The RITING ISSUU
2015 -2016 The RITING ISSUU
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The RITING ISSUU
2015 -2016 The RITING ISSUU* *Material Taken from Virginia Beach Public Schools Curriculum and www.litx.weebly.com, the class study site., How to RITE a research paper, Objectives Pre-assessment Rationale Prompts Suggestions for Reflection Writing Goals SAT Essay Scoring Guide Two Folders, Both Alike in Dignity Informal and Formal Writing Dimensions and Standards Sentence Formation, Usage and Mechanics Writing Domains and Definitions Venn Diagram (Blank) Protocols Blogs Formal Letter ROSE Quadrant 6 + 1 Traits Peer Editing Iceberg Model Understanding the Question Understanding Word Choice
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The RITING ISSUU OBJECTIVES
10.7.10 Revise writing for clarity and for relevancy, accuracy, and depth of content. (SOL 10.6f) 10.7.13 Proofread and edit final product for intended audience and purpose. (SOL 10.7h) 10.7.14 Use a Works in Progress (WIP) folder to compose and strengthen writing in various stages of development. PRE-ASSESSMEMT RATIONALE Each beginning of the new school year, a prompt is given to students in order for the teachers to have a “snap shot” of where students lay on writing skills spectrum. Given that writing encompasses so many differing aspects, and often students are so varied in their strengths and weaknesses, this pre-assessment is an essential element in understanding how to proceed with the process of writing. Although not going into the grade book for quality of writing, students are to do their best on the task to give teachers a realistic starting point. Moreover, feedback may be given, including a “potential score,” but any evaluation will not be reflected in the grade book. For this activity, the pre-assessment will utilize the SAT rubric provided in this document, however, over the course of this class, other rubrics may be used.
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WRITING PROMPTS
#1 In some countries every young person must serve two years of military service. Should we have a similar policy in the United States? Write an essay stating your position on this issue and supporting it with convincing reasons. Be sure to explain your reasons in detail. #2 Your city council is considering a proposal that would ban the use of cell phones in privately owned businesses such as restaurants, movie theaters, and retail stores. Violators would be subject to a fine. What is your position on this issue? Write a letter in which you convince the city council to support your position, giving strong evidence for your reasons. #3 Occasionally, students in elementary school are advanced to the next grade even though they have not successfully completed the lower grade. Advocates of "social promotion" think that keeping a child in a grade for longer than a year hurts the child's development and selfesteem. Write an essay stating your opinion on this issue, making sure to support your opinion with convincing reasons. #4 Your state legislature is considering a bill that would require a person to earn a high school diploma before he or she could receive a driver’s license. What is your position on this issue? Write a letter to convince your state legislature to accept your point of view. #5 A well-known football coach once said, "Winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing." Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Write an essay in which you state your position and support it with convincing reasons. #6 Your principal is considering a new grading policy that replaces letter or number grades on report cards with pass or fail. What is your position concerning this issue? Write a letter to your principal stating your position and supporting it with convincing reasons. Be sure to explain your reasons in detail. #7 In an effort to save money, your local school board is considering eliminating elective subjects such as art, band, and auto mechanics. What is your position on this issue? Write a letter to the school board stating your position and supporting it with convincing reasons. Be sure to explain your reasons in detail.
Suggestions for Reflection What do you like best about this essay? What are your strengths as a writer? Your weaknesses? What are some strategies you need to develop to address a timed writing? If you were given the chance to revise this essay, what would you do to improve it? On what ideas should you expand? What could you eliminate from this essay? Using the rubric provided for College Board assessment, what score would you assign your essay? What are your writing goals for this year? What three areas of usage and mechanics do you need to address the most this year?
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The RITING ISSUU WRITING GOALS Minimum one paragraph: Considering your strengths and weaknesses, what goals do you have this year regarding your writing? Your reflection should include support and details and can surpass the one paragraph limit. Although there is no “magic number” of how many goals you should have, three seems to be a good rule of thumb. The idea is that the less goals you have, the more detailed they are, and the more goals you have, the more broad they are. Think about your weaknesses being a good starting point for your goals. If you are excellent with ideas, there is no reason to have “I need better ideas” as a goal. Think about your strengths as opportunities for enhancement and challenge. If you are strong with vocabulary, maybe you wish to enhance this strength by attempting different forms of the word. The Writing goals will be visited and revisited through the year and be the heart of conversation when Conferencing takes place.
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The RITING ISSUU SAT Essay Scoring Guide SCORE of 6
SCORE of 5
An essay in this category demonstrates clear and consistent mastery, although it may have a few minor errors. A typical essay effectively and insightfully develops a point of view on the issue and demonstrates outstanding critical thinking, using clearly appropriate examples, reasons, and other evidence to support its position (SOL – 10.7a; 10.7b; 11.7e; 11.7g) is well organized and clearly focused, demonstrating clear coherence and smooth progression of ideas (SOL – 11.7a; 11.7d; 11.7g) exhibits skillful use of language, using a varied, accurate, and apt vocabulary (SOL – 11.7f) demonstrates meaningful variety in sentence structure (SOL 10.7c) is free of most errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics (SOL 11.7h)
An essay in this category demonstrates reasonably consistent mastery, although it will have occasional errors or lapses in quality. A typical essay effectively develops a point of view on the issue and demonstrates strong critical thinking, generally using appropriate examples, reasons, and other evidence to support its position
An essay in this category demonstrates adequate mastery, although it will have lapses in quality. A typical essay
is well organized and focused, demonstrating coherence and progression of ideas
is generally organized and focused, demonstrating some coherence and progression of ideas
exhibits facility in the use of language, using appropriate vocabulary
exhibits adequate but inconsistent facility in the use of language, using generally appropriate vocabulary demonstrates some variety in sentence structure has some errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics
demonstrates variety in sentence structure is generally free of most errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics
SCORE of 3
SCORE of 2
An essay in this category demonstrates developing mastery, and is marked by ONE OR MORE of the following weaknesses: develops a point of view on the issue, demonstrating some critical thinking, but may do so inconsistently or use inadequate examples, reasons, or other evidence to support its position
An essay in this category demonstrates little mastery, and is flawed by ONE OR MORE of the following weaknesses:
is limited in its organization or focus, or may demonstrate some lapses in coherence or progression of ideas displays developing facility in the use of language, but sometimes uses weak vocabulary or inappropriate word choice lacks variety or demonstrates problems in sentence structure contains an accumulation of errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics
develops a point of view on the issue that is vague or seriously limited, and demonstrates weak critical thinking, providing inappropriate or insufficient examples, reasons, or other evidence to support its position is poorly organized and/or focused, or demonstrates serious problems with coherence or progression of ideas displays very little facility in the use of language, using very limited vocabulary or incorrect word choice demonstrates frequent problems in sentence structure contains errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics so serious that meaning is somewhat obscured
SCORE of 4
develops a point of view on the issue and demonstrates competent critical thinking, using adequate examples, reasons, and other evidence to support its position
SCORE of 1 An essay in this category demonstrates very little or no mastery, and is severely flawed by ONE OR MORE of the following weaknesses: develops no viable point of view on the issue, or provides little or no evidence to support its position
is disorganized or unfocused, resulting in a disjointed or incoherent essay displays fundamental errors in vocabulary demonstrates severe flaws in sentence structure contains pervasive errors in grammar, usage, or mechanics that persistently interfere with meaning
Essays not written on the essay assignment will receive a score of zero.
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The RITING ISSUU Two Folders, Both Alike in Dignity On the TAB of the WIP, have OFFICIAL Name (Name you prefer in parenthesis) Block Seat Number
Inside: o Have the elements of a formal Letter (1-11) and placement for those items o Have the Bans listed o Have Thesis Format Listed o Have ROSE Quadrant Listed o Have 4 As Listed o Have Transitional Phrases Listed o Have 6+1 Traits Listed o Have Three Writing Goals Listed
Back Cover: o Vocab List throughout the year
The Writing Portfolio Quarters 1-3 will be dedicated to the WIP folder, therefore embracing the concept that writing is a process, and instilling a sentiment that final drafts need rough drafts to precede them. Quarter 4, however, will be one that uses prior writings (the ones from Quarters 13) and/or new writings to fulfill the requirements of the Finalized Writing Portfolio. Traditionally, this includes 12 different types of pieces and includes a list of “rules to adhere to”. The specifics of this will be included in an upcoming document. Students who consistently revise their work (well before the fourth quarter) tend to get the quarter four work done more efficiently, so they are advised to continuously be tweaking work they feel has potential for making it into the final Writing Portfolio.
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The RITING ISSUU ANALYZE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN AN INFORMAL AND FORMAL ESSAY Characteristics (provide Informal essay Formal essay examples from text)
Point of view
Tone
Word choice
Organization
Examples, support
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Dimension and Standards in Writing Dimension Presents a readable text that follows conventions
Presents information/ideas clearly
Basic Writes legible text with words spelled correctly, sentence boundaries marked; conforms to text model (e.g., letter format with salutations, etc.) Presents thesis, main point, central impression, general feeling
Presents an effective voice for different audiences
Present a consistent point of view
Uses appropriate structures
Manages a simple sequence
Elaborates a text with examples, illustrations, etc.
Gives a single example
Participates in a community of writers
Edits to present an attractive text
Writes habitually
Uses writing as an aid to memory (lists, notes, etc.); selects a variety of words and grammatical structures
Proficient Uses appropriate grammar and syntax with compounds; marks paragraphs clearly; uses graphics appropriately
Advanced Uses complex sentences, varied paragraphs; shows evidence of sense of rhythm in prose; breaks conventions when it is a stylistic advantage Uses consistent terms; Presents ideas with defines terms and ideas subclasses and multiple parts; presents information, ideas, scenes with words that vivify them Demonstrates audience Selects topic or awareness across text approach to catch the types; selects topic or reader’s interest; notes approach to reach a opposing views and goal refutes if necessary; uses irony where appropriate Manages complex Manages support for sequences; cause-effect, hypotheses and comparison, etc. complex arguments; mix modes or organization to gain effect Provides multiple Uses analogy, details and illustrations metaphor, and varied illustrative devices; where appropriate, develops symbol or vivid diction Revises a text on the Revises voluntarily in basis of feedback from social or community others situations; writes in order to play or experiment with writing Writes voluntarily Writes voluntarily (journals, diaries, social or community letters); selects a variety situations; writes in of topics, voices, order to play or genres, etc. experiment with writing
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Sentence Formation, Usage, and Mechanics Skills List Listed below are skills in the areas of sentence formation, usage, and mechanics (capitalization, punctuation, formatting, and spelling) which may be addressed on both the multiple choice and the direct writing components of the secondary English Writing test. This list is not intended to be exhaustive but to provide examples of the skills which may be addressed on the writing test at the secondary level. Standard Sentence Formation Use complete sentences Avoid comma splices Avoid fused sentences (run-ons) Avoid dangling modifiers Usage Correct use of the following: subject-verb agreement “I” in compound subject situations “Me” as a direct or indirect object pronoun case pronoun reference pronoun antecedent agreement adjective comparisons adverb comparisons adverbs instead of adjectives where appropriate verb tense inflections such as –ed or use of helping verbs plurals (-s, es, changes in spellings) possessives (singular and plural) plural inflections (-s, -es, irregular forms) negatives (includes avoidance of double negatives) frequently confused words (e.g., accept/except) homophones plural inflections (-s, es, irregular forms) active/passive voice Maintain consistent point of view Maintain tense consistency Avoid common usage problems (e.g., lie/lay; less/fewer) Mechanics Punctuation Correct use of the following: colons commas in dates, series, addresses commas around interrupters (including but not limited to appositives) commas and semicolons in sentence types
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punctuation of dialogue commas with certain clauses comma-splice avoidance apostrophes in possessives quotation marks around dialogue and titles Capitalization Correct capitalization of the following: proper nouns and adjectives academic subjects and classes correctly (e.g., history, sophomore) title of works Format indent paragraphs or double space between them paragraph dialogue correctly divide words between syllables with a hyphen at end of line Spelling spell frequently used and common words correctly
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WRITING DOMAINS AND DEFINITIONS Composing
Written Expression
Usage/Mechanics
The Composing domain includes the focusing, structuring, and elaborating that a writer does to construct an effective message for readers. It is the creation of a product, the building of a writing intended to be read. The writer crafts his/her message for readers by focusing on a central idea, providing elaboration of the central idea, and delivering the central idea and its elaboration in an organized text.
The Written Expression domain comprises those features that show the writer purposefully shaping and controlling language to affect readers. This domain focuses on the vividness, specificity, and rhythm of the piece and the writer’s attitude and voice.
The Usage/Mechanics domain comprises the writer’s ability to form competent, appropriately mature sentences and the use of word-level features that cause written language to be acceptable and effective for standard discourse. This domain includes the system of symbols and cueing devices a writer uses to help readers make meaning.
Features
Central idea Elaboration Unity Organization
Features
deliberate word choice selected, precise information sentence variety tone voice
Features
sentence formation usage o standard inflections o comparisons of adjectives and adverbs o agreement mechanics o capitalization o spelling o punctuation o formatting
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Sentence Formation, Usage, and Mechanics Skills Listed below are skills in the areas of sentence formation, usage and mechanics (punctuation, capitalization, formatting, and spelling). This list is not exhaustive but is intended to provide examples of the skills that students should acquire. Sentence Formation
Usage
Mechanics In the area of sentence formation, students should use complete sentences avoid comma splices avoid fused sentences (run-ons) avoid dangling modifiers
In the area of usage, students should use the following correctly: o the subject-verb agreement o pronoun case o pronoun reference o pronoun-antecedent agreement o adjective comparisons o adverb comparisons o adverbs instead of adjectives where appropriate o verb tense inflections, such as –ed or use of helping verbs o possessives (singular and plural) o plural inflections (-s, -es, irregular forms) o negatives, including avoidance of double negatives o frequently confused words (e.g., accept/except) o homophones o active/passive voice maintain consistent point of view (In direct writing, a shift in the writer’s point of view is scored in composing; a shift in person [e.g., “School is important to students; you have to do well to get a good job.”] is considered a usage error.) maintain tense consistency avoid common usage problems (e.g., lie/lay, less/fewer) avoid faulty parallelism.
In the area of mechanics, students should use the following correctly: punctuation including o colons o commas in dates, series, and addresses o commas around interrupters (including but not limited to appositives) o commas and semicolons in sentence types o punctuation of dialogue o commas with certain clauses o apostrophes in contractions and possessives o quotation marks around dialogue and titles capitalization including o proper nouns and adjectives o academic subjects and classes (e.g., history, sophomore) o title of works formatting including o indenting or double spacing between paragraphs o paragraphing dialogue correctly o hyphenating words at ends of lines between syllables correctly spelling including o spelling frequently used and common words correctly
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Venn Diagram
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
PROTOCOLS Academic Success often includes a structured ability to revise materials in reading, in writing, and in note taking. Some of these protocols may assist in the process. This certainly is not an exhaustive list.
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Blog Posts Make Three TOTAL COMMENTS regarding the prompt(s) in the title of the blog, or regarding the comments made by others. You may do more, but you'll only be graded on your first three. Therefore, have well constructed responses that are "meaningful contributions" to the conversation as a whole. This means the rules of the Socratic Seminar apply to the digital form of communication. It also means that good form is expected in addressing others points. Please read over the Peer Editing techniques in the Protocols and Format Tab. For tracking purposes, please do the following: Please label your comments thus: FirstName Block Prompt# Referencing (Prompt #,Book, Comment of others, Outside Knowledge) This may look like: Jimmy, 1A, Prompt#1, Re: Toby's Comment on Basho or Theodora, 4B, Prompt#2, Re: Light and Dark Imagery. Be sure not to repeat anyone's message, always cite location of any passage / quote from the book, and always use good peer editing technique. Use good grammar and complete sentences. Abide by the "bans" rules as best you can to produce a clear message, but note that I am not grading based on the bans. Think: Reduce the Use.
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Formal Business Letter Note: There are plenty of templates out there. I am asking students to use this one, so that it can be more "global" in aspect and reflect both American and British English. Formatting is everything, including such minute details as spacing, font, and protocols of addressing others. A few notes on prior to getting started. -Formal Letters should be Times New Roman, 12 Point Font, with 1 inch margins. -Block format for all text (including address, signature line, etc.), with left justification is more standard than indented and varied justification. This isn't a set rule, but can reduce confusion and spacing issues. This means the block text is SS in the body and DS between paragraphs. -Formal Letters should be aware of spacing, there is single space (SS in my notations), double space (DS in my notations) -Dates should aim at clarity, therefore spelling the full name of the month is paramount. American convention is month/date/year; British (and most other conventions in other languages) is date/month/year. -"Old School" or more traditional conventions will be more global than "newer practices", this includes punctuation, etc. For example, the comma (rather than the colon) is more traditional punctuation at the end of salutations and closings. Oxford Commas are more traditional in listing items, as well. The Format: -------This is the top of the paper-------Sender's address line one (Note: no sender's name) Sender's address line two space date (e.g. 7 October 2014 OR October 7, 2014....note the commas) space Title, Full Name of Recipient Recipient's address line one Recipient's address line two space Salutation (e.g. Dear Mr. X,) Subject line (optional/rarely used: 2-3 word description of the letter, should start with "RE:" and be underlined) space Letter first paragraph (includes intent / purpose of the letter...could be as small as one line) Letter second paragraph / or extended into more paragraphs (includes main point, explanations, elaborations) Letter final paragraph (includes showing of appreciation or recap of requested /required action....could be as small as one line) space Closing (e.g. Yours truly, Yours faithfully, OR Yours sincerely, NOTE the "Si" Rule in British English.) space for signature (two lines empty/signed in pen) Printed Name (Title) Position (e.g. GSWLA Scholar) Enc. (Optional, only use if there are enclosures, should be in list format on one line) -------This is the end of the paper----17
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Rules and Comments: 1. Sender's address/ usually two lines/ does not include name of sender 2. Date either international version or US version. Note the use of commas 3. Title means that which comes before the full name (e.g. Dr. , Prof. , Capt. , Mr. , Miss, Mrs., Ms. etc.) 4. Salutation comes in two categories: those you know the name of and those you do not. This will be part of the Si Rule later (See closing). For those you do know, it should read: "Dear Title Last Name" and not have the first name included. For those you don't know: "To Whom It May Concern," ; "Dear Sir," ; "Dear Madam," ; and (in British English) "Dear Sir or Madam," are the options. Please note the commas, the capitalization in all these cases. 5. Subject line, if used, would be used for business type correspondance that is routine rather than personal 6. All letter body should be in complete sentences. The introduction and conclusion can be formulated. (e.g. "I am writing this letter to...." ; "It is my utmost pleasure to write this letter...." for introduction (among many others); "I thank you in advance" ; "I look forward to ...." are two examples from the conclusion, among many others. 7. Closing "Si" rule. In British English: If you don't know the person, you use "Yours faithfully," if you do, you use "Yours sincerely"; or in British English if the "Si" appears in "Sir" in the saluation, you don't get another "Si" from sincerely, or alternatively, if you've an "Si" in sincerely, you should know the person and not have the "Si" of "Dear Sir,". In American English you use either "Yours truly," or "Yours sincerely", or (if military) V/R (for Very Respectfully) 8. Leave enough space for a signature. Sign so that others can read it, but it is still your own. 9. The title that would go in the parenthesis after the printed name is only for earned titles. One example may be "John Smith (Dr.). There is no need to put "Mr." or "Mrs." in the title parenthesis. 10. Always leave some sort of position, often it would be affiliated with where you attend or where you work. 11. Do not use enclosure line if you have no enclosures. Some would have this line at the bottom of the page; typed on the 23rd line. One way around the enc. line is to mention what is enclosed as part of the text, with a sentence such as: "please find enclosed the following: resume, transcripts, library card, restaurant menu" Finally always proofread for tone as well as obvious errors.
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R
O
S
E
ROSE QUADRANT
The Rose Quadrant invites readers to go beyond the literature, and when used in note taking encourages deeper understanding. It is very difficult to do a ROSE Quadrant on the entirety of a piece, and it usually works better when focusing upon a one sentence author's message. This is not exclusively true, however, and it can be used in other ways. To explain the Acronym ROSE, placement is essential. The R stands for Readings (as in Other Readings), the O stands for Observations, the S stands for Studies, and the E stands for Experiences. When divided top to bottom, the R and the O share a broader look, whereas the S and E focus on more specific examples. When divided left to right, the R and S highlight others, whereas the O and E center around the personal. Ideally, each quadrant should be filled out, however, this most likely will mean some additional research on the part of the student, as Studies essentially means what research has to say on the topic.
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6 + 1 Traits The 6 Traits. -Ideas: Details, Overall concepts, new ways / innovative ways to present ideas, new juxtapositions -Organization: an order that has a noticeable format and/or adds to the overall meaning -Voice: the style, the tone, the "you" of the piece -Word Choice: the appropriateness of the words used / does it fit, the sophistication of the words, showing instead of telling words (i.e. active voice over passive voice) -Sentence Fluency: the flow, the music, the rhythm of the piece, the variation of sentence structure. Meaningful breaks of the "rules" if appropriate. -Conventions: the grammar, the following of the bans, the mechanics The Plus One. -(Presentation): Often not counted, the formatting (font, size, margins, title page, accreditation, citation) -Scoring Guide: See 6 + 1 Traits for full explanation. *See note on top. For our purposes, look at the rubric and we'll match it as closely to the quick check 5/3/1 system below. 5/3/1, No Middle Scores, Must obtain all bullet items to receive higher score. A five is no errors in this category, a 3 is some room for improvement, and a 1 is little or no evidence of this item. CONCEPTS -Work the Weakness: This means the first go through needs an all evaluative quick check. For example, this may be that the work has a peer editor (or the writer) abbreviate the elements as I, O, WC, SF, V, C and score each with the appropriate scores of 5, 3, or 1 mark. The writing might be marked accordingly: I-3, O-5, WC-1, SF-1, V-3, C-3. -Each student should pick THREE areas of Weakness to work on with their Peer Editor and Rank them in order of urgency. This should be their guiding focus on all writings for a time, because working the weakness means that they are moving out of their comfort area and working on the items that will (and probably has for some time) brought their overall grade down. In the example above, this student would work on the Word Choice and Sentence Fluency for sure since both have been scored as 1s, but then would have to choose which item is most pressing of the three 3 scores. If Voice and Conventions feel slightly better, for example, than Ideas, the third item to work on would be Ideas, making WC, SF, and I the target elements. These items should still be ranked by urgency. -Focus on one Aspect NOT all. As a plan of improvement, writers should work on one element at a time. This might mean that during one revision, the writer is only fixing the word choice in one revision, sentence fluency in another, and tweaking the ideas in a third. The separation of the elements in the revision process is incredibly important as it means studets will not be able to slip into the comfort zone of what they are good at. Please NOTE: The three selected elements will be the focus of the grading of the writings. So, one student may be attempting to improve Conventions, Word Choice, and Voice. That student's papers will be graded on those three items. Another student has low scores in Organization, Ideas and Sentence Fluency. Grades on that student’s paper will be based on that criteria.
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Peer Editing -Use Plus/Delta Chart: Plus means those impressive items; Delta (instead of Minus) means things that should change somehow / somewhat. -Compliment Strengths, then move on. The idea behind peer editing is to improve writing. Therefore, recognize and compliment that which is good, but find ways to move on to that which needs improvement. This is often dependent upon the ability for the writer to take criticism. -Point out weaknesses with kind words and strategies to improve. Identifying problems without offering solutions produces only frustration. -Avoid matching person to content (talk about literature's merits or content's faults rather than character/morals/value of writer.) "This piece" is a neutral way of saying "your writing" and can be used for negative / critical commentary. "Your writing" or "you write", etc. can be used for positive commentary. -Locate the error/issue: General comments without going back to the actual piece is only commentary, and not helpful. Locating, excerpting, and replaying to the passage(s) instead of "the whole thing" helps focus the improvement. All else is superficial commentary. -Name the error/issue: Give the error/issue a name. If all are familiar with a grammar issue, a reviewer can easily use words like "fragment", "run on", "comma splice", "dangling modifier" etc. Combined with location, this should be an easily identified problem, the writer can fix. Often errors come from quick entries rathar than lack of understanding. A speech therefore is a waste of everyone's time. A prime example is the wrong use of a word commonly confused. We all make mistakes, and in doing so, a pointing out of location, and naming the error is enough. The words "your" and "you're" come to mind, and most would quickly and easily fix the piece. -Explain the effect of the usage: Often, especially for items that may not be understood, a scripted explanation may be needed. Identify the error, name the error (if you can), and explain how it effects the writing as a whole. These are often word choice errors, especially with words that have slight differences in meaning or connotation. A writer, for example might say: "Between Judy and her mom and day, the decision to move to Florida was evident." Most eyes may pass by this sentence. Between, however, is reserved for two of something. Among is the correct word for any number over two. This might take a sentence of explanation. -Offer Sample Solutions: For more complex comments, do the items above of locate, name, explain, then actually offer a potential fix. Preamble the comment with a word/phrase less direct than a command, so that the writer knows there's still a choice in the matter. "You might think about...."; "how's this for a try:....."; "maybe if you ..... or ......., it might be something like ....." creates a friendlier tone than: "change .... to ..... " -Use Sandwich Technique of Positive/ Constructive Criticism / Positive. For example: "I like the way you work in a lot of popular culture references, it makes the piece really interesting throughout. You may wish to tie the references in with the topic at hand. I know where you were going with it, but a simple transition would fix the clarity. So, for example, you say: "The 21
The RITING ISSUU car swirved and ended up in the ditch. We looked up for a Superman to help us." As I read it, it felt really abrupt, you could try: "The car swirved and ended up in the ditch. After a lot of effort to get unstuck, we threw up a our hands in despair. We really needed a Superman to help us." Just the same, I think the piece is great and I look forward to the next revision." I underlined the positive remarks so you can see how Sandwich technique works much better. -Tell the Truth: No matter what tell the truth, but remember that you are not looking at the piece completely, only an element of the piece. This means you can remind the writer of this, as in: "Your Ideas and Organization are great, and it's worth saying I love you mention of ......, today, however we're only looking at Voice." That comment will redirect the writer to know that the criticism is not about the writing as a whole, but only the detailed look at the weakness. -More errors equal more explaining, but combined with telling the truth, there is such a thing as too much. Writing is ultimately evolutionary, and needs time to ruminate, therefore, if there are multiple errors, decide the limit you will stop at, especially if there is need for a lot of comments. Otherwise, the comments may be larger than the piece itself, and the writer will be stuck trying to fix everything...which is very much opposite the goal. -Award Effort: near misses still had a process involved. Take note of this. "I see where you were going here recognizes that the missed target wasn't due to lack of understanding or lack of intellect or any other number of lackings, but rather because it didn't fit the model being used. Recognize this, and redirect if needed.
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Iceberg Model (to be submitted to Academy Portfolio) ICEBERG Format This format is a way to deepen the study of a particular issue. THIS ITEM SHOULD BE VISUALLY APPEALING AND END UP IN THE ACADEMY PORTFOLIO. Essentially, it is a three paragraph analysis of a given issue. 1. The first paragraph "Event" summarizes the article and is only fact based. Be sure to paraphrase or use direct quotations. Event - Answers Questions: what, who, when, where .....................................Summary (knowledge from article) 2. The second paragraph "Examples" looks for "trends" or "patterns" in other news articles/events. Examples Answers Questions:where else,when else,who else, how ...................Other times this took place (comparison) 3. The third paragraph, the most analytical of the three offers "Reasons" for this type of event. This is often speculative and filled with personal opinion or voice, but must (as always) be backed up and relate to the issue at hand. Reasons why..........................................Opinions For example, you read an article on an oil spill. Paragraph 1 summarizes the details of the article's events. Paragraph 2 finds other articles/reports on oil spills. One students examples may/may not differ from anothers. Paragraph 3 answers a why question. For example, you may create the question: why do oil spills happen? This is the question you must answer. Another student may ask: why do governments not punish oil companies so that oil spills will never occur again? That student's third paragraph will be vastly different from the first students. Traditionally the entire iceberg should not exceed one typed page.
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KiSiN Chart(s) A KSN Chart is for organizing study of vocabulary (or really any thing study worthy) so that it is a non-redundant practice, and items already known are not overstudied (which by default, suggests that those items not already known are understudied or not studied at all. For the individual and for a group, the set up is the same: Item being studied(word, term, concept, etc)/KNOW IT column/SEEN IT column/NEW TO ME column. When there are multiple items to be studied, this system allows the student to separate that which is already known (and not need to be studied extensively), and that which is known on a limited basis or not at all. A sample might look like this. Word Know Seen New Hubris x Opulence x Pun x For this individual, Hubris is Brand New and hasn't been seen before, Opulence is Known so that it can be used in all levels (identified, defined, used in the student's own writing, varied in form, etc.) Pun has been seen, and may have a limited understanding of the usages as descibed regarding the Known column. A group version takes a tad more effort and will have multiple people involved. In practice the only difference is the amount of x's placed. However, these marks show what the group as a whole needs to work on. One strategy is to group target any x in the New category, so that everyone is at least having a K or an S marking. Another approach is to move the S's to K's, so that these items are certain points on the test, then worry about the N's. So with an example of 3 students, the chart may look like this: Word Know Seen New Hubris x xx Opulence xx x Pun x x x This gives generic information, and is still useful. Another way to do it is to use initials instead of Xs, so the group not only knows the general knowledge of how many know a word or not, but also who needs the help. In one way the x's allow for anonymous marking, and therefore may avoid embarrassment, and the initials would allow for targeting the student to the word. The amount of students in a group may assist in how to approach the K/S/N chart. At any rate the chart may look like this: Word Know Seen New Hubris IP AV, CB Opulence IP, AV CB Pun AV IP CB Whereas one student's initials appear in the Known column more than others, and one student is hovering in the Seen and New columns, there can be a delicate balance between avoiding embarrassment and engaging the material. 24
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RRR (Review, Rant, Rave) The Three R's are ways of evaluating a selected event, creation, art form, etc. The Review is balanced; whereas the Rant and Rave are biased, although all are structured and logical. Often Rant is misused to now mean a barrage of emotional outburst. For our purposes, we will use Rant in the traditional sense. All are meant for "public consumption," and are evaluative in nature. Often The Three R's break up the event, creation, art form, etc. into its various parts and comment individually on these aspects. Often audience/reader/target is considered as well. The Review being balanced focuses on both the good and bad of the item, and describes it for background information, as well as evaluates it in terms of the field it is in. The Rave and Rant are opposites to each other. The Rave only highlights the positive aspects of the item and does so in an exaggeratory manner. The Rant does the same, but in the negative. Often this means the elements of the item are selected based on the intended bias. A fourth item: a Point/Counterpoint is a short piece supporting one side (100-150 word abstract) followed by another short piece opposing one side (100-150 word abstract). These are opposites and can be thought of as a short argument for followed by a short argument against. The purpose of the Point/Counterpoint is to practice the art of arguing both sides so that the argument is convincing enough to sway the opinion of the reader. A strong Point/Counterpoint (as two separate pieces) equally convinces a reader of two opposite points of view. Although these generally aren't published, they are great for building arguments to use later for essays, etc. To exemplify these items, first we need something to evaluate. Let's take this for our example: a recording session of U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" in Harlem. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M8Wt3dhF4fU A Review might select three elements of this piece that can be discussed at length. Maybe the use of instruments, the use of solos, and the use of a chorus. If the author has outside knowledge (meaning outside the realm of what is seen in the link above), he/she may add commentary that would enhance the overall evaluation. The first paragraph might be introductory in nature, and include a hook, background info, but not a thesis (this isn't an essay, after all). The body paragraphs can be organized in a number of ways, including breaking the paragraphs into the chosen elements (one paragraph on instruments, one on solos, and one on the use of chorus), or maybe what worked, what didn't work, and what worked in a limited way. Other organizational patterns might include a focus on the type of reader/listener/viewer. Paragraph one might be how one group would interpret, enjoy, feel about the item; the next paragraph might change audiences, but keep the format. There would be no Conclusion paragraph, although there may be a closer...a nice memorable ending (functioning as a hook, but at the end of the piece). A Rave of the same link would only highlight the positive. It is not simply celebrating the item; it must give reasons for the "Rave reviews", must still break the piece into parts, and explain why the item works so well. All paragraphs should ultimately prove the positive, however, it doesn't mean the negative cannot be mentioned, it just means the negative needs to be discredited. Moreover, since the Rave is a positive review (nearly hyperbolic in nature) the elements to subdivide may be different than the balanced review, and most likely will be 25
The RITING ISSUU different from the negative rant. A Rant of the same link would replicate the Rave, except in the negative. To emphasize the negative, however, the writer may chose three different elements of the item. Traditionally Reviews (which all three of these forms technically are) would be in a newspaper and the length would be dependent upon the allotted amount of space, and often limits on size are based on word counts. 450-1000 words might be a traditional range for this type of writing.
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Socratic Seminar Discussion format. Works best if prepared with pre-readings and/ or a set of prepared questions. Circle, Nameplates, "According to" statements, No Repeating, Elaborations, Moving On Summation Paragraphs / activities.
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Understanding the Question from: http://www.uefap.com/writing/question/quesfram.htm Understanding the question Introduction Much of your writing will be prompted by an assignment, essay or exam question. Students often do worse than they should in examinations or when writing assignments in English in the UK, not because their writing skills are weak or because their knowledge of the subject matter is insufficient, but because they have not fully understood what they have been asked to do. To score high marks in an examination or an assignmnet, it is important to fully understand what a question or brief means and how it should be answered.
In order to understand the question it is useful to analyse the questions and to search for certain components. The following technique is very useful (Swales, 1982). The components of a question Most assignment titles or examination questions contain the following components:
1. Subject matter or topic. What, in the most general terms, is the question about? 2. Aspect or focus. This is the angle or point of view on the subject matter. What aspect of the subject matter is the question about? 3. Instruction or comment. This refers to the instruction word or phrase. These instructions tell the student exactly what to do. Some titles also contain the following components:
1. Restriction or expansion of the subject matter. This is the detailed limitation of the topic. What, in specific terms, is the question about? 2. Viewpoint. This refers to the requirement, in the question, that the writer writes from - or evaluates - a point of view given by the setter of the question. Analysing the title To analyse the title, it is useful to follow the following steps: 1. Identify the topic. 28
The RITING ISSUU 2. If the topic has a restriction or expansion, identify it. 3. Search for the aspect. This is the angle or point of view on the subject matter. Often, the aspect is a phrase ending in 'of', e.g. 'the importance of', 'the contribution of'. Be sure you are clear about how the aspect relates to the subject matter. It can be an example of it, a stage in its sequence, the cause or effect, one of the solutions to it as a problem etc. 4. Identify the instruction (which often comes at the beginning) and decide what it means and what it requires you to do. 5. Check whether there is a viewpoint and if so, if it the same as your own. The vocabulary of questions Here is a list of the most common assignment instruction key-words with an explanation for each. Note: The explanations given for these words can be a rough guide only. You must always go by the total meaning of the title or question. Read the question carefully: do not jump to conclusions about what is required on the basis of these words only. Account for requires an answer that gives the reasons for the subject of the question. Analyse requires an answer that takes apart an idea, concept or statement in order to consider all the factors it consists of. Answers of this type should be very methodical and logically organised. Compare requires an answer that sets items side by side and shows their similarities and differences. A balanced (fair, objective) answer is expected. Consider requires an answer in which the students describe and give their thoughts on the subject. Contrast requires an answer that points out only the differences between two items. Criticise requires an answer that points out mistakes or weaknesses, and that also indicates any favourable aspects of the subject of the question. It requires a balanced answer. Define requires an answer that explains the precise meaning of a concep. A definition answer will include a definition, probably expanded. Describe requires an answer that says what something is like, how it works and so on. Discuss requires an answer that explains an item or concept, and then gives details 29
The RITING ISSUU about it with supportive information, examples, points for and against, and explanations for the facts put forward. It is important to give both sides of an argument and come to a conclusion. Elucidate requires an answer that explains what something means, makes it clear (lucid). Evaluate/Assess require an answer that decides and explains how great, valuable or important something is. The judgement should be backed by a discussion of the evidence or reasoning involved. Explain requires an answer that offers a rather detailed and exact explanation of an idea or principle, or a set of reasons for a situation or attitude. Explore requires an answer that examines the subject thoroughly and considers it from a variety of viewpoints. Illustrate requires an answer that consists mainly of examples to demonstrate or prove the subject of the question. It is often added to another instruction. Justify requires an answer that gives only the reasons for a position or argument. Answer the main objections likely to be made of them. Note, however, that the proposition to be argued may be a negative one (e.g. Justify the abolition of the death penalty.) Prove/Disprove both of these require answers that demonstrate the logical arguments and/or evidence connected with a proposition prove requires the 'pro' points, and disprove requires the 'contra' points. State requires an answer that expresses the relevant points briefly and clearly without lengthy discussion or minor details. Summarise/Outline require an answer that contains a summary of all the available information about a subject, i.e. only the main points and not the details should be included. Questions of this type often require short answers. Trace is found most frequently in historical questions (but not only in History courses); it requires the statement and brief description in logical or chronological order of the stages (steps) in the development of e.g. a theory, a person's life, a process, etc. To what extent is X true? requires an answer that discusses and explains in what ways X is true and in what ways X is not true. Sometimes you may find several different instruction words combined into one composite question. For example: Define financial accounting. Compare and contrast the Anglo-American and Continental approaches to financial accounting. Explain the role that the invididual accountants play in each approach. 30
The RITING ISSUU Some other important words used in questions. concept an important idea concise short, brief in the context of referring to, inside the subject of criteria what standards you would expect; what questions you would expect to be answered deduction the conclusion or generalisation you come to after looking carefully at all the facts factor(s) the circumstances bringing about a result function what something does its purpose or activities implications results that are not obvious, long term, suggested results limitations explain where something is not useful or not relevant with/by reference to make sure you write about the following subject in relation to only a certain part of the first topic is needed role what part something plays, how it works, especially in co-operation with others scope the area where something acts or has influence significance meaning and importance valid/validity is there evidence and are there facts to prove the statement?
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Examples of questions Account for the large-scale immigration into Malaya in the late 19th Century. Analyse the changes in US policy towards China during the 1970s. Assess the contribution of Asoka to the spread of Buddhism in India. Explain the concept of 'role'. Of what use is the concept to a practising manager? Compare and contrast cellulose and lignin decomposition in soil. List the criteria you would apply to the presentation of government expenditure policy. 31
The RITING ISSUU 7. Critically discuss economies and diseconomies of scale. 8. What deductions can be made after studying the cell exhibited at C? 9. Evaluate the contribution of political parties to the development of public policy in the United States and Canada. 10. To what extent does the British public participate in the political process? 11. What factors determine the elasticity of demand curves? 12. Describe the histology and functional importance of striated muscle. 13. Illustrate your answer by typical temperature profiles. 14. Discuss the implications of the Milgram and Zimbardo experiments for understanding people's behaviour in situations involving authority. 15. Discuss the use of behaviour therapy in clinical psychology and comment on its limitations. 16. Illustrate the diversity of anaerobic bacteria by reference to either practical importance or mechanism of energy generation. 17. Outline the requirements as to 'locus standi' in relation to injunctives and declaratives. 18. Discuss the role of international capital movements in a world payments system. 19. Define Administrative Law indicating its general scope and function. 20. Consider the significance of the year 1848 for the Hapsburg Empire. 21. Summarise the main requirements of the law in respect of the employer-employee relationship. 22. 'They are often at a disadvantage in dealing with industry at a technical level.' How valid is this criticism of British Civil Servants? 23. To what extent is an understanding of the various approaches to industrial relations useful in allowing us to make better sense of the changing nature of the employment relationship? 24. Discuss the extent to which Human Resource Management and its associated individualism has led to a demise in collectivism and the role of trade unions. 25. Discuss the respective influences of states and markets in the contemporary world economy characterised by globalisation. 26. Analyse the process of transition from a command economy to a market economy, drawing upon the many recent examples. Planning the answer In planning the answer, the instruction decides the text-type (discussion, explanation, etc.); the topic (with its restriction or expansion if there is one) determines the overall range of the 32
The RITING ISSUU subject matter but the aspect determines the particular content; viewpoint dictates which arguments, for or against, to use. The interaction between instruction and aspect will lead to decisions about the organisation of the essay. See Organising the answer for more information on essay organisation.
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Understanding Word Choice PASSIVE VOICE from: http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/passive-voice/ What this handout is about. This handout will help you understand what the passive voice is, why many professors and writing instructors frown upon it, and how you can revise your paper to achieve greater clarity. Some things here may surprise you. We hope this handout will help you to understand the passive voice and allow you to make more informed choices as you write. Myths So what is the passive voice? First, let’s be clear on what the passive voice isn’t. Below, we’ll list some common myths about the passive voice: 1. Use of the passive voice constitutes a grammatical error. Use of the passive voice is not a grammatical error. It’s a stylistic issue that pertains to clarity—that is, there are times when using the passive voice can prevent a reader from understanding what you mean. 2. Any use of “to be” (in any form) constitutes the passive voice. The passive voice entails more than just using a being verb. Using “to be” can weaken the impact of your writing, but it is occasionally necessary and does not by itself constitute the passive voice. 3. The passive voice always avoids the first person; if something is in first person (“I” or “we”) it’s also in the active voice. On the contrary, you can very easily use the passive voice in the first person. Here’s an example: “I was hit by the dodgeball.” 4. You should never use the passive voice. While the passive voice can weaken the clarity of your writing, there are times when the passive voice is OK and even preferable. 5. I can rely on my grammar checker to catch the passive voice. See Myth #1. Since the passive voice isn’t a grammar error, it’s not always caught. Typically, grammar checkers catch only a fraction of passive voice usage. Do any of these misunderstandings sound familiar? If so, you’re not alone. That’s why we wrote this handout. It discusses how to recognize the passive voice, when you should avoid it, and when it’s OK. Defining the passive voice A passive construction occurs when you make the object of an action into the subject of a sentence. That is, whoever or whatever is performing the action is not the grammatical subject of the sentence. Take a look at this passive rephrasing of a familiar joke: Why was the road crossed by the chicken? Who is doing the action in this sentence? The chicken is the one doing the action in this sentence, but the chicken is not in the spot where you would expect the grammatical subject to be. Instead, the road is the grammatical subject. The more familiar phrasing (why did the chicken cross the road?) puts the actor in the subject position, the position of doing something—the chicken (the actor/doer) crosses the road (the object). We use active verbs to represent that “doing,” whether it be crossing roads, proposing ideas, making arguments, or invading houses (more on that shortly). Once you know what to look for, passive constructions are easy to spot. Look for a form of “to be” (is, are, am , was, were, has been, have been, had been, will be, will have been, being) followed by a past participle. (The past participle is a form of the verb that typically, but not always, ends in “-ed.” Some exceptions to the “-ed” rule are words like “paid” (not “payed”) and “driven.” (not “drived”). Here’s a sure-fire formula for identifying the passive voice:
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The RITING ISSUU form of “to be” + past participle = passive voice For example: The metropolis has been scorched by the dragon’s fiery breath. When her house was invaded, Penelope had to think of ways to delay her remarriage. Not every sentence that contains a form of “have” or “be” is passive! Forms of the word “have” can do several different things in English. For example, in the sentence “John has to study all afternoon,” “has” is not part of a past-tense verb. It’s a modal verb, like “must,” “can,” or “may”—these verbs tell how necessary it is to do something (compare “I have to study” versus “I may study”). And forms of “be” are not always passive, either—”be” can be the main verb of a sentence that describes a state of being, rather than an action. For example, the sentence “John is a good student” is not passive; “is” is simply describing John’s state of being. The moral of the story: don’t assume that any time you see a form of “have” and a form of “to be” together, you are looking at a passive sentence. Need more help deciding whether a sentence is passive? Ask yourself whether there is an action going on in the sentence. If so, what is at the front of the sentence? Is it the person or thing that does the action? Or is it the person or thing that has the action done to it? In a passive sentence, the object of the action will be in the subject position at the front of the sentence. As discussed above, the sentence will also contain a form of be and a past participle. If the subject appears at all, it will usually be at the end of the sentence, often in a phrase that starts with “by.” Take a look at this example: The fish was caught by the seagull. If we ask ourselves whether there’s an action, the answer is yes: a fish is being caught. If we ask what’s at the front of the sentece, the actor or the object of the action, it’s the object: the fish, unfortunately for it, got caught, and there it is at the front of the sentence. The thing that did the catching—the seagull—is at the end, after “by.” There’s a form of be (was) and a past participle (caught). This sentence is passive. Let’s briefly look at how to change passive constructions into active ones. You can usually just switch the word order, making the actor and subject one by putting the actor up front: The metropolis has been scorched by the dragon’s fiery breath. becomes The dragon scorched the metropolis with his fiery breath. When her house was invaded, Penelope had to think of ways to delay her remarriage. becomes After suitors invaded her house, Penelope had to think of ways to delay her remarriage. To repeat, the key to identifying the passive voice is to look for both a form of “to be” and a past participle, which usually, but not always, ends in “-ed.” Clarity and meaning The primary reason why your instructors frown on the passive voice is that they often have to guess what you mean. Sometimes, the confusion is minor. Let’s look again at that sentence from a student’s paper on Homer’s The Odyssey: When her house was invaded, Penelope had to think of ways to delay her remarriage. Like many passive constructions, this sentence lacks explicit reference to the actor—it doesn’t tell the reader who or what invaded Penelope’s house. The active voice clarifies things: After suitors invaded Penelope’s house, she had to think of ways to fend them off. Thus many instructors—the readers making sense of your writing—prefer that you use the active voice. They want you to specify who or what is doing the action. Compare the following two 35
The RITING ISSUU examples from an anthropology paper on a Laotian village to see if you agree. (passive) A new system of drug control laws was set up. (By whom?) (active) The Lao People’s Revolutionary Party set up a new system of drug control laws. Here’s another example, from the same paper, that illustrates the lack of precision that can accompany the passive voice: Gender training was conducted in six villages, thus affecting social relationships. And a few pages later: Plus, marketing links were being established. In both paragraphs, the writer never specifies the actors for those two actions (Who did the gender training? Who established marketing links?). Thus the reader has trouble appreciating the dynamics of these social interactions, which depend upon the actors conducting and establishing these things. The following example, once again from that paper on The Odyssey, typifies another instance where an instructor might desire more precision and clarity: Although Penelope shares heroic characteristics with her husband, Odysseus, she is not considered a hero. Who does not consider Penelope a hero? It’s difficult to tell, but the rest of that paragraph suggests that the student does not consider Penelope a hero (the topic of the paper). The reader might also conceivably think that the student is referring to critics, scholars, or modern readers of The Odyssey. One might argue that the meaning comes through here—the problem is merely stylistic. Yet style affects how your reader understands your argument and content. Awkward or unclear style prevents your reader from appreciating the ideas that are so clear to you when you write. Thus knowing how your reader might react enables you to make more effective choices when you revise. So after you identify instances of the passive, you should consider whether your use of the passive inhibits clear understanding of what you mean. Summarizing history or literary plots with the passive voice: don’t be a lazy thinker or writer! With the previous section in mind, you should also know that some instructors proclaim that the passive voice signals sloppy, lazy thinking. These instructors argue that writers who overuse the passive voice have not fully thought through what they are discussing and that this makes for imprecise arguments. Consider these sentences from papers on American history: The working class was marginalized. African Americans were discriminated against. Women were not treated as equals. Such sentences lack the precision and connection to context and causes that mark rigorous thinking. The reader learns little about the systems, conditions, human decisions, and contradictions that produced these groups’ experiences of oppression. And so the reader—the instructor—questions the writer’s understanding of these things. It is especially important to be sure that your thesis statement is clear and precise, so think twice before using the passive voice in your thesis. In papers where you discuss the work of an author—e.g., a historian or writer of literature—you can also strengthen your writing by not relying on the passive as a crutch when summarizing plots or arguments. Instead of writing It is argued that…or Tom and Huck are portrayed as…or And then the link between X and Y is made, showing that… you can heighten the level of your analysis by explicitly connecting an author with these statements: Anderson argues that…Twain portrays Tom and Huck as…Ishiguro draws a link between X and Y to show that… By avoiding passive constructions in these situations, you can demonstrate a more thorough understanding of the material you discuss. 36
The RITING ISSUU Scientific writing All this advice works for papers in the humanities, you might note—but what about technical or scientific papers, including lab reports? Many instructors recommend or even require the passive voice in such writing. The rationale for using the passive voice in scientific writing is that it achieves “an objective tone”—for example, by avoiding the first person. To consider scientific writing, let’s break it up into two main types: lab reports and writing about a scientific topic or literature. Lab reports Although more and more scientific journals accept or even prefer first-person active voice (e.g., “then we sequenced the human genome”), some of your instructors may want you to remove yourself from your lab report by using the passive voice (e.g., “then the human genome was sequenced” rather than “then we sequenced the human genome”). Such advice particularly applies to the section on Materials and Methods, where a procedure “is followed.” (For a fuller discussion on writing lab reports, see our handout on writing lab reports.) While you might employ the passive voice to retain objectivity, you can still use active constructions in some instances and retain your objective stance. Thus it’s useful to keep in mind the sort of active verbs you might use in lab reports. Examples include: support, indicate, suggest, correspond, challenge, yield, show. Thus instead of writing A number of things are indicated by these results. you could write These results indicate a number of things. or Further analysis showed/suggested/yielded… Ultimately, you should find out your instructor’s preference regarding your use of the passive in lab reports. Writing about scientific topics In some assignments, rather than reporting the results of your own scientific work, you will be writing about the work of other scientists. Such assignments might include literature reviews and research reports on scientific topics. You have two main possible tasks in these assignments: reporting what other people have done (their research or experiments) or indicating general scientific knowledge (the body of knowledge coming out of others’ research). Often the two go together. In both instances, you can easily use active constructions even though you might be tempted by the passive—especially if you’re used to writing your own lab reports in the passive. You decide: Which of these two examples is clearer? Heart disease is considered the leading cause of death in the United States. (passive) or Research points to heart disease as the leading cause of death in the United States.(active) Alternatively, you could write this sentence with human actors: Researchers have concluded that heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. The last two sentences illustrate a relationship that the first one lacks. The first example does not tell who or what leads us to accept this conclusion about heart disease. Here’s one last example from a report that describes angioplasty. Which sounds better to you? The balloon is positioned in an area of blockage and is inflated. or The surgeon positions the balloon in an area of blockage and inflates it. You can improve your scientific writing by relying less on the passive. The advice we’ve given for papers on history or literature equally applies to papers in more “scientific” courses. No matter what field you’re writing in, when you use the passive voice, you risk conveying to your reader a sense of uncertainty and imprecision regarding your writing and thinking. The key is to know when your instructor wants you to use the passive voice. For a more general discussion of writing in the sciences, see our handout. 37
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“Swindles and perversions” Before we discuss a few instances when the passive might be preferable, we should mention one of the more political uses of the passive: to hide blame or obscure responsibility. You wouldn’t do this, but you can learn how to become a critic of those who exhibit what George Orwell included among the “swindles and perversions” of writing. For example: Mistakes were made. The Exxon Company accepts that a few gallons might have been spilled. By becoming critically aware of how others use language to shape clarity and meaning, you can learn how better to revise your own work. Keep Orwell’s swindles and perversions in mind as you read other writers. Because it’s easy to leave the actor out of passive sentences, some people use the passive voice to avoid mentioning who is responsible for certain actions. So when is it OK to use the passive? Sometimes the passive voice is the best choice. Here are a few instances when the passive voice is quite useful: 1. To emphasize an object.Take a look at this example: 100 votes are required to pass the bill. This passive sentence emphasizes the number of votes required. An active version of the sentence (“The bill requires 100 votes to pass”) would put the emphasis on the bill, which may be less dramatic. 2. To de-emphasize an unknown subject/actor. Consider this example: Over 120 different contaminants have been dumped into the river. If you don’t know who the actor is—in this case, if you don’t actually know who dumped all of those contaminants in the river—then you may need to write in the passive. But remember, if you do know the actor, and if the clarity and meaning of your writing would benefit from indicating him/her/it/them, then use an active construction. Yet consider the third case. 3. If your readers don’t need to know who’s responsible for the action. Here’s where your choice can be difficult; some instances are less clear than others. Try to put yourself in your reader’s position to anticipate how he/she will react to the way you have phrased your thoughts. Here are two examples: Baby Sophia was delivered at 3:30 a.m. yesterday.(passive) and Dr. Susan Jones delivered baby Sophia at 3:30 a.m. yesterday.(active) The first sentence might be more appropriate in a birth announcement sent to family and friends—they are not likely to know Dr. Jones and are much more interested in the “object”(the baby) than in the actor (the doctor). A hospital report of yesterday’s events might be more likely to focus on Dr. Jones’ role. Summary of strategies Identify Look for the passive voice: “to be” + a past participle (usually, but not always, ending in “-ed”) If you don’t see both components, move on. Does the sentence describe an action? If so, where is the actor? Is he/she/it in the grammatical subject position (at the front of the sentence) or in the object position (at the end of the sentence, or missing entirely)? Does the sentence end with “by…”? Many passive sentences include the actor at the end of the sentence in a “by” phrase, like “The ball was hit by the player” or “The shoe was chewed up by the dog.” “By” by itself isn’t a conclusive sign of the passive voice, but it can prompt you to take a closer look. 38
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Evaluate Is the doer/actor indicated? Should you indicate him/her/it? Does it really matter who’s responsible for the action? Would your reader ask you to clarify a sentence because of an issue related to your use of the passive? Do you use a passive construction in your thesis statement? Do you use the passive as a crutch in summarizing a plot or history, or in describing something? Do you want to emphasize the object? Revise If you decide that your sentence would be clearer in the active voice, switch the sentence around to make the subject and actor one. Put the actor (the one doing the action of the sentence) in front of the verb. Towards active thinking and writing. We encourage you to keep these tips in mind as you revise. While you may be able to employ this advice as you write your first draft, that’s not necessarily always possible. In writing, clarity often comes when you revise, not on your first try. Don’t worry about the passive if that stress inhibits you in getting your ideas down on paper. But do look for it when you revise. Actively make choices about its proper place in your writing. There is nothing grammatically or otherwise “wrong” about using the passive voice. The key is to recognize when you should, when you shouldn’t, and when your instructor just doesn’t want you to. These choices are yours. We hope this handout helps you to make them. Anson, Chris M. and Robert A. Schwegler. The Longman Handbook for Writers and Readers. Second edition. (2000). Pages 118-120; 270-272; 262-64; 369-71; 448. Baron, Dennis. “The Passive Voice Can Be Your Friend,” Declining Grammar and Other Essays On the English Vocabulary (Urbana: NCTE, 1989), pages 17-22. Hjortshoj, Keith. The Transition to College Writing. (2001). Pages 119-121. Lanham, Richard. Revising Prose. Fourth edition. (2000). Orwell, George. Politics and the English Language. (1946). Rosen, Leonard J. and Laurence Behrens. The Allyn & Bacon Handbook. Third edition. (1997). Pages 240-243; 326-327; 340-344. Strunk and White. The Elements of Style. Third edition. (1979). Pages 18-19. Trimble, John R. Writing with Style. Upper Saddle River, N.J. : Prentice Hall. (2000). Pages 5558. Williams, Joseph. Style: Ten Lessons in Clarity and Grace. Sixth edition. (2000). Chapter 3 and pages 70ff. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 License. You may reproduce it for non-commercial use if you use the entire handout (just click print) and attribute the source: The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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VERBS: The LINKING VERB from: http://www.chompchomp.com/terms/linkingverb.htm The Linking Verb: Recognize a linking verb when you see one. Linking verbs do not express action. Instead, they connect the subject of the verb to additional information about the subject. Look at the examples below: Keila is a shopaholic. Ising isn't something that Keila can do. Is connects the subject, Keila, to additional information about her, that she will soon have a huge credit card bill to pay. During the afternoon, my cats are content to nap on the couch. Areing isn't something that cats can do. Are is connecting the subject, cats, to something said about them, that they enjoy sleeping on the furniture. After drinking the old milk, Vladimir turned green. Turned connects the subject, Vladimir, to something said about him, that he needed an antacid. A ten-item quiz seems impossibly long after a night of no studying. Seems connects the subject, a ten-item quiz, with something said about it, that its difficulty depends on preparation, not length. Irene always feels sleepy after pigging out on pizza from Antonio's. Feels connects the subject, Irene, to her state of being, sleepiness. The following verbs are true linking verbs: any form of the verb be [am, is, are, was, were, has been, are being, might have been, etc.], become, and seem. These true linking verbs are always linking verbs. Then you have a list of verbs with multiple personalities: appear, feel, grow, look, prove, remain, smell, sound, taste, and turn. Sometimes these verbs are linking verbs; sometimes they are action verbs. How do you tell when they are action verbs and when they are linking verbs? If you can substitute am, is, or are and the sentence still sounds logical, you have a linking verb on your hands. If, after the substitution, the sentence makes no sense, you are dealing with an action verb instead. Here are some examples: Sylvia tasted the spicy squid eyeball stew. Sylvia is the stew? I don't think so! Tasted, therefore, is an action verb in this sentence, something Sylvia is doing. The squid eyeball stew tasted good. The stew is good? You bet. Make your own! I smell the delicious aroma of a mushroom and papaya pizza baking in the oven. I am the aroma? No way! Smell, in this sentence, is an action verb, something I am doing. The mushroom and papaya pizza smells heavenly. The pizza is heavenly? Definitely! Try a slice! When my dog Oreo felt the wet grass beneath her paws, she bolted up the stairs and curled up on the couch. Oreo is the wet grass? Of course not! Here, then, felt is an action verb, something Oreo is doing. My dog Oreo feels depressed after seven straight days of rain. Oreo is depressed? Without a doubt! Oreo hates the wet. This substitution will not work for appear. With appear, you have to analyze the function of the verb. Swooping out of the clear blue sky, the blue jay appeared on the branch. Appear is something a blue jay can do—especially when food is near. The blue jay appeared happy to see the bird feeder. Here, appeared is connecting the subject, the blue jay, to its state of mind, happiness.
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The RITING ISSUU
Banned Words List In all submitted writings, do not use the following words, lest the teacher consider the submitted writing as a NONSUBMISSION, and the homework/assignment as Not Done, and subsequently a zero in the grade book. Students may resubmit the writing for a “regrade.� If Student X uses a ban and gets a zero, then submits a revised piece that meet all the criteria, then the new grade will replace the zero.
Do Not use: 1. These Eight Passive Voice Verbs: Be, Is, Are, Am, Was, Were, Being, Been (as well as the contracted versions (such as "they're", etc.). 2. Words labeled the "Thing Endings" words, meaning the following words: thing or things, something, nothing, everything, anything, as well as someone, no one, everyone, anyone, and somebody, nobody, everybody, anybody, (and NEW THIS YEAR!!!) nowhere, everywhere, anywhere, somewhere 3. The word "people" or phrases such as "some would say"... 4. First person, except in reflective pieces, second person, except in instructional pieces. 5. Pronouns without antecedents 6. All non-purposed use of repetition of words as starts of sentences or paragraphs. 7. Use of "alot", "irregardless", "literally" when speaking figuratively, "and etc.", "hopefully" when used as adjective, "in regards to", "kind of" and "sort of", "than" when used as chronology 8. "I think" or "I believe"
Exceptions: -Quoted material (I'm not asking you to rephrase a direct quote, however, before using it, ask yourself if the quote enhances the overall writing). -Discussion of these words as a topic (for clarity, these items can be italicized)
Rationale: Although historically the bans have definitely been a point of contention, the bans allow for the following: 1. a larger exploration of active verbs, 2. the decrease dependency upon overused phrasings, 3. the need to have an "agent" in a sentence, 4. the increased need to take a stance, 5. the increase in varied sentence structure, 6. the avoidance of ambiguity in position papers, 7. the reduction in unevidenced, and essentially unprovable, generalities 8. the exploration of an often dormant writer's voice 9. an increase in the satisfaction that there is a difficult barrier that is overcome 10. a dramatic increase in writing scores in coursework outside of World Lit
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Techniques and Processes: Many approaches exist around the bans, however, the writer and peer editors should look at each ban individually to really approach the revisions. The following list represents a fragment of possibilities, rather than an exhaustive list.
The Be Verb Approaches I. Step One: identify the words. Step Two: Replace the words with an equivalent word. Good for quick fixes/ Not good if overused / If inappropriate, could lead to awkward sentences. II. Step One: Identify the words. Step Two: Ask yourself, is this sentiment needed....or does this sentence actually contribute to the overall meaning of the piece. If yes, work on another of the suggested approaches. If no, delete the sentence. III. Step One: Write your piece first (with all the violations) Step Two: Revise Advantage: You don't freeze over one sentence. Disadvantage: You've a number of sentences to go over as a revision. Versus Step One: Revise your sentences as you write. Advantage: No need to go back. Disadvantage: Often leads to staring at the blank page in fear of a violation. IV. Step One: Identify the words. Step Two: Rework the sentence order. Step Two A: add an agent of the action via a prepositional phrase. Step Three A: Place the agent at the front of the sentence, deleting the be verb and/or the prepositional phrase. Step Four A: Check for equality of meaning and/or enhancement of meaning. Step Two B: remove the be verb and change the form of the active verb. Step Three B: Check for equality of meaning and/or enhancement of meaning. SAMPLE of the Above. Type A a. The window was broken. b. The window was broken by Tom. c. Tom broke the window. Type B a. The window was broken. b. The window broke. V. Step One: Identify the words. Step Two: Get a fresh set of eyes from your house and/or Peer Editor grouping to assist. VI. Step One: Identify the words. Step Two: Aim at reducing the use and conquer each ban one at a time. 42
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Note: if typed, the FIND function on most programs will assist in locating the violations, however do not forget that the contracted forms (such as "you're") will not FIND the full version of the word. Moreover, you may find words that are not banned (e.g. “become”, “believe”, etc.)
The Thing Ending Approaches A. Step One: Attribute an action to a person, place, thing or idea. B. Find categorizations of the group by using adjectives. Step One: “People know that the world is round” (a double violation with “people” and “is”) Step Two: Add adjective: Educated people know…..” Step Three: See if getting rid of the noun maintains the meaning. The educated know that the world is round.” Step Four: Final Check. Are there other violations?
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How to Rite the Research Paper Virginia Beach Association of Teachers of English Fourth Annual Symposium March 17, 2012 Virginia Beach, VA, Landstown High School http://demott.weebly.com/how-to-rite-the-research-paper.html earl.demott@vbschools.com Abstract “How to Rite the Research Paper” – Research paper writing is a standard form used by English teachers across the world. It should be a defining moment in the education of a young adult. Making the writing of the research paper a Rite of Passage involves examining the multiple layers of experiential learning. This presentation will take you through the steps taught at Tallwood High School’s Global Studies and World Languages Academy, focusing on the practical aspects of original research by looking at the use of cohort groups, a two-tiered rubric, panel assessment, and public showcasing of the work. Students' work will be available for perusal and a small panel will field any questions. Material Covered:
Concepts Process: Iceberg Model, Critical Review, Lit Review, Abstract Research: Website Analysis, Databases, Interviewing Writing: Paraphrasing, Grammar, Noodletools Editing: Six Traits, Cohorts Evalutaion: Two Tiered Rubric, Panel Assessment, Public Showcasing, Authenticity as an expert
Process Iceberg Model: http://careerswitcherssocial.wikispaces.com/Iceberg+Model Critical Review http://demott.weebly.com/critical-review.html Lit Review http://library.ucsc.edu/help/howto/write-a-literature-review http://writingcenter.unc.edu/resources/handouts-demos/specific-writing-assignments/literature-reviews Abstracts http://research.berkeley.edu/ucday/abstract.html
Research (Manual: http://demott.weebly.com/gcs---lessons2.html) Website Analysis http://prezi.com/uw7znyvuvwen/website-evaluation/ Databases
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The RITING ISSUU http://scholar.google.com/ (scholarly research) http://www.eric.ed.gov/ (education) http://library.duke.edu/research/subject/guides/chemistry/science-databases.html (science) http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/DisplayJournalBrowse.cfm (social sciences) http://www.ircps.org/index.htm (classical philosophy) http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/ (american culture / literature) http://ipl.org/div/litcrit/ (literary criticism) http://digital.library.upenn.edu/books/ (digital library) http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/ (internet shakespeare) Interviewing http://prezi.com/w9o4lwu8hdvv/interviewing-skills/
Writing (Manual: http://demott.weebly.com/gcs---lessons2.html) Paraphrasing (Have your students try their hand at these, change words / phrases / structure....but not the meaning) http://www.zelo.com/family/nursery/ Grammar http://bcs.bedfordstmartins.com/pocket5e/player/pages/login.aspx?sViewAs=S Noodletools http://www.noodletools.com/
Editing Six Traits http://educationnorthwest.org/traits
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