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Preface xv Part I The Reading Process 1 Becoming a Critical Reader    Stage 1: Get an Overview of the Selection    Stage 2: Deepen Your Sense of the Selection    Stage 3: Evaluate the Selection    Assessing Visuals in a Reading      Assessing an Image: An Example      Assessing a Graph: An Example    A Model Annotated Reading          Ellen Goodman, “Family Counterculture”    Part II The Writing Process 2 Getting Started Through Prewriting    Use Prewriting to Get Started      Keep a Journal      The Pre-Reading Journal Entry      Understand the Boundaries of the Assignment      Determine Your Purpose, Audience, Tone, and Point of View      Discover Your Essay’s Limited Subject      Generate Raw Material About Your Limited Subject      Conduct Research      Organize the Raw Material    Activities: Getting Started Through Prewriting    3 Identifying a Thesis    What Is a Thesis?    Finding a Thesis    Writing an Effective Thesis      Tone and Point of View      Implied Pattern of Development      Including a Plan of Development      1. Don’t Write a Highly Opinionated Statement      2. Don’t Make an Announcement      3. Don’t Make a Factual Statement      4. Don’t Make a Broad Statement    Arriving at an Effective Thesis    Placing the Thesis in an Essay    Activities: Identifying a Thesis    4 Supporting the Thesis with Evidence    What Is Evidence?    How Do You Find Evidence?      How the Patterns of Development Help Generate Evidence    Characteristics of Evidence      The Evidence Is Relevant and Unified      The Evidence Is Specific      The Evidence Is Adequate      The Evidence Is Dramatic      The Evidence Is Accurate      The Evidence Is Representative      Borrowed Evidence Is Documented    Activities: Supporting the Thesis with Evidence    5 Organizing the Evidence    Use the Patterns of Development    Select an Organizational Approach      Chronological Approach      Spatial Approach      Emphatic Approach      Simple-to-Complex Approach    Prepare an Outline    Activities: Organizing the Evidence    6 Writing the Paragraphs in the First Draft    How to Move from Outline to First Draft    General Suggestions on How to Proceed    If You Get Bogged Down    A Suggested Sequence for Writing the First Draft      1. Write the Supporting Paragraphs      2. Write Other Paragraphs in the Essay’s Body      3. Write the Introduction      4. Write the Conclusion     5. Write the Title    Pulling It All Together    Sample First Draft          Harriet Davids, “Challenges for Today’s Parents”      Commentary    Activities: Writing the Paragraphs in the First Draft    7 R evising Overall Meaning, Structure, and Paragraph Development    Five Strategies to Make Revision Easier      Set Your First Draft Aside for a While      Work from Printed Text      Read the Draft Aloud      View Revision as a Series of Steps      Evaluate and Respond to Instructor Feedback      Peer Review: An Additional Revision Strategy      Evaluate and Respond to Peer Review    Revising Overall Meaning and Structure    Revising Paragraph Development    Sample Student Revision of Overall Meaning, Structure, and Paragraph Development    Activities: Revising Overall Meaning, Structure, and Paragraph Development    8 Revising Sentences and Words    Revising Sentences      Make Sentences Consistent with Your Tone      Make Sentences Economical      Vary Sentence Type      Vary Sentence Length      Make Sentences Emphatic    Revising Words 1     Make Words Consistent with Your Tone      Use an Appropriate Level of Diction      Avoid Words That Overstate or Understate      Select Words with Appropriate Connotations      Use Specific Rather Than General Words      Use Strong Verbs      Delete Unnecessary Adverbs      Use Original Figures of Speech      Avoid Sexist Language    Sample Student Revision of Sentences and Words    Activities: Revising Sentences and Words    9 Editing and Proofreading    Edit Carefully    Use the Appropriate Manuscript Format    Proofread Closely    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Proofreading          Harriet Davids, “Challenges for Today’s Parents”      Commentary    Activities: Editing and Proofreading    Part III The Patterns of Development 10 Description    What Is Description?    How Description Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Description in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Marie Martinez, “Salt Marsh”      Commentary    Activities: Description      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Description          Mario Suárez, “El Hoyo”          Cherokee Paul McDonald, “A View from the Bridge”          Gordon Parks, “Flavio’s Home”    Additional Writing Topics: Description    11 Narration    What Is Narration?    How Narration Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Narration in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Paul Monahan, “If Only”      Commentary    Activities: Narration      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Narration          Audre Lorde, “The Fourth of July”          Lynda Barry, “The Sanctuary of School”          Joan Murray, “Someone’s Mother”    Additional Writing Topics: Narration    12 Illustration    What Is Illustration?    How Illustration Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Illustration in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Michael Pagano, “Pursuit of Possessions”      Commentary    Activities: Illustration      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Illustration          Kay S. Hymowitz, “Tweens: Ten Going On Sixteen”          Beth Johnson, “Bombs Bursting in Air”          France Borel, “The Decorated Body”    Additional Writing Topics: Illustration    13 Division-Classification    What Is Division-Classification?    How Division-Classification Fits Your Purpose and Audience Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Division-Classification in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Gail Oremland, “The Truth About College Teachers”      Commentary    Activities: Division-Classification      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Division-Classification          Ann McClintock, “Propaganda Techniques in Today’s Advertising”          Scott Russell Sanders, “The Men We Carry in Our Minds”          Bianca Bosker, “How Teens Are Really Using Facebook: It’s a ‘Social Burden,’ Pew Study Finds”    Additional Writing Topics: Division-Classification    14 Process Analysis    What Is Process Analysis?    How Process Analysis Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Process Analysis in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Robert Barry, “Becoming a Recordoholic”      Commentary    Activities: Process Analysis      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Process Analysis          Amy Sutherland, “What Shamu Taught Me About a Happy Marriage”          David Shipley, “Talk About Editing”          Alex Horton, “On Getting By”    Additional Writing Topics: Process Analysis    15 Comparison-Contrast    What Is Comparison-Contrast?    How Comparison-Contrast Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Comparison-Contrast in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Carol Siskin, “The Virtues of Growing Older”      Commentary    Activities: Comparison-Contrast      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Comparison-Contrast          Eric Weiner, “Euromail and Amerimail”          Patricia Cohen, “Reality TV: Surprising Throwback to the Past?”          Alex Wright, “Friending, Ancient or Otherwise”    Additional Writing Topics: Comparison-Contrast    16 Cause-Effect    What Is Cause-Effect?    How Cause-Effect Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Cause-Effect in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Carl Novack, “Americans and Food”      Commentary    Activities: Cause-Effect      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Cause-Effect          Stephen King, “Why We Crave Horror Movies”          Belinda Luscombe, “The Science of Romance: Why We Flirt”          Josie Appleton, “The Body Piercing Project”    Additional Writing Topics: Cause-Effect    17 Definition    What Is Definition?    How Definition Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Definition in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Laura Chen, “Physics in Everyday Life”      Commentary    Activities: Definition      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Definition          Ann Hulbert, “Beyond the Pleasure Principle”          Laura Fraser, “The Inner Corset”          Keith Johnson, “Who’s a Pirate? In Court, a Duel over Definitions”    Additional Writing Topics: Definition    18 Argumentation-Persuasion    What Is Argumentation-Persuasion?    How Argumentation-Persuasion Fits Your Purpose and Audience    Prewriting Strategies    Strategies for Using Argumentation-Persuasion in an Essay    Revision Strategies    Student Essay: From Prewriting Through Revision          Mark Simmons, “Compulsory National Service”      Commentary    Activities: Argumentation-Persuasion      Prewriting Activities      Revising Activities    Professional Selections: Argumentation-Persuasion          Anna Quindlen, “Driving to the Funeral”          Mary Sherry, “In Praise of the “F” Word”    Debating the Issues: Gender-Based Education          Gerry Garibaldi, “How the Schools Shortchange Boys”          Michael Kimmel, “A War Against Boys?”    Debating the Issues: Government Regulation to Help Control Obesity and Related Diseases         Robert Lustig, Laura Schmidt, and Claire Brindis, “The Toxic Truth About Sugar”          Michael Marlow and Sherzod Abdukadirov, “Government Intervention Will Not Solve Our Obesity Problem”  Additional Writing Topics: Argumentation-Persuasion   Part IV The Research Essay 19 Locating, Evaluating, Analyzing, and Synthesizing Research Sources    Plan the Research      Understand the Essay’s Boundaries      Choose a General Subject      Prewrite to Limit the General Subject      Understand Primary versus Secondary Research      Conduct Preliminary Research      Identify a Tentative (Working) Thesis      Make a Schedule    Conduct Primary Research      Conduct Interviews      Carry Out Surveys    Conduct Secondary Research      Find Books on Your Subject      Find Periodicals on Your Subject      Find Sources on the Internet     Know the Advantages and Limitations of the Library and the Web    Prepare a Working Bibliography and Take Notes      Record Information About the Source      Take Notes on the Source    Evaluate Sources and Analyze Information      Evaluate Sources      Analyze Information    Use Quotation, Summary, and Paraphrase to Synthesize Research While Avoiding Plagiarism      Plagiarism      Direct Quotation    Summary      Paraphrase      Activities: Locating, Evaluating, and Integrating Research Sources    20 Writing the Research Essay    Refine Your Working Thesis    Sort Your Research Results    Organize the Evidence by Outlining    Write the First Draft    Integrate Sources into Your Writing      Using Sources Effectively      Awkward Use of a Quotation      Effective Use of a Source      Introducing a Source      Using Variety in Attributions      Shortening or Clarifying Quotations      Capitalizing and Punctuating Short Quotations    Document Sources to Avoid Plagiarism      What Needs to Be Documented?      What Does Not Need to Be Documented?    Creating In-Text References: MLA Format    Revise, Edit, and Proofread the First Draft    Prepare the Works Cited List: MLA Format      General Instructions for the MLA Works Cited      Citing Print Sources–Periodicals      Citing Print Sources–Books      Citing Sources Found on a Website      Citing Sources Found Through an Online Database or Scholarly Project      Citing Other Common Sources    Prepare the References List: APA Format      Parenthetic Citations in the Text      General Instructions for the APA References List     Citing Print Sources–Periodicals      Citing Print Sources–Books      Citing Sources Found on a Website      Citing Sources Found Through an Online Database or Scholarly Project      Citing Other Common Sources    Student Research Paper: MLA-Style Documentation      Commentary    Student Research Paper: APA-Style Documentation    Activities: Writing the Research Essay    Part V The Literary Essay and Exam Essay 21 Writing About Literature    Elements of Literary Works      Literary Terms    How to Read a Literary Work      Read to Form a General Impression      Ask Questions About the Work      Reread and Annotate      Modify Your Annotations    Write the Literary Analysis      Prewrite      Identify Your Thesis      Support the Thesis with Evidence      Organize the Evidence      Write the First Draft      Revise Overall Meaning, Structure, and Paragraph Development      Edit and Proofread    Pulling It All Together     Read to Form a General Impression          Langston Hughes, “Early Autumn”    Student Essay          Karen Vais, “Stopping to Talk”    Commentary    Additional Selections and Writing Assignments          Robert Frost, “Out, Out–”          Kate Chopin, “The Story of an Hour”    22 Writing Exam Essays    Three Forms of Written Answers      Short Answers      Paragraph-Length Answers      Essay-Length Answers    How to Prepare for Exam Essays    At the Examination      Survey the Entire Test      Understand the Essay Question    Write the Essay      Prewrite      Identify Your Thesis      Support the Thesis with Evidence      Organize the Evidence      Write the Draft      Revise, Edit, and Proofread      Sample Essay Answer      Commentary   Activity: Writing Exam Essays  Table of Contents 
        
Get Longman Writer, The, Brief Edition, 9th Edition by Judith Nadell John Langan Eliza A. Comodromos

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