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Class 19
  EWRT 1A
Agenda
• Introductions

• Conclusions

• Integrating and Citing Sources

• Editing Strategies

• Open Discussion: Essay 4/Speech

• In-Class Writing
  • Establishing Ethos
  • Managing Pathos
  • Using Logos
Writing the Opening Sentences

• Try out one or two different ways of beginning your essay—
  possibly from the list below. You might want to review your
  invention writing to see if you have already written a
  paragraph or notes that would work to launch your essay. To
  engage your readers’ interest from the start, consider the
  following opening strategies:
  • a scenario (like O’Malley)
  • statistics (like Kornbluh)
  •  a research study
  • a comparison to other places where the solution has been tried.
  • a preview of the negative consequences if the problem goes
    unsolved
  • criticism of an alternative solution
The Ending

• Try out one or two different ways of concluding your essay—possibly
  from the list below. You might want to review your invention writing to
  see if you have already written a paragraph or notes that would work to
  wrap up your essay.

• End by summarizing my solution and its advantages, as O’Malley does.

• End with a scenario suggesting the consequences of a failure to solve the
  problem.

• End with an inspiring call to action.

• Is there something special about the problem that I should remind
  readers of at the end, as Kornbluh does when she urges that an award be
  given to the companies that lead the way.
Integrating
Quotations
In-Text Quotations
• At the Beginning

• “To live a life is not to cross a field,” Sutherland, quoting Pasternak, writes at
  the beginning of her narrative (11).

• In the Middle

• Woolf begins and ends by speaking of the need of the woman writer to have
  “money and a room of her own” (4)--an idea that certainly spoke to Plath’s
  condition.

• At the End

• In The Second Sex, Simone de Beauvoir describes such an experience as one
  in which the girl “becomes an object, and she sees herself as object” (378).

• Divided by Your Own Words

• “Science usually prefers the literal to the nonliteral term,” Kinneavy writes, “--
  that is, figures of speech are often out of place in science” (177).
Block Quotations
• In the MLA style, use the block form for prose quotations
  of five or more typed lines and for poetry quotations of
  four or more lines. Indent the quotation an inch (ten
  character spaces) from the left margin, as shown in the
  following example.


  In ―A Literary Legacy from Dunbar to Baraka,‖ Margaret Walker says of
  Paul Lawrence Dunbar‘s dialect poems:
            He realized that the white world in the United States tolerated
            his literary genius only because of his ―jingles in a broken
            tongue,‖ and they found the old ―darky‖ tales and speech
            amusing and within the vein of folklore into which they wished
            to classify all Negro life. This troubled Dunbar because he
            realized that white America was denigrating him as a writer and
            as a man. (70)
Punctuating within
                    Quotations
Although punctuation within a quotation should reproduce the original,
some adaptations may be necessary. Use single quotation marks for
quotations within the quotation:

Original from David Guterson‘s Family Matters (pages 16 – 17)
• E. D. Hirsch also recognizes the connection between family and
   learning, suggesting in his discussion of family background and
   academic achievement ―that the significant part of our children‘s
   education has been going on outside rather than inside the schools.‖

Quoted Version
• Guterson claims that E. D. Hirsch ―also recognizes the connection
  between family and learning, suggesting in his discussion of family
  background and academic achievement ‗that the significant part of
  our children‘s education has been going on outside rather than inside
  the schools‘ ‖ (16-17).
Punctuation
• If the quotation ends with a question mark or an
  exclamation point, retain the original punctuation:
• “Did you think I loved you?” Edith later asks
  Dombey (566).
• If a quotation ending with a question mark or an
  exclamation point concludes your sentence, retain
  the question mark or exclamation point, and put the
  parenthetical reference and sentence period outside
  the quotation marks:
• Edith later asks Dombey, “Did you think I loved
  you?” (566).
Avoiding Grammatical Tangles

• When you incorporate quotations into your
  writing, and especially when you omit words
  from quotations, you run the risk of creating
  ungrammatical sentences. Three common
  errors you should try to avoid are verb
  incompatibility, ungrammatical
  omissions, and sentence fragments.
Verb Incompatibility.
    • When this error occurs, the verb form in the
      introductory statement is grammatically
      incompatible with the verb form in the
      quotation. When your quotation has a verb
      form that does not fit in with your text, it is
      usually possible to use just part of the
      quotation, thus avoiding verb incompatibility.



As this sentence illustrates, use the present tense when you refer to events in a
literary work.
Ungrammatical
                     Omission.
• Sometimes omitting text from a quotation leaves you with an ungrammatical
  sentence. Two ways of correcting the grammar are (1) adapting the
  quotation (with brackets) so that its parts fit together grammatically and (2)
  using only one part of the quotation.
Sentence Fragment.
• Sometimes when a quotation is a complete
  sentence, writers neglect the sentence that
  introduces the quote — for example, by forgetting to
  include a verb. Make sure that the quotation is
  introduced by a complete sentence.
Editing Strategies
Avoiding Ambiguous Use
     of This and That
• The Problem. Because you must frequently
  refer to the problem and the solution in a
  proposal, you will often use pronouns to
  avoid the monotony or wordiness of
  repeatedly referring to them by name. Using
  this and that vaguely to refer to other words
  or ideas, however, can confuse readers.
How to Correct It.
• Add a specific noun after this or that. For
  example, in his essay in this chapter, Patrick
  O‘Malley writes:
  • Another possible solution would be to help students
    prepare for midterm and final exams by providing sets
    of questions from which the exam questions will be
    selected. . . . This solution would have the advantage
    of reducing students‘ anxiety about learning every fact
    in the textbook. . . . (par. 12)

• O‘Malley avoids an ambiguous this in the second
  sentence by repeating the noun ―solution.‖
• (He might just as well have used preparation or
  action or approach.)
Revising Sentences that
               Lack an Agent
The Problem: A writer proposing a solution to a problem usually needs
to indicate who exactly should take action to solve it. Such actors—
those who are in a position to take action—are called ―agents.‖ Look,
for example, at this sentence from O‘Malley‘s proposal:

• To get students to complete the questions in a timely way, professors
  would have to collect and check the answers. (par. 11)

• In this sentence, professors are the agents. They have the authority
  to assign and collect study questions, and they would need to take
  this action in order for this solution to be successfully implemented.

• Had O‘Malley instead written ―the answers would have to be
  collected and checked,‖ the sentence would lack an agent. Failing to
  name an agent would have made his argument less convincing,
  because it would have left unclear one of the key parts of any
  proposal: Who is going to take action.
How to Correct It
• When you revise your work, ask yourself
  who or what performed the action in any
  given sentence. If there is no clear
  answer, rewrite the sentence to give it an
  agent. Watch in particular for forms of the
  verb to be (the balls were dropped, exams
  should be given, etc.), which often signal
  agentless sentences.
Examples
Side by Side
                   Essay Outline                                  Speech Outline
•   I. Presentation of the problem                         •   In the attention step, speakers call attention to the
    •   A. Its existence                                       situation. (The Problem)
    •   B. Its seriousness
    •   C. Its causes                                      •   For the need step, speakers describe the
                                                               difficulty, trouble, distress, crisis, emergency, or
•   II. Consequences of failing to solve the problem           urgency. (Its Seriousness)

•   III. Description of the proposed solution              •   In the satisfaction step, speakers tell listeners how
                                                               to satisfy the need they establish. (The Solution)
•   IV. List of steps for implementing the solution
                                                           •   For visualization, speakers offer listeners a vision of
•   V. Reasons and support for the solution                    what life can be once their solution (offered in the
    •   A. Acknowledgment of objections                        satisfaction step) is adopted. (The Promise)
    •   B. Accommodation or refutation of objections
                                                           •   The final stage is the action step when speakers
•   VI. Consideration of alternative solutions and their       offer listeners a specific course of action to follow.
    disadvantages
                                                               (Call to Action: Conclusion)

•   VII. Restatement of the proposed solution and its
    advantages
Homework
• Write: Essay #4

• Practice: Speech

• Bring:
  • Two complete copies of Essay #4
  • Two copies of your speech draft

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Class 19 1 a

  • 1. Class 19 EWRT 1A
  • 2. Agenda • Introductions • Conclusions • Integrating and Citing Sources • Editing Strategies • Open Discussion: Essay 4/Speech • In-Class Writing • Establishing Ethos • Managing Pathos • Using Logos
  • 3. Writing the Opening Sentences • Try out one or two different ways of beginning your essay— possibly from the list below. You might want to review your invention writing to see if you have already written a paragraph or notes that would work to launch your essay. To engage your readers’ interest from the start, consider the following opening strategies: • a scenario (like O’Malley) • statistics (like Kornbluh) • a research study • a comparison to other places where the solution has been tried. • a preview of the negative consequences if the problem goes unsolved • criticism of an alternative solution
  • 4. The Ending • Try out one or two different ways of concluding your essay—possibly from the list below. You might want to review your invention writing to see if you have already written a paragraph or notes that would work to wrap up your essay. • End by summarizing my solution and its advantages, as O’Malley does. • End with a scenario suggesting the consequences of a failure to solve the problem. • End with an inspiring call to action. • Is there something special about the problem that I should remind readers of at the end, as Kornbluh does when she urges that an award be given to the companies that lead the way.
  • 6. In-Text Quotations • At the Beginning • “To live a life is not to cross a field,” Sutherland, quoting Pasternak, writes at the beginning of her narrative (11). • In the Middle • Woolf begins and ends by speaking of the need of the woman writer to have “money and a room of her own” (4)--an idea that certainly spoke to Plath’s condition. • At the End • In The Second Sex, Simone de Beauvoir describes such an experience as one in which the girl “becomes an object, and she sees herself as object” (378). • Divided by Your Own Words • “Science usually prefers the literal to the nonliteral term,” Kinneavy writes, “-- that is, figures of speech are often out of place in science” (177).
  • 7. Block Quotations • In the MLA style, use the block form for prose quotations of five or more typed lines and for poetry quotations of four or more lines. Indent the quotation an inch (ten character spaces) from the left margin, as shown in the following example. In ―A Literary Legacy from Dunbar to Baraka,‖ Margaret Walker says of Paul Lawrence Dunbar‘s dialect poems: He realized that the white world in the United States tolerated his literary genius only because of his ―jingles in a broken tongue,‖ and they found the old ―darky‖ tales and speech amusing and within the vein of folklore into which they wished to classify all Negro life. This troubled Dunbar because he realized that white America was denigrating him as a writer and as a man. (70)
  • 8. Punctuating within Quotations Although punctuation within a quotation should reproduce the original, some adaptations may be necessary. Use single quotation marks for quotations within the quotation: Original from David Guterson‘s Family Matters (pages 16 – 17) • E. D. Hirsch also recognizes the connection between family and learning, suggesting in his discussion of family background and academic achievement ―that the significant part of our children‘s education has been going on outside rather than inside the schools.‖ Quoted Version • Guterson claims that E. D. Hirsch ―also recognizes the connection between family and learning, suggesting in his discussion of family background and academic achievement ‗that the significant part of our children‘s education has been going on outside rather than inside the schools‘ ‖ (16-17).
  • 9. Punctuation • If the quotation ends with a question mark or an exclamation point, retain the original punctuation: • “Did you think I loved you?” Edith later asks Dombey (566). • If a quotation ending with a question mark or an exclamation point concludes your sentence, retain the question mark or exclamation point, and put the parenthetical reference and sentence period outside the quotation marks: • Edith later asks Dombey, “Did you think I loved you?” (566).
  • 10. Avoiding Grammatical Tangles • When you incorporate quotations into your writing, and especially when you omit words from quotations, you run the risk of creating ungrammatical sentences. Three common errors you should try to avoid are verb incompatibility, ungrammatical omissions, and sentence fragments.
  • 11. Verb Incompatibility. • When this error occurs, the verb form in the introductory statement is grammatically incompatible with the verb form in the quotation. When your quotation has a verb form that does not fit in with your text, it is usually possible to use just part of the quotation, thus avoiding verb incompatibility. As this sentence illustrates, use the present tense when you refer to events in a literary work.
  • 12. Ungrammatical Omission. • Sometimes omitting text from a quotation leaves you with an ungrammatical sentence. Two ways of correcting the grammar are (1) adapting the quotation (with brackets) so that its parts fit together grammatically and (2) using only one part of the quotation.
  • 13. Sentence Fragment. • Sometimes when a quotation is a complete sentence, writers neglect the sentence that introduces the quote — for example, by forgetting to include a verb. Make sure that the quotation is introduced by a complete sentence.
  • 15. Avoiding Ambiguous Use of This and That • The Problem. Because you must frequently refer to the problem and the solution in a proposal, you will often use pronouns to avoid the monotony or wordiness of repeatedly referring to them by name. Using this and that vaguely to refer to other words or ideas, however, can confuse readers.
  • 16. How to Correct It. • Add a specific noun after this or that. For example, in his essay in this chapter, Patrick O‘Malley writes: • Another possible solution would be to help students prepare for midterm and final exams by providing sets of questions from which the exam questions will be selected. . . . This solution would have the advantage of reducing students‘ anxiety about learning every fact in the textbook. . . . (par. 12) • O‘Malley avoids an ambiguous this in the second sentence by repeating the noun ―solution.‖ • (He might just as well have used preparation or action or approach.)
  • 17.
  • 18. Revising Sentences that Lack an Agent The Problem: A writer proposing a solution to a problem usually needs to indicate who exactly should take action to solve it. Such actors— those who are in a position to take action—are called ―agents.‖ Look, for example, at this sentence from O‘Malley‘s proposal: • To get students to complete the questions in a timely way, professors would have to collect and check the answers. (par. 11) • In this sentence, professors are the agents. They have the authority to assign and collect study questions, and they would need to take this action in order for this solution to be successfully implemented. • Had O‘Malley instead written ―the answers would have to be collected and checked,‖ the sentence would lack an agent. Failing to name an agent would have made his argument less convincing, because it would have left unclear one of the key parts of any proposal: Who is going to take action.
  • 19. How to Correct It • When you revise your work, ask yourself who or what performed the action in any given sentence. If there is no clear answer, rewrite the sentence to give it an agent. Watch in particular for forms of the verb to be (the balls were dropped, exams should be given, etc.), which often signal agentless sentences.
  • 21. Side by Side Essay Outline Speech Outline • I. Presentation of the problem • In the attention step, speakers call attention to the • A. Its existence situation. (The Problem) • B. Its seriousness • C. Its causes • For the need step, speakers describe the difficulty, trouble, distress, crisis, emergency, or • II. Consequences of failing to solve the problem urgency. (Its Seriousness) • III. Description of the proposed solution • In the satisfaction step, speakers tell listeners how to satisfy the need they establish. (The Solution) • IV. List of steps for implementing the solution • For visualization, speakers offer listeners a vision of • V. Reasons and support for the solution what life can be once their solution (offered in the • A. Acknowledgment of objections satisfaction step) is adopted. (The Promise) • B. Accommodation or refutation of objections • The final stage is the action step when speakers • VI. Consideration of alternative solutions and their offer listeners a specific course of action to follow. disadvantages (Call to Action: Conclusion) • VII. Restatement of the proposed solution and its advantages
  • 22. Homework • Write: Essay #4 • Practice: Speech • Bring: • Two complete copies of Essay #4 • Two copies of your speech draft