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Expository Writing

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Title: Expository Writing


1
Expository Writing
  • Lesson Two
  • The Six-Step Process
  • Dr. M. Connor

2
The Six Step Process
  • Planning
  • Shaping
  • Writing
  • Revising
  • Editing
  • Proofreading

prewriting
rewriting
3
Prewriting
  • Planning and shaping are both steps in
    prewriting.
  • They are important in writing a paper.
  • During this phase you also come up with a thesis.

4
Thesis statement
  • Also called
  • main idea
  • theme
  • controlling idea
  • At first, you have a working thesis

5
Definitions
  • Working thesis a statement that, based on
    everything you know of the topic, should prove to
    be a reasonably accurate summary of what you will
    write.
  • Final thesis the accurate one-sentence summary
    of your work that will appear in your final draft.

6
For week three, we will do quite a bit of work on
thesis and thesis statements. They can be tricky
to do well, so well devote an entire week to
them, and Im sure well get back to them in
future lessons.
7
Planning techniques
  • Brainstorming
  • Clustering
  • Hybrid of the two
  • The W H Questions (Reporters questions.

8
Brainstorming
  • Just quickly writing down everything that comes
    to mind on a certain topics.
  • It might be a good idea to set yourself a time
    for just writing.
  • I will brainstorm on this topic for say,
    five/ten/fifteen minutes.
  • I use a kitchen timer to time myself sometimes!

9
Clustering
  • Example based on rain forest

Alternate medicines
medicine
animals
extinction
plants
exploitation
extinction
10
Hybrid
  • First you brainstorm a while then see what works
    together

11
Reporters Questions
  • What
  • Why
  • Who
  • Where
  • When
  • How

12
On the rainforest
  • What- rainforest exploitation
  • Why - overuse of raw materials
  • Who - natives and others
  • Where - Brazil
  • When - now
  • How - how does this happen? Key question that
    will lead me to research

13
Shaping
  • Once you have a huge mass of materials, you need
    to shape them into something clear.
  • I think of this step as making a map.
  • Anglo-American expository writing follows a
    specific form.
  • This is where outlining skills come in.

14
Parts of a paper
  • Introduction
  • Body
  • Reasons
  • Examples
  • Conclusion

15
Introductions
  • Smooth me into the paper, grab my interest, make
    me want to read more.
  • Techniques
  • tell a story
  • use a quote
  • use a startling fact
  • These are easier said than done, so well work on
    them in the future.

16
Body
  • This is the meat of your paper, the substance.
  • You state your reasons, but reasons must be
    backed up with solid examples.
  • I use the metaphor of a murder trial. In order
    to convict (convince), you need good, solid,
    tangible evidence.

17
Conclusion
  • This is more than just a summary. Though you do
    have a summing up of what went before.
  • Ease me out. Let me feel, yes, the writer is
    done. Dont leave me looking for the rest of the
    essay.
  • Perhaps a call to action? Leave me with a
    thought?

18
Outlining
  • If youre unfamiliar with the process of
    outlining, visit
  • http//owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/general/gl_
    outlin.html

19
How to shape a paper--logic
  • Some papers lend themselves to a certain
    structure
  • chronological
  • spatial (inside outside, top bottom)
  • importance - save the best for last
  • people remember what they read last the most, so
    you want to have your most important reason last.
  • Also, you want to build up in your paper, not
    start with a bang and then fizzle out!

20
Degree of outlining
  • The longer more complex the paper, the more
    detailed your outline will be.
  • But even for short pieces of writing, its best
    if you do some brief sketch of where youre
    going.
  • Shaping also helps you see gaps in your research
    (if needed).
  • Research is part of the planning/shaping stage as
    well.

21
Writing
  • When youve finally got the thesis and the
    outline, and youre read, then write.
  • If possible, write the entire paper in one
    sitting. Or write as much as you can.
  • Dont go back and rewrite as you write!
  • Get it down, then get it right!

22
When youre done writing...
  • After youve finished writing the first draft,
    put it away. For a class paper, a few days is
    optimal.
  • Do this even with exam essays. At the very
    least, take time to do some stretches and deep
    breathing.
  • No, your teacher wont mind!

23
Rewriting
  • Composed of three steps
  • Revising
  • Editing
  • Proofreading
  • You may do some of the processes simultaneously,
    but try to break them down one-by-one as well.

24
Revising
  • This is a form of Re-visioning, or seeing again.
  • Look at the BIG structure
  • Does the logic hold?
  • Do you need to move paragraphs around?
  • Do you need to add anything?
  • Have you proved your thesis?
  • I find its easier to change my thesis than
    rewrite my paper, so thats what I do if I
    havent proven my original thesis. But then Im
    lazy!

25
Editing
  • This step is the paragraph by paragraph then
    sentence by sentence check for things like
  • transitions
  • word choice
  • correct grammar
  • clarity
  • all of these will be the subject of a lesson in
    the future, so dont worry if youre weak right
    now.

26
Proofreading
  • This is the very last step, but dont forget it!
  • Read your paper word by word and then read it
    backwards!
  • This is an old proofreaders trick. It allows
    you to see words in isolation and better catch
    errors.
  • Run spell-check!

27
Proofreading points
  • If you find yourself having to make major
    revisions in the proofreading stage, it means
    youre messing up either the revising or the
    editing step.
  • Mistakes should be easily fixed with a little
    Tipex/Wite-Out and a black pen!
  • Dont put 100 of your faith in the grammar check
    program.
  • Its simplistic.
  • But if it offers a correction, it probably means
    that you are wrong.

28
Conclusion
I hope this presentation gives you some
understanding of what teachers will be looking
for in your writing and what will be expected of
you as a writer. Basically, Ive just covered
everything were going to learn this term! In
the following weeks, well go over all of this
material in great detail! Doing all of these
steps, and practicing the skills needed in each,
can help you hone your writing skills. Writing
is an art, but its also a craft, which means it
can be learned and improved.
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