STEP 8 PURPOSE AND TONE P. 319 Mrs. Elizabeth Celeste Coiman-Lopez, BAT., MS. Houston Community College – Fall 2018.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
If I said … “What a great paper!” … what would you think?
Advertisements

READING NONFICTION Types and Purposes. WHAT IS NONFICTION? The subject of nonfiction is real The author writes about actual persons, places and events.
Determining the Author’s Purpose, Tone, Point of View, and Intended Audience Chapter 10.
READING NONFICTION Types and Purposes. WHAT IS NONFICTION? The subject of nonfiction is real The author writes about actual persons, places and events.
The Effective Reader (Updated Edition) by D.J. Henry
Purpose and Tone Uncovering the author’s attitude and motives in writing.
Fiction Verses Non-Fiction
8 Purpose and Tone.
PSSA REVIEW!!. Elements of Fiction CONFLICT The _________ in the story problem.
READING NONFICTION Types and Purposes. WHAT IS NONFICTION? The subject of nonfiction is real The author writes about actual persons, places and events.
NONFICTION UNIT Nonfiction: prose writing that presents and explains ideas or tells about real people, places, ideas, or events; must be true.
Maniac Magee Literary Elements.
Non-FictionNon-FictionNon-Fiction Lit. & Comp.- Introduction to Non-Fiction Non-Fiction.
Literary Terms (Part Four). Dialect Regional Speech.
Tone Tone is a reflection of a writer’s or speaker’s attitude toward a subject of a poem, story, or other literary work. Tone may be communicated through.
When the bell rings you should be writing silently in your journal. “Electric communication will never be a substitute for the face of someone who with.
NONFICTION UNIT Nonfiction – prose writing that presents and explains ideas or tells about real people, places, ideas, or events; must be true.
UNIT 4 ARE YOU SAFE? P. 65 FUTURE 5 Future English for Results 5 - Pearson /Longman Elizabeth Celeste Coiman-Lopez, BAT, MS Houston Community College,
UNIT 9 SAVING THE PLANET P. 165 FUTURE 5 Future English for Results 5 - Pearson /Longman Elizabeth Celeste Coiman-Lopez, BAT, MS Houston Community College,
CHAPTER TEN Becoming an Effective Reader PowerPoint by Mary Dubbé Thomas Nelson Community College PART ONE Tone and Purpose 10 Copyright © 2012 Pearson.
Elements of a Short story
READING NONFICTION Types and Purposes.
AUTHOR’S pURPOSE and Satire.
UNIT 8 HOW ARE YOU FEELING? P. 145 FUTURE 4
Using Rhetoric.
District Assessment #1 REVIEW!!
Vocabulary List 2.
READING NONFICTION Types and Purposes.
READING NONFICTION Types and Purposes.
The Effective Reader (Updated Edition) by D.J. Henry
Unit 1 Vocabulary.
NONFICTION UNIT Nonfiction – prose writing that presents and explains ideas or tells about real people, places, ideas, or events; must be true.
Author’s Purpose and Perspective
Tone and Mood Ms. Pierce 8th Grade LA 2014.
When something goes differently than expected.
Irony Isn’t it Ironic?.
VKR #1C.
SOAPSTONE English I.
You’re in for a surprise!
Author’s Purpose and Theme Vocabulary
how writers try to convince readers
Literary Nonfiction.
Nonfiction. . . in a nutshell.
How are these advertisements persuasive?
By Rachel Carson English II Literature Textbook pp
English 99.2 The Rhetorical Precis.
Uncovering the author’s attitude and motives in writing.
Purpose and Tone Tone is the emotion or mood of the author’s written voice. It is the author’s attitude toward the topic. Purpose is the reason the author.
Elizabeth Celeste Coiman-Lopez, BAT, MS. Houston Community College
Unit 2 - NARRATIVE ESSAYS
STEP 9 ARGUMENT p. 363 Mrs. Elizabeth Celeste Coiman-Lopez, BAT., MS.
STEP 4 IMPLIED MAIN IDEAS P. 141
Literary Terms English 1.
Informational/Explanatory Writing
STEP 7 – INFERENCES P. 273 Mrs. Elizabeth Celeste Coiman-Lopez, BAT., MS. Houston Community College – Fall 2018.
UNIT 4 CAUSE-EFFECT ESSAYS p. 90
STEP #3 Supporting Details
How are these advertisements persuasive?
Uncovering the author’s attitude and motives in writing.
BELL WORK NOTES Part 1: Subject The predominate topic
Determining the Author’s Purpose, Tone, Point of View, and Intended Audience Chapter 10.
Understanding each step
THERE ARE THREE TYPES…. DO YOU KNOW WHAT THEY ARE?
Author’s Purpose Reasons for Writing.
Determining the Author’s Purpose, Tone, Point of View, and Intended Audience Chapter 10.
Author's Purpose.
SOAPSTONE Mr. Jarot English I.
Unit 6 OTHER FORMS OF ACADEMIC WRITING p. 136
Nonfiction Author’s Purpose Terms & Definitions
The Master Reader Updated Edition by D. J. Henry
Presentation transcript:

STEP 8 PURPOSE AND TONE P. 319 Mrs. Elizabeth Celeste Coiman-Lopez, BAT., MS. Houston Community College – Fall 2018

DEFINITION - PURPOSE AND TONE P. 319 The writer writes from his personal point of view. THE PURPOSE: author’s reason for writing. to inform: give information, providing facts that will explain or teach something to the readers to persuade: convince the reader to agree with the author’s point of view, giving facts but arguing or proving a point to the readers. to entertain: amuse and delight, appealing to reader’s imagination using fiction or nonfiction. PRACTICE P. 321-324 THE TONE: expression of attitude and feeling (see cartoon) DEFINITION - PURPOSE AND TONE P. 319

DEFINITION - PURPOSE AND TONE P. 325 THE TONE: expression of attitude and feeling toward the subject. It is expressed through the words and details the writer selects. It is the writer’s voice It can project: anger, sympathy, hopefulness, sadness, respect, dislike, and so on. See examples PRACTICE 3 – 325 -328 REVIEW TESTS AND MASTERY TESTS P. 337-362 DEFINITION - PURPOSE AND TONE P. 325

IRONY: a common tone used by writers It says one thing, but it means something the opposite. It is used in conversations and writings Verbal irony is also called SARCASM. It also refers to situations in which what happens is the opposite of what we might expect. We would call it ironic. Irony is a useful tone for humor and can be used to imply exactly the opposite of what is said or what is done. See examples p. 329 PRACTICE 4-6 – 329 -335 A NOTE ON IRONY p. 329