Wednesday, December 10, 2014
Literature 1 Play Presentation Final Requirement
For my Lit 1 MTh 9:00-12:00 AM and TF 9:00-12:00 AM, you will have your play presentation on December 11, 2014 at the ILC (AVR 1). Please be at the venue prepared at 1:00 PM so we can start immediately. We are only allowed to use the room until 5:00 PM so every minute counts. See you tomorrow. Also, submit the final version of your script with the answers for the narrative questions. Just staple them no need for folder or envelope.
Communications 1 Essay Format
For
your final copy,
- Use short bond paper
- Set margins to one inch
- Set font type to Calibri or Arial
- Set font size to 11
- Set line spacing to 1 for the information that comes before the text of your essay
- Set line spacing to 1.5 for the essay
For
the format,
- Your line spacing should be set at 1
- First line, left corner indicate your name (family name first)
- Press enter
- Indicate your class schedule
- Press enter twice
- Indicate the title of your essay (please follow the rules on capitalization for titles)
- Your title should be centered
- Set line spacing to 1.5
- Press enter
- The text of your essay
- Indent each paragraph (five spaces)
- Justify text alignment
- Apply format to all four essays
Deadline is on December 13, 2014.
When you submit your essays just staple them together; no need for
folders or envelopes.
Friday, November 28, 2014
Notes on the Process Analysis Method
USING THE METHOD
Process analysis explains a sequence of actions with a specified result (the process) by dividing it into its component steps (the analysis). The purpose of process analysis is to explain, but sometimes a parallel purpose is to prove something about the process or evaluate it.
To repair inconsistency here, you could stick with one for the subject (one should loosen), but that usually sounds stiff. It is better to revise the earlier subjects to be you.
Process analysis explains a sequence of actions with a specified result (the process) by dividing it into its component steps (the analysis). The purpose of process analysis is to explain, but sometimes a parallel purpose is to prove something about the process or evaluate it.
Process analyses generally fall into one of two types:
- In a directive process analysis, you tell how to do or make something. You outline the steps in the process completely so that the reader who follows them can achieve the specified result. Generally, you address the reader directly, using the second-person you or the imperative mood of verbs (“Add one egg yolk and stir vigorously.”).
- In an explanatory process analysis, you provide the information necessary for readers to understand the process, but more to satisfy their curiosity that to teach them how to perform it. You may address the reader directly, but the third-person he, she, it, and they are more common.
Whether directive or explanatory, process analysis usually follows a
chronological sequence. Most processes can be divided into phases or stages,
and these in turn can be divided into steps. Following a chronological order,
you cover the stages in sequence and, within each stage, cover the steps in
sequence.
Transitional expressions that signal time and place—such as after five minutes, meanwhile, to the left,
and below—can be invaluable in
process analysis.
GETTING STARTED
To find your subject, examine your interests or hobbies or think of a
processes you want to research in order to understand them better. Explore the
subject by listing chronologically all the necessary stages and steps.
While exploring the subject, decide on the point of your analysis and
express it in a thesis statement. For instance:
Building a table is a three-stage
process of cutting, assembling, and finishing.
You can increase your readers’ interest in the process by also
conveying your reason for writing about it:
Changing a tire does not require
a mechanic’s skill or strength; on the other contrary, a ten-year-old child can
do it.
You might show how the process demonstrates a more general principle.
The process of getting a bill
through congress illustrates the majority rule at work.
Or you might assert that a process is inefficient or unfair:
The overly complicated
registration procedure forces students to waste two days each semester standing
in line.
Remember your readers while you are generating ideas and formulating
your thesis. Consider how much background information is needed, where
specialized terms must be defined, and where examples must be given.
DEVELOPING AN ESSAY USING PROCESS ANALYSIS
Many successful process analyses begin with an overview of the process
to which readers can relate each step. In such an introduction you can lead up
to your thesis sentence by specifying when or where the process occurs, why it
is useful and interesting or controversial, what its result is, and the like.
After the introduction, you should present the stages distinctly, perhaps
one or two paragraphs for each, and usually in chronological order. Within each
stage, also chronologically, you then then cover the necessary steps.
A process analysis may simply end with the result. But you might
conclude with a summary of the major stages, with a comment on the significance
or usefulness of the process, or with a recommendation for changing a process
you have criticized.
DRAFTING
Drafting a process analysis is a good occasion to practice a
straightforward, concise writing style, for clarity is more important than
originality of expression. Stick to plain language and uncomplicated sentences.
REVISING AND EDITING
When you’ve finished your draft, ask a friend to read it. If you have
explained a process, he or should be able to understand it. Then examine the
draft yourself against the following questions:
- Have you adhered to a chronological sequence?
- Have you included all necessary steps and omitted unnecessary digressions?
- Have you accurately gauged your readers’ need for information?
- Have you shown readers how each step fits into the whole process and relates to the other steps?
- Have you used plenty of informative transitions?
FOCUS ON CONSISTENCY
While drafting a directive process analysis, telling readers how to do
something, you may start off with subjects or verbs in one form and then shift
to another form because the original choice felt awkward. These shifts occur
most often with the subjects a person
or one:
Inconsistent To keep
the car from rolling while changing the tire, one should first set the car’s
emergency brakes. Then one should block the three tires with objects like rocks
or chunks of wood. Before raising the car, you should loosen the bolts of the
wheel.
To repair inconsistency here, you could stick with one for the subject (one should loosen), but that usually sounds stiff. It is better to revise the earlier subjects to be you.
Consistent To keep
the car from rolling while changing while changing the tire, you should set the car’s emergency brake. Then
you should block the three other tires with objects like rocks or chunks of
wood. Before raising the car, you should loosen the bolts of the wheel.
Sometimes, writers try to avoid one or a person or even you with
passive verbs that don’t require actors:
Inconsistent To keep the car from rolling while changing
the tire, you should first set the car’s emergency brake. Then the other tires
should be blocked with objects like rocks or chunks of wood.
But the passive is wordy and potentially confusing, especially when
directions should be making it clear who does what.
One solution to problem of inconsistent subjects and passive verbs is
to sue the imperative, or commanding, forms of verbs, in which you is
understood as the subject:
Consistent To keep the car from rolling while changing
the tire, first set the car emergency brake. Then block the three other tires
with objects or chunks of wood.
ANALYZING PROCESSES IN A PARAGRAPH
Nora Ephron (born 1941) is a screenwriter, director, essayist, and
novelist known for her sharp wit and strong female characters. This paragraph
comes from “Revision and Life,” an essay first published in 1986 in the New
York Times Book Review. (When she wrote this paragraph, Ephron composed on a
typewriter. Even if she now uses a computer for writing, as seems likely, her
process may well remain much the same.)
I learned as a journalist to revise on deadline. I learned to write
an article a paragraph at a time—and to run it in a paragraph at a time—and I
arrived at the kind of writing and revising I do, which is basically a kind
of typing and retyping. I am a great believer in this technique for the simple
reason that I type faster than the wind. What I generally do is to start an
article and get as far as I can—sometimes no farther than a sentence or
two—before running out of steam, ripping the piece of paper from the
typewriter and starting all over again. I type over and over until I have got
the beginning of the piece to the point where I am happy with it. I then am ready
to plunge into the body of the article itself. This plunge usually requires
something known as a transition. I approach a transition by completely
retyping the opening of the article leading up to it in the hope that the
ferocious speed of my typing will somehow catapult me into the next section
of the piece. This does not work—what in fact catapults me into the next
section is a concrete thought about what the next section ought to be
about—but until I have the thought the typing keeps me busy, and keeps me
from feeling something known as blocked.
|
Explanatory process analysis: tells how the author
drafts and revises
Transitions (underlined) signal sequence
Process divided into steps
Details of the last step
Goal of process
|
Notes on Comparison and Contrast Method
USING THE METHOD
Comparison shows the similarities between two or more
subjects while contrast shows the differences between subjects.
Comparison and contrast usually work together because
any subjects that warrant side-by-side examination usually resemble each other.
You’ll generally write a comparison for one of two
purposes:
To explain the similarities and differences between
subjects so as to make either or both of them clear.
To evaluate subjects so as to establish their advantages
and disadvantages, strengths, and weaknesses.
In writing a comparison, you not only select subjects
from the same class but also, using division or analysis, identify the features
shared by subjects. These points of comparison are the attributes of the class
and thus of the subjects within the class.
In an effective comparison a thesis or controlling
idea governs the choice of class, points of comparison, and specific
similarities and differences, while also making the comparison worthwhile for
the reader. The thesis of an evaluative comparison coincides with the writer’s
purpose of supporting a preference for one subject over another:
THESIS SENTENCE (EVALUATION): The two diets result in
similarly rapid weight loss, but Harris’s requires much more self-discipline
and nutritionally much riskier than Marconi’s.
In an explanatory comparison, the thesis goes beyond
the obvious and begins to identify the points of comparison.
TENTATIVE THESIS SENTENCE (EXPLANATION): Rugby and
American football are the same in some respects and different others.
REVISED THESIS SENTENCE (EXPLANATION): Though rugby
requires less strength and more stamina than American football, the two games
are very much alike in their rules and strategies.
The examples
suggest other decisions you must make when writing a comparison:
- Should the subjects be treated in equal detail, or should one be emphasized over the others? Give the subjects equal emphasis when they are equally familiar or are being evaluated. Stress one subject over the others when it is less familiar.
- Should the essay focus on similarities or differences, or both? Generally, stress them equally when all points of comparison are equally familiar or important. Stress the differences between subjects usually considered similar or the similarities between subjects usually considered different.
You have two options for arranging a comparison:
- Subject-by-subject in which you group the points of comparison under each subject so that the subjects so that the subjects are covered one at a time.
- Point-by-point, in which you group the subjects under each point of comparison so that the points are covered one at a time.
Subject-by-subject
Harris’s diet
Speed of
weight loss
Required
self-discipline
Nutritional risk
Marconi’s diet
Speed of
weight loss
Required
self-discipline
Nutritional risk
|
Point-by-point
Speed of weight loss
Harris’s
diet
Marconi’s
diet
Required self-discipline
Harris’s
diet
Marconi’s
diet
Nutritional risk
Harris’s
diet
Marconi’s
diet
|
DEVELOPING AN ESSAY BY COMPARISON AND CONTRAST
Whenever you observe similarities or differences
between two or more members of the same general class—activities, people,
ideas, things, places—you have a possible subject for comparison and contrast.
While shaping your ideas, you should begin formulating
your controlling idea,your thesis. The thesis should reflect your answers to
these questions:
- Do the ideas suggest an explanatory or evaluative comparison?
- If the explanatory, what point will the comparison make so that it does not merely recite the obvious?
- If evaluative, what preference or recommendation will you express?
- Will you emphasize both subjects equally or stress on over the other?
- Will you emphasize differences or similarities, or both?
As you gain increasing control over your material,
consider also the needs of your readers?
Do they know your subjects well, or should you take
special care to explain one or both of them?
Will your readers be equally interested in
similarities and differences, or will they find one more enlightening than the
other?
If your essay is evaluative, are your readers likely
to be biased against your preference? If so, you will need to support your case
with plenty of specific reasons.
Organizing
An effective introduction to a comparison essay often
provides some context for readers—the situation that prompts the comparison or
the need for the comparison. Placing your thesis sentence in the introduction
also informs readers of your purpose and point.
For the body of the essay, choose the arrangement that
will present your material most clearly and effectively. Remember that the
subject-by subject arrangement suits brief essays comparing dominant
impressions of subjects, whereas the point-by-point arrangement suits longer
essays requiring emphasis on the individual points of comparison.
The conclusion to a comparison essay can help readers
see the whole picture: the chief similarities and differences between two
subjects compared in alternating arrangement. In addition, you may want to
comment on the significance of your comparison, advise readers on how they can
sue the information you have provided, or recommend a specific course of action
for them to follow.
Drafting
Drafting your essay gives you the chance to spell out
your comparison so that it supports your thesis, or if your thesis is still
tentative, to find your idea by writing into it.
Revising and Editing
When you are revising and editing your draft, use the
following questions to be certain your essay meets the principal requirements
of the comparative method.
Are your subjects drawn from the same class?
Does your essay have a clear purpose and say something
about the subject?
Do you apply all points of comparison to both
subjects?
Does the pattern of comparison suit readers’ needs and
the complexity of the material?
FOCUS ON PARAGRAPH COHERENCE
To help readers keep your comparison straight, you can
rely on the use of transitions and repetition or restatement:
- Some transitions indicate that you are shifting between subjects, either finding resemblances between them (also, like, likewise, similarly) or finding differences (but, however, in contrast, instead, unlike, whereas, yet). Other transitions indicate that you are moving on to a new point (in addition, also, furthermore, moreover).
Traditional public schools depend for financing, of
course, on tax receipts and on other public money like bonds, and as a result
they generally open enrolment to all students without regard to background,
skills, or special needs. Magnet schools are similarly funded by public
schools. But they often require prospective students to pass a test or the
hurdle for admission. In addition, whereas traditional public schools usually
offer a general curriculum, magnet schools often focus on a specialized program
emphasizing an area of knowledge or competence, such as science or technology
or performing arts.
- Repetition or restatement of labels for your subjects or for your points of comparison makes clear the topic of each sentence. In the passage, the repetitions of traditional public schools and magnet schools and the substitution of they for each clarify the subjects of comparison. The restatements of financing/public money/funded, enrolment/admission, and curriculum/program clarify the points of comparison.
Analyzing Comparison
and Contrast in a Paragraph
Suzanne Britt (born 1946) has written for many
newspapers and magazines, and she has also published several collections of
essays. The following paragraphs comes from “That Lean and Hungry Look,” first
published in 1978 in the “My Turn” column of Newsweek on Campus.
Some people say the business
about the jolly fat person is a myth, that all of us chubbies are neurotic,
sick, sad people. I disagree. Fat people may not be chortling all day long,
but they’re a hell of a lot nicer than the wizened and shrivelled. Thin
people turn surly, mean, and hard at a young age because they never learn the
value of a hot-fudge sundae for easing tension. Thin people don’t like gooey
soft things because they themselves are neither gooey nor soft. They are
crunchy and dull, like carrots. They go straight to the heart of the matter
while fat people let things stay all blurry and hazy and vague, the way
things actually are. Thin people want to face the truth. Fat people know
there is no truth. One of my thin friends is always staring at complex,
unsolvable problems and saying, “The key thing is . . .” Fat people never say
that. They know there isn’t such thing as the key thing about anything.
|
Point-by-point comparison
1.
Personality
2.
Food preferences (related to
personality)
3. Outlook
|
Source:
Aaron, Jane E. The
Compact Reader: Short Essays by Method and Theme. 7th Ed. Boston, MA:
Bedford/St. Martin's, 2003.
Notes on Classification Method
We classify when we sort things into groups. Because it creates order, classification helps us make sense of our physical and mental experience.
Writers classify to explain a pattern in a subject
that might not have been noticed before.
Using the Method
Writers classify primarily to explain a pattern in a
subject that might not have been noticed before.
Writer also classify to persuade readers that one
group is superior.
Classification is a three-step process:
- Separate things into their elements, using the method of division or analysis
- Isolate the similarities among the elements
- Group or classify the things based on those similarities, matching like with like.
The number of groups in a classification scheme
depends entirely on the basis for establishing the classes in the first place.
There are two systems:
- In a complex classification, each individual fits firmly into one class because of at least one distinguishing feature shared with all members of that class but with any members of any other classes.
- In a binary or two-part classification, two classes are in opposition to each other.
Sorting demands a principle of classification that
determines the groups by distinguishing them.
Your choice of a principle depends on your interest.
Although you may emphasize one class over the others, the classification itself must be complete and consistent.
Developing an Essay
by Classification
Be sure that your general subject forms a class in its
own right—that its members share at least one important quality.
Your principle of classification may suggest a thesis sentence, but be sure the sentence also conveys a reason for the classification so that the essay does not become a dull list of categories.
TENTATIVE THESIS SENTENCE Political fund-raising appeals are
delivered in six ways.
REVISED THESIS SENTENCE Of the six ways to deliver political fund-raising appeals, the three
rely on personal contact are generally the most effective.
Be sure to consider your readers’ needs. The principle
of classification for a familiar subject need little justification. On the
other hand, an unfamiliar subject might require considerable care in explaining
the principle of classification.
Organizing
The introduction to a classification essay should make
clear why the classification is worthwhile: what situation prompted the essay?
What do readers already know about the subject? What use might they make of the
information you will provide?
Do state your principle in a thesis sentence, so that
readers know where you’re taking them.
In the body of the essay the classes may be arranged
in order of decreasing familiarity or increasing importance or size.
Among other uses, the conclusion might summarize the
classes, comment on the significance of one particular class in relation to the
whole, or point out a new understanding of the whole subject gained from the
classification.
Drafting
For the first draft of your classification, your goal
will be to establish your scheme: spelling out the purpose and principle of
classification and defining the groups so that they are complete and
consistent, covering the subject without mixing principles or overlapping.
Revising and Editing
The following questions can help you revise and edit
your classification:
- Will readers see the purpose of your classification?
- Is your classification complete?
- Is your classification consistent?
FOCUS ON PARAGRAPH DEVELOPMENT
A crucial aim of revising a classification is to make
sure each group is clear: what’s counted in, what’s counted out, and why.
You’ll provide the examples and other details that make the groups clear as you
develop the paragraphs devoted to each group.
The second group, evangelists, does not condemn
smokers but encourages, them to quit. Evangelists think quitting is easy, and
they preach this message, often earning the resentment of potential converts.
Contrast the given paragraph with the actual paragraph
written by Franklin E. Zimring in his essay, “Confessions of a Former Smoker”:
By contrast, the
antismoking evangelist does not condemn smokers. Unlike the zealot, he regards
smoking as an easily curable condition, as a social disease, and not a sin. The
evangelist spends an enormous amount of time seeking and preaching to the
unconverted. He argues that kicking the habit is not that difficult. After all,
he did it; moreover, as he describes it, the benefits of quitting are beyond
measure and the disadvantages are nil.
The hallmark of
the evangelists is his insistence that he never misses tobacco. Though he is
less hostile to smokers than the zealot, he is resented more. Friends and loved
ones who have been the targets of his preachments frequently greet the resumption
of smoking by the evangelist as an occasion for unmitigated glee.
In Zimring’s paragraph, he contrasts evangelists with
zealots; he provides specific examples of his message and of others’ reaction
to them. These additional details make the group distinct from other groups and
clear in itself.
Analyzing
Classification in A Paragraph
Daniel Goleman (born 1940) is a psychologist who
consults and writes on “emotional intelligence.” He previously wrote for the New York Times, and the following
paragraph comes from a 1992 Times a
column headlined “As Addiction Medicine Gains, Experts Debate What It Should
Cover.”
Dr. Milkman, in a theory often cited by
those who are stretching the boundaries of addiction, proposed in the mid-1980s
that there are three kinds of addiction, each marked by the change they
produce in emotional states. The first involves substances or activities
that are calming, including alcohol, tranquilizers, overeating, and even
watching television. The second involves becoming energized, whether by
cocaine and amphetamines, gambling, sexual activity, and even watching
television. The second involves becoming energized whether by cocaine and
amphetamines, gambling, sexual activity, or high-risk sports like parachute-jumping.
The third kind of addiction is to fantasy, whether induced by psychedelic
drugs or, for example, by sexual thoughts.
|
Principle of classification (topic
sentence underlined): change produced in emotional states
1.
Calming Addiction
2.
Energizing Addiction
|
Source:
Aaron, Jane E.
The Compact Reader : Short Essays by Method and Theme. 7th Ed. Boston, MA:
Bedford/St. Martin's, 2003.
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