Unit 5 Seminar Academic. Grammar The role of grammar in our class and in college Writing center Grammar websites Grammar books (The Elements of Style)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Fragments and Run-ons There will be a link to this PP on my website so you can use it to study. The grammar quiz will be on Wednesday even if Tuesday is.
Advertisements

Revising your ICE Essay Tips to avoid Fragments & Run- On Sentences.
Foundations of Writing
Unit 5 Seminar Aubrey Freeman CM107 Turning a Topic into a Thesis.
Writing Workshop Run-On Sentences.
Grammar Workshop Fragments & Run-ons.
Fragments, Run-Ons, & Comma Splices
COMMON SENTENCE ERRORS
Fragments, Run-Ons, & Comma Splices Grammar Unit 3.
Unit 1 Jeopardy SubjectsVerbsFragmentsRun-Ons
Top 10 Grammar Mistakes to Avoid Mistake #1: Mistake #1: Not using Standard edited English and a professional tone We don’t always use correct grammar.
The Essay Revising and Editing. Writing the Essay Writing a First Draft Revision Editing.
Grammar Concept #1. Basics: Complete Sentences  Must have a subject (the who or what of a sentence)  Must have a predicate (what the who or what does.
Proofreading & Revising
Essay Improvements.
September 3, 2015 Thoughtful Thursday
Grammar:Fragments and Run-ons. Fragments A fragment is an incomplete sentence that lacks a subject, a verb, or both. A fragment does not express a complete.
CM 107: Unit 5 Seminar Christine Danelski, Ph.D. Overcoming Obstacles: Facing Fears and Being Enough & Turning a Topic into a Thesis.
Fragments, Run-ons and Comma Splices Or: What drove us crazy while grading your papers.
Tosspon Engl 155 Due today: Outline (turn in at the end of class) Agenda 1.Run-On sentences - Review Sentence/Fragment/Run on 2.Begin writing paper – Using.
Sentence Struture Revision Review. What Does Sentence Structure Mean? Sentence structure refers to what is included in the group of words that you deem.
Complete Sentences, Fragments, and Run-on Sentences Recognize incomplete sentences and run-on sentences and edit appropriately. SPI
Welcome to CM107 Unit 5 Seminar!. Unit 5 agenda Our seminar will focus on:  Discussing expository writing  Reviewing and discussing thesis statements.
Sentence Boundaries & Clauses Ways to Fix Fragments, Run-ons, and Comma Splices.
Unit 5 Seminar Turning a Topic into a Thesis. Use strategies to overcome writing obstacles. Evaluate point of view. Apply real-life techniques to writing.
U2 – KU121.  A complete sentence has three characteristics: ◦ First, it begins with a capital letter. ◦ In addition, it includes an end mark—either a.
Avoiding Run-ons Many students think a run-on sentence is a sentence that is particularly long, or “runs on and on,” like this one:
Run-ons and Comma Splices
Chapter Two: Sentence Problems, Run-ons and Fragments The exercises in Chapter Two are based on the Going for the Look module.
Correcting Sentence Fragments and Run-On Sentences.
Fragments vs. Run-On Sentences Claire Brownstone.
Fragments and Run- Ons In order to understand, you must know some definitions first.
The Writing Process Basic Sentence Structure Complete Sentences Types of Sentences Fragments Run-Ons Paragraphs Elements of a Paragraph Outlining.
Most Common Mistakes Made. Fragments are incomplete sentences. In some, fragments are disconnected from the main clause because of an unnecessary period.
Sentence Structure How to create complete sentences and avoid the run-on sentence.
Run-Together Sentences How to Identify and Fix. Run-Together Sentences Run-together sentences occur when two sentences are joined with no punctuation.
Avoiding Run-ons Many students think a run-on sentence is a sentence that is particularly long, or “runs on and on,” like this one:
SLIDES WITH THIS GRAPHIC ARE SLIDES THAT YOU HAVE TO WRITE.
“The pen is the tongue of the mind.”
S TEP 5 - E DITING The next stage in the writing process is called “editing”. The purpose of editing is to apply the standards of written English to your.
Building Sentences. Why does grammar matter? I saw a teacher who cares. I saw a teacher. Who cares? Abraham Lincoln wrote the Gettysburg address while.
Run-ons/Comma Splices Correcting serious sentence errors.
How to Fix Problem Sentences Fragments Run-ons Comma Splices.
Take notes! I don’t want to see any of these errors in future writing assignments.
Haosen Wang 5/26/2016 ELA IV. A complete sentence is not merely a group of words with a capital letter at the beginning and a period or question mark.
SENTENCES, RUN-ONS, AND FRAGMENTS A sentence has a subject and a verb and makes a complete thought. Another name for a sentence is an independent clause.
Four Types of Sentences
Writing Complex Sentences
INRW 0420 Defining, Recognizing, and Revising
Sentence Fragments and Run-Ons
Fragments, Comma Splices, Run-Ons
Writing Complex Sentences
Let’s learn about … COMMA SPLICES & RUN-ON SENTENCES
Writing Complex Sentences
Fragments, Comma Splices, Run-Ons
Fragments, Run-ons, and Complete Sentences
simple, complex, compound, and compound-complex sentences
Writing Complex Sentences
English B50 Grammar Review #1.
Clauses Listen closely or we won't play kahoot..
Fragments, Run Ons, and Comma Splices
Fragments, Run Ons, and Comma Splices
Writing Complex Sentences
Sentence Fragments & Run-Ons
Run-ons and fragments are terrible, they make sentences confusing
Writing Complex Sentences
Writing Complex Sentences
Writing Complex Sentences
The Four Types of Sentences
Writing Complex Sentences
Presentation transcript:

Unit 5 Seminar Academic

Grammar The role of grammar in our class and in college Writing center Grammar websites Grammar books (The Elements of Style) Write out all of your work in Microsoft Word so you can use spell check and grammar check Cut and paste (shortcut)

The #1 grammar mistake: Run-ons and comma splices These are basically the same thing. This is where you have joined two (or more) sentences together improperly. What two things do you need to have a complete sentence? Clause Independent clause Dependent clause

Examples Complete simple sentence (independent clause): “She walks.” Dependent clause (fragment): “When she walks.” Run-on: “She walks to the store she buys milk.” Comma splice: “She walks to the store, she buys milk.”

4 ways to fix these mistakes Make it two separate sentences: “She walks to the store. She buys milk.” Put a semi-colon between the clauses: “She walks to the store; she buys milk.” Connect with a coordinating conjunction (and, or, but, for, nor, so yet): “She walks to the store, and she buys milk.” Connect by adding a subordinating conjunction to one clause to make it dependent on the other clause: “When she walks to the store, she buys milk.”

Grammar mistake #2 -- fragments Again, you need two parts to have a complete sentence – a subject and verb. To create a fragment, you could be missing a subject or verb, or add in another word that makes it an incomplete thought (such as adding a conjunction without anything to join it to).

Fragment examples The giant red barn across the street from my grandfather’s house. (missing a verb) Running all the way to the store late at night with all my friends around me. (missing a subject) While I talked to me friend on the phone. (has a subordinating conjunction – “while” – to start the phrase, and no independent clause to attach to)

Fixing fragments Each sentence must represent a complete thought. If not, it needs fixing. A long phrase doesn’t necessarily equal a sentence. Add a missing subject, missing verb, or connect to a sentence around it.

Academic writing standards Keep it formal – no slang, no contractions (I’m = I am can’t = cannot they’re = they are) Standard American grammar Check out example papers/projects to see how an assignment should be formatted (the “look”) – generally always double-spaced, 12-point font (Times New Roman is often required) Be careful not to “text” in papers or in any college work (watch capitalization, don’t abbreviate)

Purpose, audience, tone, point of view No first-person perspective (no “I” or “me”). No personal information as evidence (this depends on the assignment) Since your name is on it, never a need to write “I believe,” “I think,” or “in my opinion.” No second person (“you”) – can be replaced with “one” or “someone,” or maybe “people.” No religious texts as evidence Must sound like a textbook, not a conversation What is your goal? Why should someone read this? What is the point? What can you offer that is new for your reader, that they don’t already hear all the time?

Why write a paper/ research paper? Academia is a like a giant conversation Research influences more research Your purpose is closely tied to everything – the mode you choose (or that the assignment gives you), the research chosen, and the thesis (main idea)

What is expository writing? Expository refers to writing that explains and clarifies an idea. You come across examples of expository writing every day: oMagazine articles oNewspaper articles o s and memos oInstruction manuals

What is expository writing? Academic assignments and essays often fall under the category of expository writing. Hallmarks of expository writing: oPrecisely-worded oFocused around a central idea oLogically sound (uses adequate support)