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Steps to Writing Well with Additional Readings Book

Steps to Writing Well with Additional Readings
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  • Steps to Writing Well with Additional Readings
  • Written by author Jean Wyrick
  • Published by Cengage Learning, January 2010
  • Reliable and straightforward, this text has helped thousands of students learn to write well. Jean Wyrick's rhetorically organized STEPS TO WRITING WELL WITH ADDITIONAL READINGS is known for its friendly tone and the clear way it presents the basics of es
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PART I. THE BASICS OF THE SHORT ESSAY.
1. Prewriting. Getting Started (or Soup-Can Labels Can Be Fascinating). Selecting a Subject. Finding Your Essay's Purpose and Focus. Pump-Primer Techniques. After You've Found Your Focus. Practicing What You've Learned. Discovering Your Audience. How to Identify Your Readers. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Keeping a Journal (Talking to Yourself Does Help). Chapter
1. Summary.
2. The Thesis Statement. What Is a Thesis? What Does a "Working Thesis" Do? Can a "Working Thesis" Change? Guidelines for Writing a Good Thesis. Avoiding Common Errors in Thesis Statements. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Using the Essay Map. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Chapter
2. Summary.
3. The Body Paragraphs. Planning the Body of Your Essay. Composing the Body Paragraphs. The Topic Sentence. Focusing Your Topic Sentence. Placing Your Topic Sentence. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Paragraph Development. Paragraph Length. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Paragraph Unity. Practicing What You've Learned. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Paragraph Coherence. Practicing What You've Learned. Paragraph Sequence. Transitions between Paragraphs. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Chapter
3. Summary.
4. Beginnings and Endings. How to Write a Good Lead-in. Avoiding Errors in Lead-ins. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. How to Write a Good Concluding Paragraph. Avoiding Errors in Conclusions. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. How to Write a Good Title.Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Chapter
4. Summary.
5. Drafting and Revising: Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking. What Is Revision? When Does Revision Occur? Myths about Revision. Can I Learn to Improve My Revision Skills? Preparing to Draft: Some Time-Saving Hints. Writing with Computers. Writing Centers, Computer Classrooms, and Electronic Networks. A Revision Process for Your Drafts. I. Revising for Purpose, Thesis, and Audience. II. Revising for Ideas and Evidence. III. Revising for Organization. IV. Revising for Clarity and Style. V. Editing for Errors. VI. Proofreading. A Final Checklist for Your Essay. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Collaborative Activities: Group Work, Peer Revision Workshops, and Team Projects. Benefiting from Collaborative Activities. Guidelines for Peer Revision Workshops. Guidelines for Small-Group Work. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Some Last Advice: How to Play with Your Mental Blocks. Chapter
5. Summary.
6. Effective Sentences. Developing a Clear Style. Practicing What You've Learned. Developing a Concise Style. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Developing a Lively Style. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Developing an Emphatic Style. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Chapter
6. Summary.
7. Word Logic. Selecting the Correct Words. Practicing What You've Learned. Selecting the Best Words. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Applying What You've Learned to Your Writing. Chapter
7. Summary.
8. The Reading-Writing Connection. How Can Reading Well Help Me to Become a Better Writer? How Can I Become an Analytical Reader? Steps to Reading Well. Sample Annotated Essay: "Our Youth Should Serve". Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Writing a Summary. Practicing What You've Learned. Benefiting from Class Discussions. Chapter
8. Summary. Part One summary: The Basics of the Short Essay.
PART II: PURPOSES, MODES, AND STRATEGIES.
9. Exposition. The Strategies of Exposition. Strategy One: Development by Example. Developing Your Essay. Problems to Avoid. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay: "So What's So Bad about Being So-So?" The drive for perfection is preventing too many people from enjoying sports and hobbies, says author Lisa Wilson Strick (who proudly plays the piano badly but with great pleasure).A Revision Worksheet Reviewing Your Progress. Strategy Two: Development by Process Analysis. Developing Your Essay. Problems to Avoid. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay (Informative Process): "To Bid the World Farewell." by describing the embalming process in vivid, step-by-step detail, social critic and author Jessica Mitford questions the value--and necessity--of the entire procedure. Professional Essay (Directional Process): "Preparing for the Job Interview: Know Thyself."Career-search consultant Katy Piotrowski offers a thoughtful six-step procedure to help job-seekers plan for successful interviews. A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress. Strategy Three: Development by Comparison and Contrast. Developing Your Essay. Which Pattern Should You Use? Problems to Avoid. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay (Point-by-Point Pattern). Sample Student Essay (Block Pattern). Professional Essay (Point-by-Point Pattern): "Grant and Lee: A Study in Contrasts" Noted historian Bruce Catton compares and contrasts the two great generals of the Civil War, concluding that their roles at Appomattox made possible "a peace of reconciliation."Professional Essay (Block Pattern): "Two Ways of Viewing the River". A Revision Worksheet. A Special Kind of Comparison: The Analogy. Reviewing Your Progress. Strategy Four: Development by Definition. Why Do We Define? Developing Your Essay. Problems to Avoid. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay: "The Munchausen Mystery." A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress. Strategy Five: Development by Division and Classification. Division. Classification. Developing Your Essay. Problems to Avoid. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay (Classification): "The Plot against People."Professional Essay (Division): "What is REALLY in a Hotdog? And How Unhealthy are They?"A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress. Strategy Six: Development by Causal Analysis. Developing Your Essay. Problems to Avoid. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay: "Some Lessons from the Assembly Line."A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress.
10. Argumentation. Developing Your Essay. Problems to Avoid. Common Logical Fallacies. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Essay Topics A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essays (Pro/Con): "Four is Not Enough" and "We Like the Four-day Week". Analyzing Advertisements. Conflicting Positions: Gun Control. Competing Products: Sources of Energy. Popular Appeals: Spending Our Money. A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress.
11. Description. How to Write Effective Description. Problems to Avoid. Practicing What You've Learned: "Snake" by Annie Dillard. Assignment: " birthday" by Marc Chagall. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay: "Still Learning from My Mother." A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress.
12. Narration. Writing the Effective Narrative Essay. Problems to Avoid. Practicing What You've Learned: "Tornado over Kansas" by John Steuart Curry. Essay Topics. A Topic Proposal for Your Essay. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay: "Salvation" by Langston Hughes. A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress.
13. Writing Essays Using Multiple Strategies. Choosing the Best Strategies. Problems to Avoid. Sample Student Essay. Professional Essay: "Don't Let Stereotypes Warp Your Judgments." A Revision Worksheet. Reviewing Your Progress.
PART III: SPECIAL ASSIGNMENTS.
14. Writing a Paper Using Research. Focusing Your Topic. Beginning Your Library Research. General Reference Works. Online Catalogs. Indexes. Databases. The Internet. Special Collections. Conducting Primary Research. The Personal Interview. The Questionnaire. Preparing a Working Bibliography. Choosing and Evaluating Your Sources. Preparing an Annotated Bibliography. Taking Notes. Distinguishing Paraphrase from Summary. Incorporating Your Source Material. Avoiding Plagiarism. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Choosing the Documentation Style for Your Essay. MLA Style. APA Style. Footnote and Bibliography Form. Practicing What You've Learned. Using Supplementary Notes. Sample Student Paper Using MLA Style. Student Sample Using APA Style.
15. Writing in Class: Exams and "Response" Essays. Steps to Writing Well under Pressure. Problems to Avoid. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Writing the Summary-and-Response Essay. Sample Student Essay. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment.
16. Writing about Literature. Using Literature in the Composition Classroom. Suggestions for Close Reading of Literature. Steps to Reading a Story. Annotated Story: "The Story of an Hour."Sample Student Essay. Steps to Reading a Poem. Annotated Poem: "When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer." Sample Student Essay. Guidelines for Writing about Literature. Problems to Avoid. Practicing What You've Learned (Stories): "Geraldo No Last Name" by Sandra Cisneros; "The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar Allan Poe. Practicing What You've Learned (Poems): "Those Winter Sundays" by Robert Hayden; "The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost. Suggestions for Writing.
17. Writing about Visual Arts. Using Visual Arts in the Composition Classroom. Suggestions for Analyzing Paintings. Additional Advice about Sculpture and Photography. Practicing What You've Learned. Guidelines for Writing about Artworks. Problems to Avoid. Annotated Painting: Nighthawks. Sample Student Essay. Suggestions for Writing.
18. Writing about Film. Using Film in the Composition Classroom. Guidelines for Writing about Film. Problems to Avoid. Sample Student Essay. Practicing What You've Learned: "Cinematic Riches in Millionaire" by Ty Burr. Suggestions for Writing. Glossary of Film Terms.
19. Writing in the World of Work. Composing Business Letters. Business Letter Format. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Sample Business Letter. Creating Memos. Sending Professional E-Mail. Problems to Avoid. Designing Cover Letters and Résumés. Critique Your Page Appeal. Problems to Avoid. Sample Résumés. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Preparing Interview Notes and Post-Interview Letters.
PART IV: A CONCISE HANDBOOK. Parts of Speech. Sentence Parts and Classifications.
20. Major Errors in Grammar. Errors with Verbs. Practicing What You've Learned. Practicing What You've Learned. Errors with Nouns. Errors with Pronouns. Practicing What You've Learned. Errors with Adverbs and Adjectives. Practicing What You've Learned. Errors in Modifying Phrases. Practicing What You've Learned. Errors in Sentences. Practicing What You've Learned. Practicing What You've Learned. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Practicing What You've Learned. Practicing What You've Learned. Chapter
21. A Concise Guide to Punctuation. The Period. The Question Mark. The Exclamation Point. Practicing What You've Learned. The Comma. Practicing What You've Learned. The Semicolon. Practicing What You've Learned. The Colon. Practicing What You've Learned. The Apostrophe. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Quotation Marks. Practicing What You've Learned. Parentheses. Brackets. The Dash. Practicing What You've Learned. The Hyphen. Practicing What You've Learned. Italics and Underlining. Practicing What You've Learned. Ellipsis Points. The Slash. Practicing What You've Learned.
22. A Concise Guide to Mechanics. Capitalization. Practicing What You've Learned. Abbreviations. Numbers. Practicing What You've Learned. Assignment. Spelling.
PART V: ADDITIONAL READINGS.
23. Exposition: Development by Example. "Darkness at Noon" by Harold Krents. " black Men and Public Space" by Brent Staples. "Thank You" by Alex Haley.
24. Exposition: Process Analysis. "The Jeaning of America" by Carin C. Quinn. "I Slalomly Swear" by Dave Barry. "Successful Presentations: Some Practical Advice" by Margaret McDonald.
25. Exposition: Comparison/Contrast. "My Real Car" by Bailey White. "The Myth Of The Latin Woman: I Just Met A Girl Named Maria" by Judith Ortiz Cofer. "Once More to the Lake (August 1941)" by E. B. White.
26. Exposition: Definition. "Celebrating Nerdiness" by Tom Rogers. "The Picture of Health" by Kim Lute. "What Is Poverty?" by Jo Goodwin Parker.
27. Exposition: Division/Classification. "Party Manners" by Richard L. Grossman."The Extendable Fork" by Calvin Trillin. "Mother Tongue" by Amy Tan.
28. Exposition: Causal Analysis. "The Teacher Who Changed My Life" by Nicholas Gage. "Mystery" by Nicholas Meyer. "Cell Phones and Social Graces" by Charles Fisher.
29. Argumentation. "A Scientist: 'I Am the Enemy'" by Ron Kline. "Defining the SAT Downward" by The Editorial Board of USA Today."Judging by the Cover" by Bonny Gainley.
30. Description. "A Day at the Theme Park" by W. Bruce Cameron. "The Way to Rainy Mountain" by N. Scott Momaday. "Walking On the Moon" by David R. Scott.
31. Narration. "38 Who Saw Murder Didn't Call the Police" by Martin Gansberg. "Crossing the Great Divide" by Peter Fish. "Arrival at Manzanar" by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston and James D. Houston.
32. Essays for Further Analysis: Multiple Strategies and Styles. "I Have a Dream" by Martin Luther King, Jr. " beauty: When the Other Dancer Is the Self" by Alice Walker. "A Modest Proposal" by Jonathan Swift.
33. Literature. "Perhaps the World Ends Here" by Joy Harjo. "Ozymandias" by Percy Bysshe Shelley. "Poem for An Inked Daughter" by Jane Wheeler."A Jury of Her Peers" by Susan Glaspell. List of Artworks. List of Advertisements. List of Collaborative Activities.


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