Informative/ Explanatory/Expository Writing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 37
About This Presentation
Title:

Informative/ Explanatory/Expository Writing

Description:

Informative/ Explanatory/Expository Writing Introduction Suggestions Pull readers in by describing the situation whose causes or effects you plan to analyze. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:278
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: Spar90
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Informative/ Explanatory/Expository Writing


1
Informative/ Explanatory/Expository Writing
2
Expository Writing
  • Expository is another word for explaining. In an
    expository essay you may be asked to give
    information about something or you might be asked
    to explain something.
  • Example What is your favorite sport and why?
  • Clue words explain, discuss, show, clarify,
    inform, describe, talk about, tell/write why,
    explain how, compare/contrast, show the
    causes/effects of

3
Essay Structure
  • There is no ONE WAY to structure an informative
    essay.
  • The strategy you use to structure an essay
    depends upon your purpose and your topic.
  • Sometimes you can incorporate more than one
    strategy in a single essay.

4
Strategies
  • Definition
  • Cause and Effect Analysis
  • Comparison and Contrast
  • Process Analysis
  • Example
  • Division or Analysis
  • Classification

5
Definition
6
Possible Topics
  • A current slang expression
  • Bullying in the digital age
  • A good friend
  • Cowardice
  • Self-respect
  • Stop and frisk
  • Osmosis
  • The Great Depression
  • Occupy Wall Street

7
Introduction Suggestions
  • Provide a base from which to expand while
    explaining why the forthcoming definition is
    useful, significant, or necessary
  • You may report the incident that prompted you to
    define why the subject is important.
  • Specify the common understandings, or
    misunderstandings, about its meaning.

8
Introduction (continued)
  • Discuss the etymology of the word.
  • Offer a quote from another writer supporting or
    contradiction your definition.
  • Offer an explanation of what it does NOT mean.
  • State your thesis so readers will know precisely
    what you purpose and point are.
  • AVOID the overused The American Heritage
    Dictionary defines _________ as . . .

9
Body Organization Suggestions
  • Connect to your perspective (thesis point).
  • Proceed paragraph by paragraph to refine the
    characteristics or qualities of the subject,
    arranged to distinguish it from other similar
    subjects.
  • Draw increasingly tight boundaries from broader
    and familiar to the one you have in mind.

10
Organization Continued . . .
  • Arrange points in order of increasing drama.
  • Begin with your own experience with the subject
    and show how you see it operating in your
    surroundings.

11
Conclusion Suggestions
  • Summarize your definition.
  • Indicate its superiority to other definitions of
    the same subject.
  • Quote another writer whose view supports your
    own.
  • Recommend how readers can make use of the
    information you have provided.
  • As always, the choice of conclusion in any essay
    depends on your purpose and the impression you
    want to impart.

12
Compare and Contrast Analysis
13
Possible Topics
  • A memory of someone and a recent encounter
  • Two pieces of literature with similar themes but
    different styles
  • Older and newer version of a product
  • Heroes today and in ancient Greece
  • The views of two political candidates
  • Two different chemical reactions
  • Two cars

14
Compare and Contrast
  • They usually work together.
  • This strategy is good for subjects that warrant
    side-by-side comparison.
  • The subjects usually resemble each other in some
    respects but differ in others.

15
Explanatory Comparison
  • Explain the similarities and differences between
    subjects so as to make either or both of them
    clear.
  • An explanatory comparison does NOT take a
    position on the relative merits of the subjects.
  • Example Explain how the new teen driving laws
    differ from the old laws.

16
Evaluative Comparison
  • Evaluate subjects so as to establish their
    advantages/disadvantages, strengths/weaknesses,
    etc.
  • The evaluative comparison DOES take a position
    and usually concludes with a preference or a
    selected course of action.
  • Example Argue how the new teen driving laws
    prevent more accidents than the old laws did

17
Explanatory/Evaluative
  • Both types of comparisons treat two or more
    subjects from the same general class.
  • Identify features shared by bothpoints of
    comparison.
  • This assures a direct rather than a random
    comparison.
  • Example dietsforbidden foods, allowed foods,
    speed of weight loss, nutritional quality

18
Introduction Suggestions
  • Decide whether you are going to explain the
    similarities and differences between subjects in
    order to make either or both of them clearan
    EXPLANATORY comparison OR you are going to
    evaluate the subjects in order to establish their
    advantages and disadvantagesan EVALUATIVE
    comparison.
  • Your THESIS will depend on this decision
  • EXPLANATION Though rugby requires less strength
    and more stamina than American football, the two
    games are very much alike in their rules and
    strategies.
  • EVALUATION The two diets result in similarly
    raid weight loss, but Harriss requires much
    more self-discipline and is nutritionally much h
    riskier than Marconis.

19
Body Organization Suggestions
  • Generally give subjects equal emphasis when they
    are equally familiar or are being evaluated.
  • Stress one subject over the other when it is less
    familiar.
  • Generally stress similarities and differences
    equally when all the points of comparison are
    equally familiar.

20
Organization Continued . . .
  • Stress the differences with subjects that are
    usually considered similar.
  • Stress the similarities between subjects that are
    usually considered different.
  • Subject-by-subject each one is explained in
    full, one before the other (usually reserved for
    short essays)
  • Point-by-point points are covered one at a time
    (usually the more useful approach)

21
Conclusion Suggestions
  • Help the reader see the whole picture.
  • Comment on the significance of the comparison.
  • Advise readers on how they can use the
    information.
  • Recommend a specific course of action for readers
    to follow.

22
Cause and Effect Analysis
23
Possible Topics
  • A change of mind about an important issue
  • What accounts for the popularity of ___________ ?
  • Why is the United States facing an economic
    crisis?
  • How does a persons addiction impact his/her
    family?
  • What effects do you expect your work ethic to
    have on your career choice?
  • Speculate on the resulting reaction when you
    combine _____ and ______ and explain why that
    will occur.
  • Why do people root for the underdog?

24
Purpose
  • Use this method when dividing occurrences into
    their elements to find relationships among them.
  • Analyze CAUSES to discover which of the events
    PRECEDING a specified outcome actually made it
    happen.
  • Analyze EFFECTS to discover which of the events
    FOLLOWING a specified occurrence actually
    resulted from it.

25
Purpose Continued . . .
  • Your purpose in analyzing might be to EXPLAIN or
    to PERSUADE.
  • EXPLAIN order experience and pin down the
  • connections in it.
  • ARGUE show why one explanation of causes
  • is more accurate than another
  • OR
  • how a proposed action will produce
  • desirable or undesirable consequences.

26
The Challenge
  • Related events sometimes overlap, sometimes
    follow each other immediately, and sometimes
    connect over gaps in time.
  • Events vary in duration and complexity.
  • Events vary in importance.
  • Analysis requires identifying them, but also
    discerning their relationships accurately and
    weighing their significance fairly.

27
Challenges Continued . . .
  • Causes and effects often occur in a sequence,
    each contributing to the next in a CAUSAL CHAIN.
    Identifying this chain involves sorting out
    events in time
  • IMMEDIATE the causes or effects occur nearest
    the event
  • REMOTE the causes or events occur further away
    in time.

28
Challenges Continued . . .
  • Analyzing causes also requires distinguishing
    their relative importance in the sequence
  • MAJOR These causes are directly and primarily
    responsible for the outcome.
  • MINOR These causes (also called CONTRIBUTORY)
    merely contribute to the outcome.

29
Pitfalls
  • A confusion of the coincidence and the causein
    other words, an assumption that because one event
    preceded another, it must have caused the other
    (post hocafter this, therefore because of this)
  • Examples
  • superstitions illustrate post hoc
  • A accuses B of ________ . B is upset and leaves
    in his car. Shortly after, B has an accident.
    Bs friend accuses A of causing the accident. In
    the absence of proof, the friend commits the
    error of post hoc by asserting that A caused Bs
    accident simply because his accusation preceded
    the accident.

30
Pitfalls Continued . . .
  • OVER-SIMPLIFICATION consider not only the causes
    and effects that seem obvious but all
    possibilities remote as well as immediate, minor
    as well as major.
  • NECESSARY cause one that must happen I order for
    an effect to come about an effect can have more
    than one necessary cause.
  • SUFFICIENT cause one that brings about the
    effect by itself.

31
Pitfalls Continued . . .
  • Over-simplification can also occur if you allow
    opinions or emotions to cloud the interpretation
    of evidence.
  • To achieve a balanced analysis, you have to put
    aside your own feelings and consider all possible
    causes for the occurrence.

32
Planning/Prewriting
  • Whether your subject suggests a focus on causes,
    effects, or both list as many of them as you can
    from memory or from research.
  • Ask
  • Why did it happen?
  • What contributed to it?
  • What were or are the result
  • What might its consequences be?
  • One or more of these questions should lead you to
    a focus for the essay.

33
Planning Continued . . .
  • Arrange the causes or effects in sequence and
    weigh their relative importance.
  • Anticipate the expectations and needs of your
    audience, considering what they already know and
    what they need to be told.
  • Develop a THESIS that states your subject, your
    perspective on it, and your purpose. The thesis
    should reflect your judgments about the relative
    significance of possible causes or effects.

34
Introduction Suggestions
  • Pull readers in by describing the situation whose
    causes or effects you plan to analyze.
  • Provide backgrounda brief narrative of the
    situation, a summary of the analysis of causes
    and effects that your essay will dispute.
  • If your thesis is not already apparent, stating
    it explicitly can tell readers exactly what your
    purpose is and which causes and effects you plan
    to highlight. (If you anticipate readers will
    oppose your thesis, you may wait to state it
    until the end after you have provided proof.)

35
Body Organization
  • The arrangement of your ideas will depend on your
    material and your emphasis.
  • CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER for events that unfold in a
    causal chaineach event causing another effect.
  • ORDER OF IMPORTNCE if events overlap or vary in
    significance, try. Tis shows which events are
    major and which minor and reserves your most
    significant (and most detailed) point for last.

36
Conclusion Suggestions
  • You may want to restate your thesisor state it
    if you deliberately withheld it for the endso
    that readers are left with the point of your
    analysis.
  • If your analysis is complex, readers may benefit
    from a summary of the relationships you have
    identified.
  • Depending on your purpose, you may want to
    specify why your analysis is significant, what
    use the readers can make of it, or what action
    you hope they will take.

37
Works Cited
  • Aaron, Jane E. 40 Model Essays A Portable
  • Anthology. Boston Bedford, 2005.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com