Contents
- Page ID
- 224263
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- About This Book
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1: The Introduction
- 1.1 College Writing
- 1.2 Things to Know
- 1.3 Resources to Use
- Chapter 2: Reading in Writing Class
- 2.1 Why We Read
- 2.2 How to Read Effectively
- 2.3 How to Read Rhetorically
- 2.4 Responding to Texts
- Chapter 3: The Writing Process, Composing, and Revising
- 3.1 The Writing Process
- 3.2 Knowing Your Audience
- 3.3 Understanding the Writing Assignment
- 3.4 Creating the Thesis
- 3.5 Revising Your Draft(s)
- 3.6 Peer Review and Responding to Others’ Drafts
- 3.7 Proof-Reading and Editing Your Final Draft
- 3.8 Grammar Overview
- Deeper Reading: “What Is Academic Writing?”
- Chapter 4: Structuring, Paragraphing, and Styling
- 4.1 Basic Essay Structure
- 4.2 Body Paragraphs: An Overview
- 4.3 Topic Sentences
- 4.4 Supporting Evidence
- 4.5 Explaining Evidence
- 4.6 Breaking, Combining, or Beginning New Paragraphs
- 4.7 Transitions: Developing Relationships between Ideas
- 4.8 Tone, Voice, and Point of View
- 4.9 A review of the five-paragraph essay
- 4.10 Moving Beyond the five-paragraph format
- Deeper Reading: “I Need You to Say I”
- Chapter 5: Writing a Summary and Synthesizing
- 5.1 Writing Summaries
- 5.2 Synthesizing in Your Writing
- 5.3 Make Connections When Synthesizing in Your Writing
- 5.4 Informative vs. Argumentative Synthesis
- 5.5 Synthesis and Literature Reviews
- 5.6 Synthesis in Practice
- Chapter 6: Thinking and Analyzing Rhetorically
- 6.1 What is Rhetoric?
- 6.2 What is the Rhetorical Situation?
- 6.3 What is Rhetorical Analysis?
- 6.4 Rhetorical Appeals: Logos, Pathos, and Ethos Defined
- 6.5 Logical Fallacies
- 6.6 What is self analysis?
- 6.7 What is Critical Analysis
- What is critical analysis?
- How can I do critical analysis?
- Questions to help the writer detail the basics for studying communication in one asynchronous online course
- Questions to help the writer find clusters, patterns, and coordination while studying communication in one asynchronous online course
- A deeper look at coordination
- Questions to help the writer perform analysis with intersectional lenses while studying communication in one asynchronous online course
- Questions to help the writer perform analysis on what could be added?
- Works Cited
- Chapter 7: Multimodality and Non-Traditional Texts
- 7.1 Reading Traditional and New Media
- 7.2 What is Multimodality?
- 7.3 Digital Composition and Multimodal Texts
- Chapter 8: Making Academic Arguments
- 8.1 Arguing
- 8.2 Basic Structure and Content of Argument
- 8.3 Types of Evidence in Academic Arguments
- 8.4 Counterargument and Response
- 8.5 Failures in Evidence: When Even “Lots of Quotes” Can’t Save an Paper
- Deeper Reading: Counterargument – “On the Other Hand: The Role of Antithetical Writing in First Year Composition Courses”
- Chapter 9: The Research Process
- 9.1 Developing a Research Question
- 9.2 Coming Up With Research Strategies
- 9.3 Basic Guidelines for Research in Academic Databases 9.3 Basic Guidelines for Research in Academic Databases
- 9.4 Using Effective Keywords in your Research
- 9.5 Keeping Track of Your Sources and Writing an Annotated Bibliography
- Chapter 10: Sources and Research
- 10.1 Types of Sources: Primary, Secondary, Tertiary
- 10.2 Reading Popular Sources
- 10.3 Reading Academic Sources
- 10.4 A Deeper Look at Scholarly Sources
- 10.5 Conducting Your Own Primary Research
- Deeper Reading: “Reading Games: Strategies for Reading Scholarly Sources”
- Chapter 11: Ethical Source Integration: Citation, Quoting, and Paraphrasing
- 11.1 Using Sources Ethically
- 11.2 Quoting
- 11.3 Paraphrasing and Summarizing
- 11.4 Signal Phrases
- 11.5 Plagiarism Policy
- Chapter 12: Documentation Styles: MLA and APA
- 12.1 Formatting Your Paper in MLA
- 12.2 MLA Citation: In-text Citations
- Example of Basic Citation
- How to cite a source the first time you mention it
- Example of citing with a successive mention
- Example of citing when no signal phrase is used
- Citing print sources with no author
- Citing online articles with authors
- Examples of citing online articles with no named author
- Examples of citations for multiple authors
- 12.3 MLA Citation: Works Cited Entries
- 12.4 MLA Citation: Final Notes
- 12.5 Formatting Your Paper in APA
- 12.6 APA Citations: In-Text Citations
- 12.7 APA Citations: References
- Chapter 13 Additional Readings and Resources
- 13.1 Writing Spaces
- Appendix
- Appendix A: Troubleshooting: Body Paragraph Development
- Appendix B: Additional Synthesis Examples Synthesis Examples
- Works Cited