.Pogrow Study
  • IV. Conclusion

O u tline 37. Educational institutions should seriously analyze advocacy of Computer Assisted Instruction because educational researchers have yet to prove that CAIin schools substantially increases learning. Th e sis Statement 38. The following section on projects and experiments will prove, according to the focus stated earlier in the introduction, that projects and experiments are inconclusive, at best, by the admission of the researchers themselves. O u tline 39.

  • Paragraph 8
  • Purely transitional paragraph, allowing the writer to shift the essays focus from types of CAI programs to the effects CAI has on higher-order thinking skills.
  • A clear, precise summary of ideas creates a persona reflecting intelligence and reasonable objectivity.

B o dy 40.

  • Paragraph 9
  • A strongly argumentative paragraph, for the necessity of these higher-order thinking skills.
  • Quotations used to define and analyze this need.

B o dy 41.

  • Paragraph 10
  • Argumentative aim again strongly present as the writer seeks to show weakness in how scholarly research on CAI has been used.
  • Fourth sentence begins a summary that builds a context so that audience can understand the material in question.
  • Quotation is obviously necessary because of the complexity of the material.

B o dy 42.

  • Paragraph 11
  • The paraphrase that opens the paragraph analyzes the previous quotation with a keen argumentative edge taken from Bass and Perkins own study.
  • The writer uses researchers own admission of weakness to support her argument through a key, but telling, direct quotation.

B o dy 43.

  • Introduction
  • Courseware
  • III. Projects / Experiments
  • A. Bass/Perkins Experiment
  • B.Shalvoy Study
  • C.Pogrow Study
  • IV. Conclusion

O u tline 44.

  • Draws together separate threads of the writers argument clearly and precisely.
  • Concludes the essay withimplicationsthat both teachers and parents should consider.
  • Persona appears concerned and intelligent.

Concl u sion 45.

  • I will collect the following:
  • First Draft
  • Rough Outline
  • Include you thesis statement at the top of your paper.
  • Also,labelyour assignments at the top of the page or mark the page.

Ne x t Week