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Academic Writing The Mechanics. Sentences  Must have a subject and a verb  and maybe an object  Who, what the subject is doing, to what  Pay attention.

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Presentation on theme: "Academic Writing The Mechanics. Sentences  Must have a subject and a verb  and maybe an object  Who, what the subject is doing, to what  Pay attention."— Presentation transcript:

1 Academic Writing The Mechanics

2 Sentences  Must have a subject and a verb  and maybe an object  Who, what the subject is doing, to what  Pay attention to the tense  Keep the main subject and verb close together  Create complex compound sentences  Use connecting words  And punctuation  Check for clarity  Do you have a long preamble at the start?  Makes it difficult for the reader to get the point  Are the subject and verb close enough together?  Makes it difficult for the reader to get the point

3 How to write a sentence  Start with the subject  What the sentence is about  E.g. Software Development Projects  Perhaps add a short introductory phrase  Keep subject and verb close  E.g  Software development projects frequently fail due to a lack of understanding of requirements by the project team.  OR  However, it is widely recognised that software development projects frequently fail due to a lack of understanding of requirements by the project team

4 Problems  Sentence Fragments  Incomplete, cannot stand alone  E.g.  Emphasising the fact that software development is difficult.  Corrected  The consistent level of software project failure as reported in the Standish Chaos reports emphasises the fact that software development is difficult.

5 Punctuation - Comma  Separate items in a list  Software development consists of the phases analysis, design, implementation, testing and maintenance.  To mark a phrase at the start or end of a sentence  However, …  To mark a phrase in the middle of sentence  The number of software development projects considered to be failures, as identified in the Standish Chaos reports, has remained largely consistent for the last five years.  First part, non-essential part, second part  To join main clauses  The waterfall model is still widely quoted as a model of software development, but it is recognised as being unrealistic.  To introduce a quote  As Boehm states, “  Beware of the ‘comma splice’  Joining two sentences with a comma

6 Incorrect?  Business analytics has been identified as one of the top ten technologies in the last few years, typically it is in the top five.  This proves that sequential software development processes do not reflect the reality, detailed surveys of project teams will support this.

7 Punctuation – Colon  Use after a statement to introduce explanation, clarity, illustration or reinforcement of that statement  Initial Statement : Second Statement  Can be used to introduce a quote

8 Punctuation – Semi-Colon  Join two sentences closely related in meaning  To replace words like ‘and’, ‘so’, ‘but’…  To replace words like ‘however’, ‘moreover’, ‘further’ in the middle of sentences  To separate items in a list if commas are already used  Key researchers in the field of software development are Barry Boehm, creator of the Spiral model; the main developer of the RAD methodology, James Martin; and Kent Beck, creator of the XP methodology.

9 Punctuation – Apostrophe  Indicate possession  Comes directly after the affected owner  David’s…  The student’s …  The students’…  It’s = ‘it is’ or ‘it has’  Its – belongs to it  Generally do not use contractions  Can’t, don’t, won’t etc

10 Paragraph  A collection of related sentences dealing with a single topic.  Use to decompose your narrative  Break it into chunks  Present ideas coherently  Each paragraph  Should have a clear central point  Focus on one topic  Contain only relevant information  If you feel your paragraph addresses more than one topic  Introduce another paragraph

11 Useful Resources  Grammar Basics  http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/section/1/5/ http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/section/1/5/  Establishing Arguments  http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/588/01/ http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/588/01/  Writing Concisely  http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/572/01/ http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/572/01/  Sound Alike Words  http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/660/01/ http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/660/01/  Useful Phrases  http://www.englishforresearch.com/phrasebooks/examples.htm http://www.englishforresearch.com/phrasebooks/examples.htm


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