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Prewriting: all the thinking, planning and organizing you do before you actually start writing. Writers Notebook: keeping a separate notebook or folder.

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Presentation on theme: "Prewriting: all the thinking, planning and organizing you do before you actually start writing. Writers Notebook: keeping a separate notebook or folder."— Presentation transcript:

1 Prewriting: all the thinking, planning and organizing you do before you actually start writing. Writers Notebook: keeping a separate notebook or folder in which you jot down experiences and thoughts about anything that interests you. Brainstorming: Focus on a single word, and list everything that pops into your head. Freewriting: Nonstop writing Clustering/Mapping/Webbing: a cluster diagram to explore a topic to break a large topic into smaller parts, or to gather details.

2 5-W and How? Who? What? When? Where? Why? How? For some topics, not every questions will apply; for others topics you may think of several questions beginning with the same word.

3 Chose two of the five broad, general topics below. For each topic, suggests three limited topics that you could cover in a three page paper. 1.Horses2. Television3. Art 4. Earthquakes5. Baseball For one of the limited topics you identified in Exercise 3, use brainstorming, clustering, and/or the 5-W and How? Questions to gather details about that topic. Turn in for a grade when finished.

4 Section 1.2

5 Outline- a writing plan consisting of the most important points. which main ideas and details to include in support of your topic. What order to present them in. Style- the manner in which you express your ideas. Audience-person you or persons who will read what you write. Purpose- to describe, inform, tell a story, persuade, entertain, or a combination of these..

6 Write two or more paragraphs suing the prewriting notes you made for a limited topic you chose last class. First decide the Audience and purpose. Then make an outline. When you have finished start the drafting strategies suggested in this lesson. I will hand back your papers you turned in last class. Must turn both in at the end of class for a grade.

7 Section 1.3

8 # Add a space

9 Comma Rules Rule 1. Use commas to separate words and word groups in a simple series of three or more items. Example: My estate goes to my husband, son, daughter-in-law, and nephew. Note: When the last comma in a series comes before and or or (after daughter-in-law in the above example), it is known as the Oxford comma. Most newspapers and magazines drop the Oxford comma in a simple series, apparently feeling it's unnecessary. However, omission of the Oxford comma can sometimes lead to misunderstandings. Example: We had coffee, cheese and crackers and grapes. Adding a comma after crackers makes it clear that cheese and crackers represents one dish. In cases like this, clarity demands the Oxford comma. We had coffee, cheese and crackers, and grapes. Fiction and nonfiction books generally prefer the Oxford comma. Writers must decide Oxford or no Oxford and not switch back and forth, except when omitting the Oxford comma could cause confusion as in the cheese and crackers example.

10 Rule 2. Use a comma to separate two adjectives when the adjectives are interchangeable. Example: He is a strong, healthy man. We could also say healthy, strong man. Example: We stayed at an expensive summer resort. We would not say summer expensive resort, so no comma.

11 Rule 3a. Many inexperienced writers run two independent clauses together by using a comma instead of a period. This results in the dreaded run-on sentence or, more technically, a comma splice. Incorrect: He walked all the way home, he shut the door. There are several simple remedies: Correct: He walked all the way home. He shut the door. Correct: After he walked all the way home, he shut the door. Correct: He walked all the way home, and he shut the door. Rule 3b. In sentences where two independent clauses are joined by connectors such as and, or, but, etc., put a comma at the end of the first clause. Incorrect: He walked all the way home and he shut the door. Correct: He walked all the way home, and he shut the door. Some writers omit the comma if the clauses are both quite short: Example: I paint and he writes.

12 Rule 4. Use a comma after certain words that introduce a sentence, such as well, yes, why, hello, hey, etc. Examples: Why, I can't believe this! No, you can't have a dollar

13 Rule 5. Use commas to set off the name, nickname, term of endearment, or title of a person directly addressed. Examples: Will you, Aisha, do that assignment for me? Yes, old friend, I will. Good day, Captain.

14 Rule 6. Use a comma to separate the day of the month from the year, and—what most people forget!—always put one after the year, also. Example: It was in the Sun's June 5, 2003, edition. No comma is necessary for just the month and year. Example: It was in a June 2003 article.

15 Rule 7. Use a comma to separate a city from its state, and remember to put one after the state, also. Example: I'm from the Akron, Ohio, area.

16 Song Titles in “Quotes” Song titles are always surrounded by quotation marks, like *NSYNC’s “Bye Bye Bye,” or “A Whole New World” from Disney’s Aladdin. Hyphen In Compound Numbers When writing a compound number – any number made up of two words – we use a hyphen in between them. This applies to any number between 21 and 99. Numbers higher than ninety-nine don’t require a hyphen. Forty-four Twenty-seven Fifty-six bottles of pop on the wall, fifty-six bottles of pop….


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