The UNA University Writing Center Writing & Research Process Workshop Series Dr. Robert T. Koch Jr. Director, University Writing Center University of North.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Journal 9/20/11 Get new Table of Contents on back table & write todays Table of Contents. Write Homework. Journal: (at least 6 lines for journal checks)
Advertisements

Conducting Research Investigating Your Topic Copyright 2012, Lisa McNeilley.
ORGANIZATION OF ACADEMIC PAPER
MEL-Con Writing Strategy
The UNA University Writing Center Writing & Research Process Workshop Series Dr. Robert T. Koch Jr. Director, Center for Writing Excellence University.
HOW TO WRITE AN ACADEMIC PAPER
Essays Dr. Karen Petit This presentation explains how to avoid plagiarism by using correct documentation.
Writing.
Summary-Response Essay
Inquiry: How can anecdotes help establish a sound claim (thesis statement) in an introductory paragraph? JOURNAL “A thesis statement is the single, specific.
Strategies for Timed Writing
Writing Center Paraphrasing and Using Sources. Statement on Plagiarism Plagiarism (the intentional or unintentional theft of intellectual ideas), occurs.
English Skills, Chapter 18 by John Langan
Today we will: Talk about developing a thesis for your feeder 1.2; Continue our drafting workshop.
Constructing a Well-Crafted Academic Essay: Created by Catherine Kula Adjunct Composition Instructor University of Pittsburgh at Bradford.
Start with a topic that you are interested in studying further. This will help you to focus your research on particular aspects of the bigger picture.
Synthesizing Resources English 1301: Composition I David Glen Smith, Instructor.
The UNA University Writing Center Writing & Research Process Workshop Series Dr. Robert T. Koch Jr. Director, University Writing Center University of North.
Writing a Persuasive Essay
MECHANICS OF WRITING C.RAGHAVA RAO.
Writing Research Papers. Research papers are often required of students in high school and in higher education.
What you should be able to do upon successful completion of ENGL 101: Understand a writer’s thesis. Assess the validity of a writer’s central claims. Understand.
Accelerated 10 English 1. Read 2. Details 3. Topic – Significant to the Text 4. Return to the details. o Details are combined/interpreted to determine.
Questions to answer 1. What is a thesis? 2. What does supporting or substantiating your thesis mean? 3. When are thesis statements especially important?
Week 1: Find resources, Summarize, paraphrase, thesis, and outline Week 2: Research and Write, incorporate evidence and transitions (1/2 done) Week 3:
Response to Literature Essay Writing. Intro. Paragraph with thesis statement* Body Par. #1 Body Par. #2 Body Par. #3 Concluding Paragraph.
Writing a Book Review Danika Rockett University of Baltimore Summer 2009.
HU113: Technical Report Writing Prof. Dr. Abdelsamie Moet Fall 2012/13 Pharos University in Alexandria Faculty of Engineering Lecture 5: Preparation.
Academic Essays & Report Writing
1)Read through and mark-up text. 2)After you've finished editing the paper, tell the writer what you as a reader are finding in the text. Writer listens-
What Makes an Essay an Essay. Essay is defined as a short piece of composition written from a writer’s point of view that is most commonly linked to an.
Advanced English Writing
May 2009 Of Mice and Men Essay.
Peer Review of Essays Descriptive Outlines: Describing what each paragraph SAYS and what each sentence DOES.
DBQs What do I do?. Understand the Question Read the historical context carefully to understand what it’s all about. Read the DBQ question. In almost.
Several FACTS or REASONS are discussed rather than only one being REPEATED.
Summary-Response Essay Responding to Reading. Reading Critically Not about finding fault with author Rather engaging author in a discussion by asking.
Writing the Rhetorical Precis
Explicit Textual Evidence. When we read, we are often asked to __________ questions or __________ our ideas about the text.
Citing Textual Evidence
ENGLISH II SEPTEMBER 26, 2011 Turn in worksheet for “And of Clay Are We Created” now. No warm-up today. Right now, get out a piece of paper to take notes.
Critical ‘Need-to-Know’ Information PHASE 3 – SECONDARY RESEARCH REPORT.
Paraphrasing in the Body of Your Essay To incorporate material from sources into your essay, you paraphrase the source, or you quote the source.
Thesis Statement-Examples
 An article review is written for an audience who is knowledgeable in the subject matter instead of a general audience  When writing an article review,
CPE Reading Strategies Task I. Summarize 1 or more of the authors’ ideas on a given topic Draw a relationship between (compare) aspects of the readings.
Critical Analytical Response to Literature English 10-1.
Writing Exercise Try to write a short humor piece. It can be fictional or non-fictional. Essay by David Sedaris.
CM226 College Composition II Wednesday, February 24, Unit 9: Polishing the Final Paper Unit 9 Seminar David Becker Welcome to College Composition.
The UNA University Writing Center Writing & Research Process Workshop Series Dr. Robert T. Koch Jr. Director, Center for Writing Excellence University.
C CAUSAL ESSAY Step by step. Parts of a Thesis Topic: The main topic of your essay For this essay it is: College Technical school Military Other Claim:
Body Paragraphs - Unity Body paragraphs must be UNIFIED  All of the sentences must relate to a single subject which is stated in the TOPIC SENTENCE Topic.
Chapter 20 Asking Questions, Finding Sources. Characteristics of a Good Research Paper Poses an interesting question and significant problem Responds.
How to Write a Well Written Essay with Text Evidence.
+ PARCC Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers.
Writing Notes This information will be on the final examination in June.
Writing Lesson Building UNIFIED Body Paragraphs. Body Paragraphs - Unity Body paragraphs must be UNIFIED  All of the sentences must relate to a single.
In Concert: An Integrated Reading and Writing Approach by Kathleen T
RHS Writing Guide.
PURPOSE OF THE INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPH
How to transform my outline to an ‘A’wesome essay!!
From Bedford Handbook for College Writers Chapter 12
The Synthesis.
The Synthesis.
English B50 The Rhetorical Precis.
RHS Writing Guide.
Editing vs Proofreading
How to Write a Good Paragraph
Developing Academic Paragraphs
Paraphrasing, summarizing, and quoting correctly
Presentation transcript:

The UNA University Writing Center Writing & Research Process Workshop Series Dr. Robert T. Koch Jr. Director, University Writing Center University of North Alabama 3 March, 2008

● Understand the components of an academic paragraph ● Develop a strategy for writing academic paragraphs ● Use a checklist to identify the components of your paragraphs

An academic paragraph, particularly in business and most traditional research, includes the following characteristics: 1. A focusing sentence, claim, or argument driving the paragraph as either the opening (topic sentence) or closing (summarizing) sentence 2. Supporting evidence such as explanations, illustrations, and data, often taken from credible academic sources such as journals and book-length research studies 3. Clear and precise discussion that ties these explanations, illustrations, and data to both the focusing sentence and the overall thesis

This is often called the topic sentence of the essay. It explains what the paragraph is about, most often by making a single claim or statement. Most topic sentences are the first sentence of the paragraph. They transition from the content of the prior paragraph, establishing a relevant connection between the two ideas. A topic sentence may appear at the end of a paragraph only if a substantial connection to the prior paragraph has been established at the start of the current paragraph.

This is the proof from other academic sources used to support each topic sentence. Forms of this include Data, facts, and figures Charts, graphs, and tables Illustrations, anecdotes, and descriptions In all cases, proper summarizing, paraphrasing, or quoting using the appropriate style for in-text citation and documentation is expected.

Discussion involves the use of your own words and ideas to build connections between each item of support, between each item of support and the topic sentence, and between the topic sentence and the primary goal of the assignment (the purpose and/or thesis) Discussion explains a connection which the writer sees but which the reader might not see. Discussion must precede and follow each item of support evidence, which is the reason why two or more quotes cannot be stuck together back-to-back-to-back.

Identify the topic sentence or main idea of each paragraph (paragraphs only have one main idea). Using word processor software, type each of these in a list separate from the rest of your text, making sure each is a complete and focused thought. Under each sentence, indent and list the sources you intend to use as support – Note whether or not you will summarize, paraphrase, or quote them, and note the author and page where you found them. Find multiple types of support for each sentence. Under each type of source support, indent and describe how it connects to the evidence above and below it, and how it connects to the topic sentence.

Instead of asking how long a well developed paragraph should be, think of it in terms of cascading ideas: Do you have a clear topic sentence? Do you spend 2-3 sentences developing and discussing each component of that topic sentence in your own words and using your own arguments? Do you spend 3-4 sentences providing and discussing different types of support that have been properly documented for each of the 2-3 sentences that develop the topic sentence? If you start adding the sentences, you discover that a well developed paragraph is not very short.

In everything you write, clarity is essential. This means that what you write must be understood by the reader, who does not know exactly what you are thinking. Ideas must be spelled out completely and clearly, using accurate and correct words. Know your terms – use the glossary in your book, definitions at the ends of chapters, and the dictionary (online or print) to find accurate and correct meanings. Know the difference among signal phrase verbs in your in-text citations: An author who writes, states, says, suggests, argues, shows, illustrates, or proves does something different in each case – understand what the differences are!

For each paragraph in your draft, ask yourself the following questions and mark each part: Do I have a clear, focused topic sentence in each paragraph? Do I use multiple forms of support in each paragraph? Do I clearly discuss how each support item ties to the other support items and to the topic sentence?

1. What are the component parts of any paragraph? (3 points) 2. Name three strategies for developing academic paragraph support. (3 points) 3. Quoted, paraphrased, or summarized evidence is part of what paragraph component? (1 point) 4. Discussion develops relationships between what parts of the paragraph or essay? (3 points)

1. What are the component parts of any paragraph? (3 points) 1. Focusing Sentence (Topic sentence/Summarizing sentence) 2. Support (Evidence/Proof) 3. Discussion (Explanation/Analysis of Support)

2. Name four strategies for developing academic paragraphs. (4 points) Answers from any of the following: Data, facts, figures, charts, graphs, tables, illustrations, anecdotes, and descriptions 3. Quoted, paraphrased, or summarized evidence is part of what paragraph component? (1 point) Support

4. Discussion develops relationships between what parts of the paragraph or essay? (3 points) 1. Types of Support (Evidence/Proof) 2. Focusing Sentence (Topic sentence/Summarizing sentence) and Support (Evidence/Proof) 3. Paragraph Support/Focusing Sentence and Thesis (Main Point of Essay/Essay Purpose/ Goal of Paper)