Title: Exposition Cause-and-Effect Essay
1ExpositionCause-and-Effect Essay
- adapted from Writing and Grammar Communication
in Action, Prentice-Hall, Publishers, 2001
2Cause-and-Effect Relationships in Everyday Life
- Identifying causes and effects is a part of daily
life. - Giving advice to a friend based on the effects
you predict, fireproofing a potential fire
hazard, and arguing about the best way to solve a
problemall these activities show an awareness of
cause-and-effect relationships.
3Cause-and-Effect Relationships in Everyday Life
(2)
- Cause-and-effect relationships are also explored
in writing. - Feature articles in your daily newspaper often
describe causes and effects related to politics,
crime, or the environment. - History textbooks are primarily focused on causes
and effects, as well. - Even something as common as a recipe may describe
a cause-and-effect process.
4What is a Cause-and-Effect Essay?
- Exposition is writing that informs or explains.
- A cause-and-effect essay is a piece of exposition
that describes the relationship between an event
or circumstance and its causes.
5Ingredients in the Cause-and-Effect Essay
- Good cause-and-effect essays contain
- A clearly stated topic that explains what
cause-and-effect relationships will be explored. - An effective and logical method of organization
- Details and examples that elaborate upon the
writers statements - Transitions that smoothly and clearly connect the
writers ideas
6Types of Cause-and-Effect Essays
- Cause-and-effect relationships are explored in
many types of writing, including the ones listed
below - Historical articles explain how events in history
contributed to or resulted in other events - Process explanations take readers step by step
through a process, such as a math formula or a
scientific technique. - Predictions make educated guesses about future
events based on knowledge of cause-and-effect
relationships
7PrewritingChoosing Your Topic
- Choose a topic for your cause-and-effect essay
that you find interesting and that centers around
a cause-and-effect relationship. - Use the following strategies for choosing a topic
8Choosing Your Topic
- Sketch a SceneDraw a scene from the world of
nature. Review your sketch to find interesting
details that make a good writing topic. - For example, you might draw a field of dandelions
and clover that has a pond in the middle of it. - You might then decide to write about the effects
of last years drought on local flowers and crops.
9Choosing Your Topic (2)
- Make a ListList interesting events or scientific
phenomena. - After five minutes, circle the one you find most
interesting. - Then, write for another five minutes, lisitng any
causes and effects that spring to mind when you
think of that topic. - Review what you wrote, and develop your topic
into a cause-and-effect essay. - If you find that your topic doesnt have a strong
enough cause-and-effect relationship, continue
the listing process until you find one that does.
10Choosing Your Topic (3)
- Scan a NewspaperScan a newspaper, looking for
topics that you can link to causes or effects. - Keep a list of the possible topics as you come
across them. - Then, review your list, and choose a topic the
item you find most interesting.
11Topic Bank
- If you are having difficulty finding a specific
topic for your cause-and-effect essay, use the
following ideas - Influences of the Blues on Popular MusicWrite an
essay that reveals how blues instruments, blues
singers, and recurring themes in blues songs
affect music today.
12Topic Bank (2)
- Causes of Changes in Rain ForestsIn a
cause-and-effect essay, explore the various
factors that have led to the rain forests
acreage being decreased. - You can find information about deforestation in
current periodicals available at the library.
13Topic Bank (3)
- Responding to Fine ArtFind a picture such as
Rolling Power (see next slide) that depicts a
close-up view of the workings of a locomotive
(see http//www.smith.edu/artmuseum/exhibitions/sp
ectrum/edsheelerfull.htm) explaining how steam
engines propel locomotives. - As an alternative, explore the cause-and-effect
relationship between the development of the
railroad and patterns of settlement westward
across the United States.
14Rolling Steel
15Topics Bank (4)
- Responding to LiteratureRead a story such as
The Dog That Bit People by James Thurber. - In an essay, explain how Thurber exaggerates
cause-and-effect relationships to create humor - Your teacher can help you find this or similar
stories to write about.
16Cooperative Writing
- History or Science DisplayWork with a group to
plan a cause-and-effect display for the
classroom. - Choose a significant moment in history or
science. - Then, divide into two sub-groups, with one group
making a timeline that traces the causes leading
up to that significant moment and the other group
making a timeline showing effects. - Share your work with the class.
17Narrowing Your Topic
- Once you have a general idea for a topic, work
with the material until it is narrow enough to
cover effectively within the scope of your essay. - Cubing is one narrowing technique that you can
use.
18Use the Cubing Technique
- Cubing lets you focus on details by helping you
identify six perspectives or aspects of your
topic. - Answer the six questions, and decide to focus
your essay on one or two of the perspectives or
aspects your explored.
196 Questions
- Describe ItHow would you describe your topic to
someone who is unfamiliar with it? - Associate ItWhat other situations or events does
your topic bring to mind? - Apply ItWhy is your topic important? Why is it
useful to explore? - Analyze ItWhere is it? When did it happen? Why
might it happen again? Can anything stop it from
happening? - Compare or Contrast ItHow does your topic
compare and contrast with similar topics? - Argue for or Against ItWhat are the positive and
negative effects of your topic?
20The Cube
Describe It
Apply It
Analyze It
Compare or Contrast It
Analyze It
21Considering Your Audience and Purpose
- Before you gather details, identify your audience
and your purpose. - Your audience and purpose will affect your word
choice, the details you include, and the way in
which you present those details. - For help identifying the types of details and
style of language that will be most effective,
devise a plan like the one that appears on the
next slide
22Audience and Purpose Planner
Audience
School Board To explain effects of decreased
music funding Facts and statistics
cause-and-effect chart examples Formal word
choice vivid persuasive language tone of respect
Purpose
Details
Style of Language
23Gathering Details
- Before you draft, collect and organize details
for your cause-and-effect essay. - Following are two methods for collecting and
organizing details
24Collect Note Cards
- When you research a topic, its important to keep
note cards for each cause-and-effect idea and its
source. - Before you begin to draft your essay, collect
note cards from a least three or four sources
either at home or at the library. - On each note card, record the quotation or the
idea you want to include in your report. - Mark the note card with a number that identifies
its source and the page number(s) on which the
information can be found. - As an alternative, photocopy source pages and
highlight the information you use.
25Chart Causes and Effects
- On a sheet of paper, write the effect, or event,
that is your subject. - Then, use arrows and boxes to show events or
conditions that are caused by or result from your
topic. - If one event has several different effects, use a
separate arrow to point to each.
26DraftingShaping your Writing
- Now that you have gathered details on your topic,
shape the structure of your essay. - Choose a logical method of organization for your
cause-and-effect essay. - Following are two such methods
27Chronological Organization
- Chronological, or time, organization is a logical
choice for structuring a cause-and-effect essay. - You can start either with the effect and go back
through its causes one at a time, in
chronological order, or you can start with the
cause and proceed to describe its effects in time
order.
28Effects Organized Chronologically
- After the Titanic sank, new marine regulations
were put into effect. The tragedy of the Titanic
caused mariners to firm up regulations about
radio contact and lifeboats. Marine regulations
instituted after the Titanic included these
mandates constant radio contact between vessels
and sufficient lifeboats to hold all passengers. - Photo http//cacella.tachyonweb.net/Titanic_i.ht
m
29Order-of-Importance Organization
- Order-of-Importance organization allows you to
build an argument or to present various causes or
effects in the order of their relative
importance. - You can either begin with the most important
detail and end with the least important detail or
reverse it, beginning with the least important
detail and ending with the most important detail.
30Effects Organized in Order of Importance
- The Titanics voyage proved to be a disaster
because of many causes. Chief among them was the
failure of the crew to navigate around the
iceberg. The resulting damage to the ships hull
made its sinking inevitable. . . . - Another contributing cause was the lack of
adequate lifeboats and safety instruction.
Because the Titanic was unsinkable, the company
that made the ship did not provide enough safety
equipment to ensure the safety of passengers and
crew. - The weather conditions certainly did not help. .
. .
31Providing Elaboration
- Elaborate as you draft to add depth and detail to
your cause-and-effect essay. - Types of elaboration include examples,
statistics, quotations, and other types of
details that support your ideas. - Use the following strategy to help you elaborate
32SEE Technique for Elaboration
- Use the SEE technique to layer, or give depth, to
your writing as you draft. - First, write a basic statement about your topic.
- Next, write a sentence that extends that
statement. - Finally, write a sentence that elaborates on the
extension.
33SEE Technique
- STATEMENT
- State the main idea of the paragraph.
- Exercise is beneficial to your health.
- EXTENSION
- Restate the idea.
- People who exercise regularly live longer, fuller
lives. - ELABORATION
- Add information that further explains or defines
the main idea. - For example, a person who works out for twenty
minutes three times a week is often in far better
shape than a person who has no regular routine.
34Revising Your Overall Structure
- As you look at the structure of your essay, make
sure that the ideas youve presented appear in
logical order and are clearly connected to each
other. - Strengthen Your Introduction and Conclusion
- In your introduction, clearly present the main
idea of your cause-and-effect essay. - You may also mention reasons for your choice of
topic and give readers an idea about why it is
interesting or important.
35Revision Strategy Circling to Identify
Relationships
- To make sure that your introduction and
conclusion match up, circle the main idea you
present in your introduction. - Then, find and circle in your conclusion a
restatement of that main idea. - If your conclusion does not contain such a
restatement, either rewrite your introduction or
rewrite your conclusion so that they work
together effectively.
36Revising Your Paragraphs
- Review your paragraphs to be sure that each
develops a single idea and that the paragraphs
themselves flow together smoothly. - Check to be sure that topical paragraphsthose
that contain a topic sentenceare unified.
37Strengthen the Unity of Paragraphs
- Revise your topical paragraphs to make them
unifiedto make sure that each has a topic
sentence - and that the other sentences within the paragraph
support or develop the main idea expressed in the
topic sentence.
38Revision Strategy color-Coding to Identify
Related Details
- Circle each topic sentence in every topical
paragraph. - (Functional paragraphsthose that perform a
specific functiondo not have topic sentences.) - Then, using a pencil of a different color, circle
the details that support the topic sentence. - Examine sentences you have not circled. If they
do not support the topic sentence, either rewrite
or delete them.
39Revising Your Sentences
- Now that your paragraphs are unified, look even
more closely at your writing. - Within each sentence, check to see that the
relationships are logical. - Make sure that the connections among words,
phrases, and clauses are clear. - Read each sentence carefully. If there is more
than one thought within a sentence, you may have
to add a transition to show how those thoughts
are related. - Some transitions indicate meaning or clarify the
significance of a detail. - For example, the phrase not only indicates that a
detail is just one of many.
40Grammar in Your WritingTransitional Phrases
- A phrase is a group of words without a subject
and verb. - In your cause-and-effect essay, use transitional
phrases to show connections between ideas. - A phrase may appear at the beginning of the
sentence, between the subject and the verb, or at
the end of a sentence
41Transitional Phrases
- Beginning
- After lunch, we worked enthusiastically.
- Between the Subject and Verb
- We, after eating lunch, worked enthusiastically.
- End
- We worked enthusiastically after eating lunch.
42Types of Transitional Phrases
- There are many types of phrases that you can use
as transitions, connecting ideas in your writing - A prepositional phrase is a group of words made
up of a preposition and a noun or pronoun, called
the object of the preposition. - Inside the studio, the sound engineers began
mixing the demo
43Types of Transitional Phrases
- A participial phrase is a participle modified by
an adverb or adverb phrase or accompanied by a
complement. - The entire phrase acts as an adjective
- Using a high-powered lens, Annette could just
make out the letters.
44Types of Transitional Phrases
- An infinitive phrase is an infinitive with
modifiers, complements, or a subject, all acting
together as a single part of speech - To avoid the iceberg, the captain had to steer
hard to starboard. - Review your draft to identify where you have used
phrases to show transitions. - If you cannot identify six phrases, challenge
yourself to add at least one more to your
writing. - Notice the improvement.
45Revising Your Word Choice
- If you use the same word or form of it several
times within a passage, your writing can sound
tedious and awkward. - Learn to distinguish between useful repetition
and careless repetition. - Useful repetition helps to emphasize a point or
to make a passage memorable. - Careless repetition creates a dull impression on
the reader.
46Review Your Word Choice
- USEFUL REPETITION
- In the 1920s, people flocked to theaters to see
plays in the 1930s, the flocked to theaters to
see movies. - CARELESS REPETITION
- Because I have always loved the theater, Im
studying theater and theater arts in school.
47Revision Strategy
- Underlining Repeated Words and Forms of Words
- Read through your draft, and underline repeated
words or forms of words. - Then, review your draft.
- If passages containing repetition are not
intended, replace some of the repeated words with
synonyms, words with the same meanings.
48Repeated Words and Forms of Words
- OVERUSED WORD
- They housed the furniture for the house in a shed
out back. - VARIED WORDS
- The stored the furniture for the house in a shed
out back. - OVERUSED WORD
- We tried to locate a better location for our
party. - VARIED WORDS
- We tried to find a better location for our party.
49Peer ReviewSay Back
- Work with a small group of peers to get feedback
on your writing. - Read your paper aloud to your peer editors twice.
- Have peers jot down two positive comments and
three constructive comments for improvement. - One by one, have your peers read aloud their
comments to you. - Take their comments into consideration as you
prepare your final draft.
50Editing and Proofreading
- Reread your cause-and-effect essay carefully,
correcting any mistakes you find in spelling,
punctuation, and grammar. - Double-check statistics or other details you
present as fact. - Proofread your essay carefully.
- Make sure youve correctly used the following
commonly confused words since, because, then,
and than.
51Using Since, Because, Then, and Than
- As you proofread, make sure that you have used
these words appropriately. - If you have not used any of those words,
challenge yourself to add them to make clear
connections between your ideas.
Use since only to refer to a previous time. Do
not Use since to mean because.
Use because to mean for the reason that.
Use then to refer to a previous time.
Use than in comparisons between people, places,
ideas, and events
52Publishing and Presenting
- When you are finished writing your
cause-and-effect essay, share it with others. - Following are some ideas for sharing your
writing
53Building Your Portfolio
- Presentation Use your essay as the basis of a
cause-and-effect presentation. - Use photographs, charts, and diagrams as you
explain the topic of your essay. - Save the essay and visuals in your portfolio.
- E-mail Share your essay electronically.
- Type the essay using word-processing software.
- Then, attach the file to an e-mail to a friend or
relative.
54Reflect on Your Writing
- Think back on your experience of writing a
cause-and-effect essay. - Then, respond to the following questions, and
save your responses in your portfolio. - During the process of writing, what did you learn
about the subject you chose? - Which strategy for writing a cause-and-effect
essay might you recommend to someone as being
most useful? Why?
55Rubric for Self-Assessment