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Wednesday, December 3, 2014

grammar practice

Grammar Grooves Practice
Here are your GG’s:
1. FANBOYS
2. supposed, used to
3. their, they're, there
4. you're, your
5. quotation punctuation
6. compound pronouns
7. semi-colon (Rules 314-318)
8. a lot, a little
9. names
10. numbers (Rules 345-346)

In the sentences below, circle as many of the 25 errors as you can. Go over it at least three times.

A. This work is suppose to help you catch errors in you’re own work.
B. Pat screamed Back up and keep your eye on the ball! Perfect!”
C. No matter how much you and him try, your chances of winning the lottery are slim to none.
D.  We invited 60 famous people to you’re party but only Cleave made it.
E.  There favorite music uses alot of bass and a little synthesizer; cool.
F.  Lopez made the audience laugh with jokes my friend and me actually wrote and sent in 3 years ago.
G. Darla’s 5 pets all have the exact same birthday; November seventeenth!
H. Last year them and I went rafting on the American River a lot, like 15 times.

I.  Never give up says the Dalai Lama. Develop the heart. Be compassionate.”

Facts About Your Research Paper

Research paper – English 101

  1. This research paper should present a thesis that is specific, manageable, provable, and contestable—in other words, the thesis should offer a clear position, stand, or opinion that will be proven with research.   You should analyze and prove your thesis using examples and quotes from a variety of sources. 

  1. You need to research and cite from at least five sources.  You must use at least 3 different types of sources.

o   At least one source must be from a library database.
o   At least one source must be a book, anthology or textbook.
o   At least one source must be from a credible website, appropriate for academic use.
o   The paper should not over-rely on one main source for most of the information. Rather, it should use multiple sources and synthesize the information found in them.

  1.  This paper will be approximately 6-8 pages in length, not including the Works Cited page, which is also required.  This means at least 6 full pages of text.  The Works Cited page does NOT count towards length requirement. 

  1. You must use MLA format for the document, in-text citations, and Works Cited page.

  1. You must integrate quotations and paraphrases using signal phrases and analysis or commentary. 

  1. You must sustain your argument, use transitions effectively, and use correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation.


  1. Your paper must be logically organized and focused.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Thoughts About Thesis Statements

Ideas About Thesis Statements

THE THESIS STATEMENT

The thesis is the ONE sentence that contains
the foundation, the premise, the argument
you are presenting to your readers.
It is the core of the essay.
Strive to make it strong and clear.


ELEMENTS OF THESIS:

  • It must be ARGUABLE.
This means it presents an opinion, an argument, or an illustration of a view or experience.  It is not a mere statement of fact. 

  • It must ADDRESS the TOPIC.
While this element seems obvious too, writers often get going and one thought leads to another and another and the topic gets left behind. Re-read the prompt several times to make sure you haven’t gone off topic beyond the parameters of the assignment. 

  • It must be specific enough to be covered in the paper.
What is the length of the assignment: two pages? ten pages? The length determines how broad or narrow the scope of your thesis will be. Adjust accordingly. 

  • It must MAKE SENSE.
This is the catch-all element that asks you to re-consider your wording, syntax, diction, and grammar. Make changes as you see fit.
 

Monday, December 1, 2014

Home Stretch Reading Presentation (#2)

Reading Analysis Guide #2


Make a note of the article titles and presentation dates that you sign up for below.
You will be presenting your analysis in class along with two to five of your classmates. The class will be counting on you to be on top of the article you are covering, so please be prepared!
To receive credit, you must participate in the presentation of your analysis. You will be graded primarily on your written analysis (breakdown of scoring below), but outstanding presentations will be rewarded.
Before you begin your work, examine the Evaluating Arguments handout. 
Read the article you will be analyzing carefully. If possible, read it twice. On your first reading, just try to identify the main idea(s) and get a feel for the writer’s approach and the flow of the piece. On your second reading, go over the text more carefully; notice how the writer constructs his or her argument. You will probably want to mark up your text and/or take notes.
To prepare your written analysis:
Identify the author’s name and the title of the article. Answer the following questions. Put your answers in outline form (see sample analysis on the reverse side of this sheet).
1.     What is the central claim (or thesis) of the selection? Your answer should be a complete sentence in your own words (not a quote!). Be as specific as possible, but remember that your claim should cover the whole article. (10 points)
2.     Is the central claim expressed explicitly or implicitly? The claim is explicit if the writer spells out what it is. The claim is implicit if the writer only implies the claim but does not state it outright. (1 point)
3.     What reasons link the evidence to the claim? In other words, why does the evidence support the claim? Reasons may be presented explicitly or implied. (7 points)
4.     What evidence does the writer present to support his or her claim? Specify and categorize the evidence (e.g. examples, personal experiences, analogy, authoritative opinion, facts, statistical data, cause-effect reasoning, results of scientific experiments, comparison, interviews, etc. – see sample on back). Do not answer this question with detailed quotes or paraphrases from the article! For additional guidance, see the table of Kinds of Evidence on pp. 91-4 of your textbook Writing Arguments. (7 points)
5.     Comment briefly on the persuasiveness of the article by answering one or more of the following questions.  (5 points)
·      Is the argument convincing? Does it rely on emotional, ethical, and/or logical appeals?
·      Are there flaws in the reasoning of the argument? Does it rely on questionable sources? 
·      Does understanding the argument require knowledge of the historical or cultural context in which it was written?
·      How do the style, organization, and/or tone contribute or detract from the persuasiveness of the argument?
·      What is your personal reaction to the article?

Guidelines for Reading Analysis Presentations 3 & 4 on The Ethics of What We Eat
Sign-up for one set of chapters for Weeks 9, 10, or 11 and one set of chapters for Weeks 12, 13, or 14. Make a note of the chapter numbers and presentation dates that you sign up for below.
Reading analysis 3 chapters: ________________________  Presentation date: _______________
Reading analysis 4 chapters: ________________________  Presentation date: _______________
You will be presenting your analysis in class along with two to five of your classmates. The class will be counting on you to be on top of the chapters you are covering, so please be prepared!
This assignment is worth 30 points – to receive credit, you must participate in the presentation of your analysis. You will be graded primarily on your written analysis (breakdown of scoring below), but outstanding presentations will be rewarded.
Before you begin your work, examine the sample analysis on the back of this sheet. 
Read the chapters you will be analyzing carefully. If possible, read them twice. On your first reading, just try to identify the main idea(s) and get a feel for the writer’s approach and the flow of the piece. On your second reading, go over the text more carefully; notice how the writer constructs his argument. You will probably want to mark up your text and/or take notes.
To prepare your written analysis:
Identify the author’s name and the title of the article. Answer the following questions. Put your answers in outline form (see sample analysis on the reverse side of this sheet).
6.     What is the central claim (or thesis) of the selection? Your answer should be a complete sentence in your own words (not a quote!). Be as specific as possible, but remember that your claim should cover the whole article. (10 points)
7.     Is the central claim expressed explicitly or implicitly? The claim is explicit if the writer spells out what it is. The claim is implicit if the writer only implies the claim but does not state it outright. (1 point)
8.     What reasons link the evidence to the claim? In other words, why does the evidence support the claim? Reasons may be presented explicitly or implied. (7 points)
9.     What evidence does the writer present to support his or her claim? Specify and categorize the evidence (e.g. examples, personal experiences, analogy, authoritative opinion, facts, statistical data, cause-effect reasoning, results of scientific experiments, comparison, interviews, etc. – see sample on back). Do not answer this question with detailed quotes or paraphrases from the article! For additional guidance, see the table of Kinds of Evidence on pp. 91-4 of your textbook Writing Arguments. (7 points)
10.  Comment briefly on the persuasiveness of the article by answering one or more of the following questions.  (5 points)
·      Is the argument convincing? Does it rely on emotional, ethical, and/or logical appeals?
·      Are there flaws in the reasoning of the argument? Does it rely on questionable sources? 
·      Does understanding the argument require knowledge of the historical or cultural context in which it was written?
·      How do the style, organization, and/or tone contribute or detract from the persuasiveness of the argument?
·      What is your personal reaction to the story?