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Unit 6 Presenting Your Ideas

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Unit 6 Presenting Your Ideas Warm Up What is the purpose of expository writing? (p. 244) Activity 1 Classification: Breaking Subjects into Parts – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit 6 Presenting Your Ideas


1
  • Unit 6 Presenting Your Ideas
  • Warm Up
  • What is the purpose of expository writing? (p.
    244)
  • Activity 1
  • Classification Breaking Subjects into Parts
  • What is classification?
  • Logical division ---identifying criteria (p.249)
  • Sample analysis
  • --What are the criteria of Text 1 and Text 2?

2
  • Text 1
  • Every educated person has at least two ways
    of
  • speaking his mother tongue. The first is that
    which he
  • employs in his family, among his familiar
    friends, and
  • on ordinary occasions. The second is that which
    he uses
  • in discoursing on more complicated subjects, and
    in
  • addressing persons with whom he is less
    intimately
  • acquainted.  It is, in short, the language which
    he
  • employs when he is "on his dignity," as he puts
    on
  • evening dress when he is going to dine.

3
  • Text 2
  • There are three kinds of book owners. The
    first has all
  • the standard sets and best-sellers--unread,
    untouched.
  • (This deluded individual owns wood pulp and
    ink, not
  • books. ) The second has a great many books--a few
    of
  • them read through, most of them dipped into, but
    all of
  • them as dean and shiny as the day they were
    bought.
  • (This person would probably like to make books
    his own,
  • but is restrained by a false respect for their
    physical
  • appearance. ) The third has a few books or
    many-every
  • one of them dog-eared and dilapidated shaken and
  • loosened by continual use, marked and scribbled
    in from
  • front to back. (This man owns books. )

4
  • The criteria are occasions of use (Text 1) and
    the use of books (Text 2).
  • Analyze Task 3
  • This is the beginning of an exposition, in what
    direction do you think the exposition will
    develop?
  • What is the function of the first paragraph?
  • Present your ideas in flow charts
  • Read Text 2 above again and fill in the
    chart

feature
feature
feature
5
Kinds of book owners
Owns all the standard sets and best-sellers
Has a great many books
Has a few books or many
Feature reads every book and makes notes
Feature Does not read or even touch all books
Feature Only reads a few and skim many.
6
  • Writing practicewrite a piece of exposition
    according to the diagram in Task 6

7
  • Activity 2
  • Definition Clarifying Your Ideas
  • Definition
  • When we write, it often happens that we have
    to make clear certain concepts or ideas or even
    words and expressions that we think our readers
    might not understand. So learning to define
    things accurately is an important writing skill.
  • What is a formal logical definition?
  • -- It is a one-sentence definition made of three
  • parts (1) the term being defined, (2) the
    general
  • class or category, (3) the characteristics which
  • distinguish the given term from other terms in
    the
  • same class or category .

8
  • Term Class
    Distinctions
  • being defined
  • A Biologist is a person who
    studies

  • living organisms
  • Rust is a reddish formed
    on iron
  • brown coating by the
    action

  • of water and air.
  • Extended definition
  • What is an extended definition? (p.265)
  • Analyze the sample text pick out examples from
    the text to match the statements

9
  • Writing practice (Task 5)
  • Give a formal definition of friendship. Then
    contrast friendship with other forms of
    relationships. You may use negation to show what
    friendship is not, perhaps by example. Classify
    main kinds of friendships and compare or contrast
    them, and provide examples if necessary. Finally,
    present your own conclusion of what real
    friendship is.

10
  • Activity 3
  • Exemplification demonstrating Your Ideas
  • Exemplification is a basic thought pattern that
    we use consciously or unconsciously all the time,
    a skill we are ready to turn to in explaining
    abstract, difficult or unfamiliar points or
    concepts.
  • Select good examples
  • Good examples should be specific.
  • Good examples should be lively and interesting.
  • Good examples must be appropriate.
  • Analyze the sample in Task 1
  • Types of examples
  • Indirect knowledge
  • Personal experience

11
  • Useful expressions or structures to signal
    exemplification (Tasks 3 and 4)
  • Writing practice
  • Start with the following sentence as the
    topic sentence Internet-based learning can
    greatly facilitate adult learners.

12
  • Activity 4
  • Comparison and Contrast
  • Using Familiar Things to Explain the Unfamiliar
  • Clarify the concepts of comparison and contrast
  • Comparison and contrast in a text
  • Read the following samples and decide whether
    they follow a half-and-half structure (????)or an
    interwoven structure (????)

13
  • Sample 1
  • It follows an interwoven structure.

14
  • Sample 2
  • It follows a half and half structure.

15
  • Further notes on transitions
  • If it is so written that it is clear a
    comparison or contrast is being made, no
    transition is necessary. See sample texts.
  • Writing practice (Task 5)

16
  • Activity 5 Cause and Effect
  • One Thing Leading to Another
  • Read the following text and complete the tasks
    modeled on the course materials.
  • Identifying cause and effect
  • Completing the sentences
  • Analyzing the overall structure
  • The Telephone
  • John Brooks
  • 1. What has the telephone done to us, or for
    us, in the hundred years of its existence? 2. A
    few effects suggest themselves at once. 3. It has
    saved lives by getting rapid word of illness,
    injury, or famine from remote places. 4. By
    joining with the elevator to make possible the
    multistory residence or office building, it has
    made possible for better or worsethe modern
    city. 5. By bringing about a quantum leap in the
    speed

17
  • and ease with which information moves from place
    to place, it
  • has greatly accelerated the rate of scientific
    and technological
  • change and growth in industry. 6. Beyond doubt it
    has crippled if
  • not killed the ancient art of letter writing. 7.
    It has made living
  • alone possible for persons with normal social
    impulses 8. by so
  • doing, it has played a role in one of the
    greatest social changes of
  • this century, the breakup of the
    multigenerational household. 9. It
  • has made the waging of war chillingly more
    efficient than
  • formerly. 10. Perhaps (though not probably) it
    has prevented wars
  • that might have arisen out of international
    misunderstanding
  • caused by written communication. 11. Or perhaps
    again not
  • probablyby magnifying and extending irrational
    personal
  • conflicts based on voice contact, it has caused
    wars. 12. Certainly
  • it has extended the scope of human conflicts,
    since it impartially
  • disseminates the useful knowledge of scientists
    and the babble of
  • bores, the affection of the affectionate and the
    malice of the

18
  • malicious.
  • 13.But the question remains unanswered. 14. The
    obvious effect
  • just cited seems inadequate, mechanistic 15.
    they only scratch
  • the surface. 16. Perhaps the crucial effects are
    evanescent (?
  • ?)and unmeasurable. 17. Use of the telephone
    involves personal
  • risk because it involves exposure 18. for some,
    to be hung up
  • on is among the worst of fears 19. others dream
    of a ringing
  • telephone and walk up with a pounding heart. 20.
    The
  • telephones actual ringmore, perhaps, than any
    other sound in
  • our daily livesevokes hope, relief, fear,
    anxiety, joy, according
  • to our expectations. 21. The telephone is our
    nerve-end to society.

19
  • 22. In some ways it is in itself a thing of
    paradox. 23. In one
  • sense a metaphor for the times it helped create,
    in another sense
  • the telephone is their polar opposite. 24. It is
    small and gentle
  • relying on low voltages and miniature partsin
    times of
  • hugeness and violence. 25. It is basically simple
    in times of
  • complexity. 26. It is so nearly human, recreating
    voices so
  • faithfully that friends or lovers need not
    identify themselves by
  • name even when talking across oceans, that to ask
    its effect on
  • human life may seem hardly more fruitful than to
    ask the effect
  • of the hand or the foot. 27.The Canadian
    philosopher Marshall
  • McLuhanone of the few who have addressed
    themselves to
  • these questionswas perhaps not far from the mark
    when he
  • spoke of the telephone as creating a kind of
    extrasensory
  • perception.

20
  • Identifying cause and effect
  • 3. It has saved livesE by getting rapid word of
    illness, injury, or famine from remote places.
    C
  • 4. By joining with the elevator to make possible
    the multistory residence or office building,C
    it has made possible for better or worsethe
    modern city. E
  • 5. By bringing about a quantum leap in the speed
    and ease with which information moves from place
    to place, Cit has greatly accelerated the rate
    of scientific and technological change and growth
    in industry. E
  • 6. Beyond doubt it has crippled if not killed the
    ancient art of letter writing. E

21
  • 7. It has made living alone possible for persons
    with normal social impulses E
  • 8. by so doing, C it has played a role in one
    of the greatest social changes of this century,
    the breakup of the multigenerational
    household.E
  • 9. It has made the waging of war chillingly more
    efficient than formerly.E
  • 10.Perhaps (though not probably) it has prevented
    wars that might have arisen out of international
    misunderstanding caused by written
    communication.E
  • 11. Or perhaps again not probablyby magnifying
    and extending irrational personal conflicts based
    on voice contact, Cit has caused wars. E

22
  • 12. Certainly it has extended the scope of human
    conflicts, E since it impartially disseminates
    the useful knowledge of scientists and the babble
    of bores, the affection of the affectionate and
    the malice of the malicious. C
  • 2nd Paragraph
  • 17. Use of the telephone involves personal risk
    E because it involves exposure C
  • 18. for some, to be hung up on C is among the
    worst of fearsE
  • 19. others dream of a ringing telephoneC and
    walk up with a pounding heart. E
  • 20. The telephones actual ringCmore, perhaps,
    than any other sound in our daily livesevokes
    hope, relief, fear, anxiety, joy, according to
    our expectations. E
  • 21. The telephone is our nerve-end to society. E

23
  • Completing the sentences
  • The telephone can carry news rapidly. ___, it has
    saved lived since its invention.
  • As a result/consequence for this reason
    consequently
  • ____ of the popularity of telephone is the damage
    to the art of letter writing.
  • The result/consequence
  • ____the telephone has made rapid and convenient
    communication possible, it has played a role in
    the breakup of multigenerational household
  • Because As Since Now that

24
  • One of ___ for the rapid scientific and
    technological change and growth in industry is
    the invention of telephone.
  • the reasons
  • According to the text, the use of the telephone
    may ____ the extension of the scope of human
    conflicts.
  • lead to result in cause
  • Living alone is possible nowadays ___ the
    telephone.
  • because of as a result of owing to
  • Analyzing the overall structure

25

Effects what has the telephone done to us, or
for us, in the hundred years of its existence?
Negative effects
Positive effects
Effect cause
Effect cause
26
  • Avoid fallacies in establishing causal
    relationship (p.293)
  • Writing practice (Task 5)
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