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Read, Write, Connect, Book 1 by Kathleen Green; Amy Lawlor - First Edition, 2019 from Macmillan Student Store
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About

Read, Write, Connect, Book 1, teaches you the skills you need to become a successful reader and writer in college and beyond.

To help you get the most out of your course, your instructor might have assigned your book together with LaunchPad Solo for Readers and Writers so that you can learn important writing skills online at your own pace. If your book did not come packaged with an access code, you can purchase access at launchpadworks.com.

Digital Options

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Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction

part 1 Reading and Writing Processes: A Step-by-Step Introduction

1 Reading and Writing for Success in College

Trying Out a Process for Reading and Writing

    Pre-Reading

    During Reading

    Post-Reading

    Responding in Writing

[Magazine Article] Cindi May, "A Learning Secret: Don’t Take Notes on a Laptop"

Managing Your Time and Avoiding Procrastination

[Blog Post] Beth Belle Cooper, "Beyond Time Management: Why We Really Procrastinate and How to Finally Stop"

Setting Personal Goals and Counting Your Strengths

Becoming a College Thinker

Chapter Review

2 Reading and Writing to Understand Texts

Myths about Readers

Active Reading to Improve Comprehension

    Pre-Reading the Text to Increase Comprehension

    [Opinion] Ashley Merryman, "Losing Is Good for You"

    Annotating While You Read to Increase Comprehension

    Post-Reading Strategies to Identify the Main Point and Support

    KWL+ Reading Strategy

Writing a Summary to Demonstrate Comprehension

    Writing a One-Sentence Summary

    Writing a Summary Paragraph

    Summary Checklist       

Readings on Success and Happiness

[Magazine Article] Shawn Achor, "Positive Intelligence"

    Model Reading Strategy: Defining Vocabulary

[Speech] Matt de la Peña, 2016 Newbery Acceptance Speech

    Model Reading Strategy: Annotating Thoughts and Reactions

[Book Excerpt] Misty Copeland, Prologue from Life in Motion: An Unlikely Ballerina

    Model Reading Strategy: Annotating for Comprehension

Assignment: Write a One-Paragraph Summary

Chapter Review                         

                             

3 Critical Reading and Writing in Response to Texts

What Is Critical Reading?

Making Inferences

Asking Critical Questions

Challenging Assumptions

Taking a Position

Writing a Critical Response Paragraph

Paragraph Assignments for Readings on Success and Happiness

Critical Response Paragraph Checklist

From Paragraph Writing to Essay Writing

Chapter Review

4 Rereading, Revising, and Editing

What Can Be Gained From Re-Reading?

Revising the Topic Sentence with Your Audience, Topic, and Purpose in Mind

Revising the Supporting Sentences of the Paragraph

    Expanding Your Paragraph

    Making Your Paragraph Unified

Revising the Concluding Sentence

Getting Help with Revision

    Helping Yourself First

    Revising with a Tutor

    Revising with Peers

    Using Instructor Feedback

What Is Editing?

    Editing for Grammar and Mechanics

    Editing for Vocabulary

    Editing for Transitions

Chapter Review

part 2 Workshops on Reading and Writing

5  Building Vocabulary

Learning Key Concept Words

   Building a College Lexicon

   Creating a Word Map

Using Context Clues

When and How to Use a Dictionary

Understanding Word Parts to Learn New Words

   Prefixes

   Roots and Root Words

   Suffixes

Understanding Denotation and Connotation

Using a Thesaurus to Improve Word Choice

Using Strong Vocabulary in the Editing Process

Creating Your Own Context for New Words

Chapter Review

6 Understanding Topic, Audience, Purpose, and Tone

Topic, Audience, and Purpose in Action

Identifying the Topic, Audience, and Purpose of a Reading

[Magazine Article] Sarah Gomillion, "The Hidden Relationship Benefits of Binge-Watching"

How Tone Connects to Topic, Audience, and Purpose

Evaluating the Writer’s Use of TAP and Tone

Crafting TAP in Your Own Writing  

Chapter Review

7 Understanding Paragraphs and Topic Sentences

What Is a Paragraph?

What Needs to Be in a Paragraph?

Different Types of Paragraphs

The Topic Sentence

   [Magazine Article] K. Anders Ericsson et al., "The Making of an Expert"

   Identifying Topic Sentences

   Writing Strong Topic Sentences

   Topic Sentence Checklist

Topic Sentences and Thesis Statement Working Together

   Revision Checklist

Chapter Review

8 Understanding Paragraph Development, Unity, and Organization

Paragraph Development

   Different Types of Support

   Addressing Problems with Paragraph Development

Paragraph Unity

Paragraph Organization

   The PIE (Point-Information-Explanation) Approach

   The Point and Sub-Point Approach

Mapping a Paragraph

Chapter Review

9 Reading and Writing Academic Essays

The Thesis Statement

Essay Structure

   Comparing Five-Paragraph and Organically Structured Essays

[Magazine Article] Virginia Hughes, "Spotless Minds: How Scientists Are Learning to Shape Our Memory"

[Magazine Article] Susan Gregory Thomas, "Rewrite Your Life: Story Editing to Prevent a Downward Spiral"

Drafting an Academic Essay

   Selecting a Focused Topic, Audience, and Purpose

   Generating a Rough Thesis

   Making a Scratch Outline

Developing the Body Paragraphs

   Developing the Introduction

   Developing the Conclusion

   Sample Student Essay Draft

Revising Your Essay

   Essay Revision Checklist

   Sample Student Essay Revision

Editing Your Essay

Chapter Review

10 Generating Ideas During Reading and Writing

How to Spark Your Thinking

Focused Prewriting for an Assignment

   [Opinion] Elizabeth W. Dunn and Michael Norton, "Hello, Stranger"

   Focused Freewriting

   Clustering

   Listing Evidence and Working Backward to Uncover Points

   Making a Commentary Outline

Generating More Ideas During Revision

   Re-Reading

   Questioning Your Work

Chapter Review

11 Thinking Critically about Texts and Support

How to Decide Which Details Are Important

Mapping for Thesis, Main Points, and Important Information

Evaluating Main Points and Supporting Information

   Distinguishing Fact from Opinion

      Recognizing Bias

   Considering Relevance

   Evaluating Credibility

   Avoiding Logical Fallacies

Recognizing Trustworthy and Untrustworthy Online Sources

   How to Read a Website

   Legitimate vs. Fake News

Understanding Visual Sources

   Interpreting Visual Sources

   Using Visuals in Academic Documents

Chapter Review

12 Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Citing Sources

Finding Key Quotations in a Reading

   [Book Excerpt] Mark Twain, From A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court

Paraphrasing

Using Signal Phrases to Integrate Quotations and Paraphrases

Using Quotations to Generate Ideas

The Mechanics of Quotation

Citing Sources

   Creating Citations in MLA Style

   Creating Parenthetical References in MLA Style

   Overview of APA Style

Chapter Review

13 Recognizing and Using Rhetorical Patterns

Recognizing Rhetorical Patterns

[Online Magazine Article] Alasdair Wilkins, "Why Childhood Memories Disappear"

[Opinion] Sheila Suess Kennedy, "A ‘Tour of Duty’ Before College Would Serve Students and the Nation"

Using Rhetorical Patterns in Writing

   Illustration

Definition

Narration

Process

Comparison and Contrast

Cause and Effect

Problem-Solution

How Do Writers Determine Which Rhetorical Patterns To Use?

Chapter Review

14 Recognizing and Using Transitions

Transition Words and Phrases

Using Transition Words and Phrases Effectively

Transition Sentences Between Paragraphs

Locating Transitions in a Reading

Chapter Review

part 3 Themes for Reading and Writing

15 Cyberbullying

Theme Overview

Readings on Cyberbullying

   [Infographic] Anti-Defamation League, "Statistics on Bullying"

   [Magazine Article] Jane Porter, "Apps of Hate?"

   [Blog Post] Justin W. Patchin, "Bullying is Not Just a Kid Problem"

   [Trade Publication] Adrienne van der Valk, "There Are No Bullies--Just Children Who Bully And You Can Help Them"

[Trade Publication] Edwin C. Darden, "Courts Join Crackdown on School Bullies"  

   Model Reading Strategy: Understanding Specialized Vocabulary

Examining the Readings Together

   Discussing the Readings

   Identifying Recurring Ideas in Readings on the Theme

Writing Assignments

   Paragraph Writing Assignments

   Essay Writing Assignments

16 Entrepreneurship

Theme Overview

Readings on Entrepreneurship

[Magazine Article] Joseph Bednar, "Planting Seeds: Grinspoon Foundation Inspires Students’ Entrepreneurial Dreams"

[Research Report] Stanford Latino Entrepreneurship Initiative, "State of Latino Entrepreneurship"

[Reference Work] "Madame C. J. Walker" from Biography in Context

[Magazine Article] Issie Lapowsky, "This Is What Tech’s Ugly Gender Problem Really Looks Like

[Magazine Article] Jessica Bruder, "The Psychological Price of Entrepreneurship"

   Model Reading Strategy: Restating the Main Points

Examining the Readings Together

   Discussing the Readings

Identifying Recurring Ideas in Readings on the Theme

Writing Assignments

   Paragraph Writing Assignments

   Essay Writing Assignments

17 Clothing, Uniforms, and Identity

Theme Overview

Readings on Clothing, Uniforms, and Identity

[Magazine Article] Joe Pinsker, "Wearing a Suit Makes People Think Differently"

[Infographic] Simmons School of Nursing and Health Sciences, "The Evolution of Nursing Uniforms"  

[Online Essay] Aarian Marshall, "A History of Police Uniforms—And Why They Matter"

[Magazine Article] Anya Alvarez, "Hijab in Sports: How Muslim Women Athletes Are Fighting for Acceptance"

   Model Reading Strategy: Mapping

[Online News Article] Morgan Till, "Combat Paper: Veterans Battle War’s Demons With Paper-Making"

Examining the Readings Together

   Discussing the Readings

   Identifying Recurring Ideas in Readings on the Theme

Writing Assignments

   Paragraph Writing Assignments

   Essay Writing Assignments

part 4 Building Strong and Effective Sentences

18 Recognizing Parts of Speech

Nouns

Pronouns

Adjectives

Verbs

Adverbs

Prepositions

Conjunctions

Interjections

Chapter Review

19 Writing Simple Sentences

The Subject and Main Verb

Objects

Compound Subjects and Verbs

Phrases           

   Phrases That Describe Only a Noun

   Phrases That Act Like Nouns

A Brief Word about Clauses

Strengthening Your Simple Sentences

   Strengthen the Subject

   Strengthen the Verb

Chapter Review             

20 Using Coordination and Subordination to Go Beyond the Simple Sentence

Using Coordination to Create Compound Sentences

   Punctuating a Compound Sentence

   One Common Comma Mistake

Using Subordination to Create Complex Sentences

Using Coordination and Subordination Together: Compound-Complex Sentences

   Compound-Complex Sentences

Chapter Review

21 Using Punctuation

Using the Right Punctuation to End a Sentence

Using the Right Punctuation to Separate Elements within a Sentence

   Comma

   Semicolon

   Colon

   Dash

   Parentheses

   Quotation Marks

Apostrophes

   Apostrophes to Show Contraction

   Apostrophes to Show Possession

Chapter Review

22 Understanding Rules for Spelling and Capitalization

Spelling Patterns and Rules

   Silent E

   Words That End in Y

   Adding –ly

   Making Plurals

Commonly Mistaken and Misspelled Words

Capitalization Rules

   Rules for Capitalizing Proper Nouns

   Rules for Capitalizing Words in Titles

Chapter Review

            

part 5 Editing for Common Errors

23 Finding and Fixing Sentence Boundary Errors

Finding Subjects and Main Verbs

   The Process-of-Elimination Strategy

   Locate-the-Main-Verb Strategy

   Compound Subjects and Compound Verbs

Fragments

   Locating Missing Subjects or Verbs and Rewriting Fragments

Fused Sentences: Run-Ons and Comma Splices

Chapter Review

24 Finding and Fixing Verb Errors

Subject-Verb Agreement Errors

   Especially Complicated Subjects

Verb Tense Errors

Editing for Correct Verb Usage

Chapter Review

25 Finding and Fixing Pronoun Errors

Types of Pronouns

Understanding the Pronoun-Antecedent Relationship

Pronoun Reference Errors

Pronoun Agreement Errors

Pronoun Shift Errors

Editing for Pronoun Errors

Chapter Review      

26 Finding and Fixing Modifier Errors and Mixed Constructions

Misplaced Modifiers

Dangling Modifiers

Mixed Constructions

Chapter Review

27 Finding and Fixing Problems with Focus, Repetition, and Wordiness

Unfocused Sentences

Clichés, Tired Phrases, and Slang

Effective vs. Ineffective Repetition

Wordiness

Chapter Review

Authors

Kathleen Green

Kathleen Green is an Associate Professor of English at Pasadena City College in Pasadena, California, where she has taught integrated reading and writing courses since 2001. She earned her Ph.D. in English at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and served as Assistant Professor of English at Purdue University-Calumet before moving to California. She has taught a wide variety of courses--including film history, film theory, women's literature, African-American literature, and children's literature--as well as the entire range of English composition courses, from basic skills to developmental to advanced composition. She has published scholarly articles on women's history and popular culture, but prefers working with students just beginning their journeys into higher education. She has served as a faculty tutor in the Pasadena City College Writing Center, has been involved with Writing Across the Curriculum, and has developed online curricula to help students with basic writing and reading skills across many disciplines. Currently, she teaches in the Veterans Learning Collaborative at PCC, a cohort-based program that helps U.S. military veterans make the transition to college learning.


Amy Lawlor

Amy Lawlor is a Professor of English at City College of San Francisco where she has been teaching integrated reading/writing and creative writing since 2008. She earned her M.A. in English as well as a Composition Certificate from San Francisco State University and a Post-Secondary Reading Certificate from Cal State Fullerton.  In the 15 years that she has been teaching college, she has enjoyed working at a number of Bay Area community colleges as well as Pasadena City College where she was exposed to a wide variety of composition curricula and experience teaching integrated reading/writing, reading, composition, Filipino-American literature, Latino-American literature, and other courses, including learning community courses and writing-across-the-curriculum courses. At Pasadena City College, in addition to teaching composition and literature, she worked as a faculty tutor in the Pasadena City College Writing Center and collaborated with Kathy Green in developing online curricula for reading and writing. She is currently co-lead faculty for one of City College of San Francisco’s accelerated courses and calls curriculum and faculty development her primary professional interests outside the classroom.


Help every student become a successful reader and writer

Read, Write, Connect, Book 1, teaches you the skills you need to become a successful reader and writer in college and beyond.

To help you get the most out of your course, your instructor might have assigned your book together with LaunchPad Solo for Readers and Writers so that you can learn important writing skills online at your own pace. If your book did not come packaged with an access code, you can purchase access at launchpadworks.com.

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

iClicker Student

Stay engaged in class with our student response system, show your instructor that you're listening and prove what you know.

Learn More

Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction

part 1 Reading and Writing Processes: A Step-by-Step Introduction

1 Reading and Writing for Success in College

Trying Out a Process for Reading and Writing

    Pre-Reading

    During Reading

    Post-Reading

    Responding in Writing

[Magazine Article] Cindi May, "A Learning Secret: Don’t Take Notes on a Laptop"

Managing Your Time and Avoiding Procrastination

[Blog Post] Beth Belle Cooper, "Beyond Time Management: Why We Really Procrastinate and How to Finally Stop"

Setting Personal Goals and Counting Your Strengths

Becoming a College Thinker

Chapter Review

2 Reading and Writing to Understand Texts

Myths about Readers

Active Reading to Improve Comprehension

    Pre-Reading the Text to Increase Comprehension

    [Opinion] Ashley Merryman, "Losing Is Good for You"

    Annotating While You Read to Increase Comprehension

    Post-Reading Strategies to Identify the Main Point and Support

    KWL+ Reading Strategy

Writing a Summary to Demonstrate Comprehension

    Writing a One-Sentence Summary

    Writing a Summary Paragraph

    Summary Checklist       

Readings on Success and Happiness

[Magazine Article] Shawn Achor, "Positive Intelligence"

    Model Reading Strategy: Defining Vocabulary

[Speech] Matt de la Peña, 2016 Newbery Acceptance Speech

    Model Reading Strategy: Annotating Thoughts and Reactions

[Book Excerpt] Misty Copeland, Prologue from Life in Motion: An Unlikely Ballerina

    Model Reading Strategy: Annotating for Comprehension

Assignment: Write a One-Paragraph Summary

Chapter Review                         

                             

3 Critical Reading and Writing in Response to Texts

What Is Critical Reading?

Making Inferences

Asking Critical Questions

Challenging Assumptions

Taking a Position

Writing a Critical Response Paragraph

Paragraph Assignments for Readings on Success and Happiness

Critical Response Paragraph Checklist

From Paragraph Writing to Essay Writing

Chapter Review

4 Rereading, Revising, and Editing

What Can Be Gained From Re-Reading?

Revising the Topic Sentence with Your Audience, Topic, and Purpose in Mind

Revising the Supporting Sentences of the Paragraph

    Expanding Your Paragraph

    Making Your Paragraph Unified

Revising the Concluding Sentence

Getting Help with Revision

    Helping Yourself First

    Revising with a Tutor

    Revising with Peers

    Using Instructor Feedback

What Is Editing?

    Editing for Grammar and Mechanics

    Editing for Vocabulary

    Editing for Transitions

Chapter Review

part 2 Workshops on Reading and Writing

5  Building Vocabulary

Learning Key Concept Words

   Building a College Lexicon

   Creating a Word Map

Using Context Clues

When and How to Use a Dictionary

Understanding Word Parts to Learn New Words

   Prefixes

   Roots and Root Words

   Suffixes

Understanding Denotation and Connotation

Using a Thesaurus to Improve Word Choice

Using Strong Vocabulary in the Editing Process

Creating Your Own Context for New Words

Chapter Review

6 Understanding Topic, Audience, Purpose, and Tone

Topic, Audience, and Purpose in Action

Identifying the Topic, Audience, and Purpose of a Reading

[Magazine Article] Sarah Gomillion, "The Hidden Relationship Benefits of Binge-Watching"

How Tone Connects to Topic, Audience, and Purpose

Evaluating the Writer’s Use of TAP and Tone

Crafting TAP in Your Own Writing  

Chapter Review

7 Understanding Paragraphs and Topic Sentences

What Is a Paragraph?

What Needs to Be in a Paragraph?

Different Types of Paragraphs

The Topic Sentence

   [Magazine Article] K. Anders Ericsson et al., "The Making of an Expert"

   Identifying Topic Sentences

   Writing Strong Topic Sentences

   Topic Sentence Checklist

Topic Sentences and Thesis Statement Working Together

   Revision Checklist

Chapter Review

8 Understanding Paragraph Development, Unity, and Organization

Paragraph Development

   Different Types of Support

   Addressing Problems with Paragraph Development

Paragraph Unity

Paragraph Organization

   The PIE (Point-Information-Explanation) Approach

   The Point and Sub-Point Approach

Mapping a Paragraph

Chapter Review

9 Reading and Writing Academic Essays

The Thesis Statement

Essay Structure

   Comparing Five-Paragraph and Organically Structured Essays

[Magazine Article] Virginia Hughes, "Spotless Minds: How Scientists Are Learning to Shape Our Memory"

[Magazine Article] Susan Gregory Thomas, "Rewrite Your Life: Story Editing to Prevent a Downward Spiral"

Drafting an Academic Essay

   Selecting a Focused Topic, Audience, and Purpose

   Generating a Rough Thesis

   Making a Scratch Outline

Developing the Body Paragraphs

   Developing the Introduction

   Developing the Conclusion

   Sample Student Essay Draft

Revising Your Essay

   Essay Revision Checklist

   Sample Student Essay Revision

Editing Your Essay

Chapter Review

10 Generating Ideas During Reading and Writing

How to Spark Your Thinking

Focused Prewriting for an Assignment

   [Opinion] Elizabeth W. Dunn and Michael Norton, "Hello, Stranger"

   Focused Freewriting

   Clustering

   Listing Evidence and Working Backward to Uncover Points

   Making a Commentary Outline

Generating More Ideas During Revision

   Re-Reading

   Questioning Your Work

Chapter Review

11 Thinking Critically about Texts and Support

How to Decide Which Details Are Important

Mapping for Thesis, Main Points, and Important Information

Evaluating Main Points and Supporting Information

   Distinguishing Fact from Opinion

      Recognizing Bias

   Considering Relevance

   Evaluating Credibility

   Avoiding Logical Fallacies

Recognizing Trustworthy and Untrustworthy Online Sources

   How to Read a Website

   Legitimate vs. Fake News

Understanding Visual Sources

   Interpreting Visual Sources

   Using Visuals in Academic Documents

Chapter Review

12 Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Citing Sources

Finding Key Quotations in a Reading

   [Book Excerpt] Mark Twain, From A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court

Paraphrasing

Using Signal Phrases to Integrate Quotations and Paraphrases

Using Quotations to Generate Ideas

The Mechanics of Quotation

Citing Sources

   Creating Citations in MLA Style

   Creating Parenthetical References in MLA Style

   Overview of APA Style

Chapter Review

13 Recognizing and Using Rhetorical Patterns

Recognizing Rhetorical Patterns

[Online Magazine Article] Alasdair Wilkins, "Why Childhood Memories Disappear"

[Opinion] Sheila Suess Kennedy, "A ‘Tour of Duty’ Before College Would Serve Students and the Nation"

Using Rhetorical Patterns in Writing

   Illustration

Definition

Narration

Process

Comparison and Contrast

Cause and Effect

Problem-Solution

How Do Writers Determine Which Rhetorical Patterns To Use?

Chapter Review

14 Recognizing and Using Transitions

Transition Words and Phrases

Using Transition Words and Phrases Effectively

Transition Sentences Between Paragraphs

Locating Transitions in a Reading

Chapter Review

part 3 Themes for Reading and Writing

15 Cyberbullying

Theme Overview

Readings on Cyberbullying

   [Infographic] Anti-Defamation League, "Statistics on Bullying"

   [Magazine Article] Jane Porter, "Apps of Hate?"

   [Blog Post] Justin W. Patchin, "Bullying is Not Just a Kid Problem"

   [Trade Publication] Adrienne van der Valk, "There Are No Bullies--Just Children Who Bully And You Can Help Them"

[Trade Publication] Edwin C. Darden, "Courts Join Crackdown on School Bullies"  

   Model Reading Strategy: Understanding Specialized Vocabulary

Examining the Readings Together

   Discussing the Readings

   Identifying Recurring Ideas in Readings on the Theme

Writing Assignments

   Paragraph Writing Assignments

   Essay Writing Assignments

16 Entrepreneurship

Theme Overview

Readings on Entrepreneurship

[Magazine Article] Joseph Bednar, "Planting Seeds: Grinspoon Foundation Inspires Students’ Entrepreneurial Dreams"

[Research Report] Stanford Latino Entrepreneurship Initiative, "State of Latino Entrepreneurship"

[Reference Work] "Madame C. J. Walker" from Biography in Context

[Magazine Article] Issie Lapowsky, "This Is What Tech’s Ugly Gender Problem Really Looks Like

[Magazine Article] Jessica Bruder, "The Psychological Price of Entrepreneurship"

   Model Reading Strategy: Restating the Main Points

Examining the Readings Together

   Discussing the Readings

Identifying Recurring Ideas in Readings on the Theme

Writing Assignments

   Paragraph Writing Assignments

   Essay Writing Assignments

17 Clothing, Uniforms, and Identity

Theme Overview

Readings on Clothing, Uniforms, and Identity

[Magazine Article] Joe Pinsker, "Wearing a Suit Makes People Think Differently"

[Infographic] Simmons School of Nursing and Health Sciences, "The Evolution of Nursing Uniforms"  

[Online Essay] Aarian Marshall, "A History of Police Uniforms—And Why They Matter"

[Magazine Article] Anya Alvarez, "Hijab in Sports: How Muslim Women Athletes Are Fighting for Acceptance"

   Model Reading Strategy: Mapping

[Online News Article] Morgan Till, "Combat Paper: Veterans Battle War’s Demons With Paper-Making"

Examining the Readings Together

   Discussing the Readings

   Identifying Recurring Ideas in Readings on the Theme

Writing Assignments

   Paragraph Writing Assignments

   Essay Writing Assignments

part 4 Building Strong and Effective Sentences

18 Recognizing Parts of Speech

Nouns

Pronouns

Adjectives

Verbs

Adverbs

Prepositions

Conjunctions

Interjections

Chapter Review

19 Writing Simple Sentences

The Subject and Main Verb

Objects

Compound Subjects and Verbs

Phrases           

   Phrases That Describe Only a Noun

   Phrases That Act Like Nouns

A Brief Word about Clauses

Strengthening Your Simple Sentences

   Strengthen the Subject

   Strengthen the Verb

Chapter Review             

20 Using Coordination and Subordination to Go Beyond the Simple Sentence

Using Coordination to Create Compound Sentences

   Punctuating a Compound Sentence

   One Common Comma Mistake

Using Subordination to Create Complex Sentences

Using Coordination and Subordination Together: Compound-Complex Sentences

   Compound-Complex Sentences

Chapter Review

21 Using Punctuation

Using the Right Punctuation to End a Sentence

Using the Right Punctuation to Separate Elements within a Sentence

   Comma

   Semicolon

   Colon

   Dash

   Parentheses

   Quotation Marks

Apostrophes

   Apostrophes to Show Contraction

   Apostrophes to Show Possession

Chapter Review

22 Understanding Rules for Spelling and Capitalization

Spelling Patterns and Rules

   Silent E

   Words That End in Y

   Adding –ly

   Making Plurals

Commonly Mistaken and Misspelled Words

Capitalization Rules

   Rules for Capitalizing Proper Nouns

   Rules for Capitalizing Words in Titles

Chapter Review

            

part 5 Editing for Common Errors

23 Finding and Fixing Sentence Boundary Errors

Finding Subjects and Main Verbs

   The Process-of-Elimination Strategy

   Locate-the-Main-Verb Strategy

   Compound Subjects and Compound Verbs

Fragments

   Locating Missing Subjects or Verbs and Rewriting Fragments

Fused Sentences: Run-Ons and Comma Splices

Chapter Review

24 Finding and Fixing Verb Errors

Subject-Verb Agreement Errors

   Especially Complicated Subjects

Verb Tense Errors

Editing for Correct Verb Usage

Chapter Review

25 Finding and Fixing Pronoun Errors

Types of Pronouns

Understanding the Pronoun-Antecedent Relationship

Pronoun Reference Errors

Pronoun Agreement Errors

Pronoun Shift Errors

Editing for Pronoun Errors

Chapter Review      

26 Finding and Fixing Modifier Errors and Mixed Constructions

Misplaced Modifiers

Dangling Modifiers

Mixed Constructions

Chapter Review

27 Finding and Fixing Problems with Focus, Repetition, and Wordiness

Unfocused Sentences

Clichés, Tired Phrases, and Slang

Effective vs. Ineffective Repetition

Wordiness

Chapter Review

Kathleen Green

Kathleen Green is an Associate Professor of English at Pasadena City College in Pasadena, California, where she has taught integrated reading and writing courses since 2001. She earned her Ph.D. in English at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and served as Assistant Professor of English at Purdue University-Calumet before moving to California. She has taught a wide variety of courses--including film history, film theory, women's literature, African-American literature, and children's literature--as well as the entire range of English composition courses, from basic skills to developmental to advanced composition. She has published scholarly articles on women's history and popular culture, but prefers working with students just beginning their journeys into higher education. She has served as a faculty tutor in the Pasadena City College Writing Center, has been involved with Writing Across the Curriculum, and has developed online curricula to help students with basic writing and reading skills across many disciplines. Currently, she teaches in the Veterans Learning Collaborative at PCC, a cohort-based program that helps U.S. military veterans make the transition to college learning.


Amy Lawlor

Amy Lawlor is a Professor of English at City College of San Francisco where she has been teaching integrated reading/writing and creative writing since 2008. She earned her M.A. in English as well as a Composition Certificate from San Francisco State University and a Post-Secondary Reading Certificate from Cal State Fullerton.  In the 15 years that she has been teaching college, she has enjoyed working at a number of Bay Area community colleges as well as Pasadena City College where she was exposed to a wide variety of composition curricula and experience teaching integrated reading/writing, reading, composition, Filipino-American literature, Latino-American literature, and other courses, including learning community courses and writing-across-the-curriculum courses. At Pasadena City College, in addition to teaching composition and literature, she worked as a faculty tutor in the Pasadena City College Writing Center and collaborated with Kathy Green in developing online curricula for reading and writing. She is currently co-lead faculty for one of City College of San Francisco’s accelerated courses and calls curriculum and faculty development her primary professional interests outside the classroom.


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