Guidelines In Writing_rz

  • November 2019
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View Guidelines In Writing_rz as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 737
  • Pages: 15
Guidelines in Writing

Some points to remember  

 

 

Writing is a skill that people all walks of like must perform Good writing requires : 1. Good Grammar 2. Good Organization To write effectively, 1. Learn some strategies 2. Practice them Writing is a process Overcome writer’s block by understanding the steps in the process.

Steps in the writing process (1)  Prewriting:  1.

Know what to write (text type/genre) who reads it (style), and why you write it (mode and tone).

Chose and narrow a topic.  Generate ideas (listing, clustering, asking questions, brainstorming, free writing).  Collect data. 

Steps in the writing process (2) Outlining/Planning:  1. Group ideas : put similar ideas into a group, delete double ideas, and more ideas coming up during the grouping.  2. Make the ideas into an outline. (Simple paragraph and essay outlines). Outlining improve organization, speed and grammar. 

Draft→revising/editing →Final draft

PARAGRAPH A Paragraph is a basic unit of organization in which a group of related sentences develops one main idea.  A good paragraph consists of: 1. topic sentence 2. supporting sentences 3. concluding sentence(s) ● An effective paragraph must be: 1. unified 2. coherent 3. adequately developed 

Unity To make a paragraph unified, we should have only one main idea.  Other supporting ideas must relate to and directly explain the main idea.  The main idea is expressed in the topic sentence.  The position of the topic sentence in the paragraph: beginning, end, beginning and end, middle, and implied. 

Writing a topic sentence (1) A

topic sentence is a sentence.  It has a topic and a controlling idea. ● A boss has good reasons for not answering the phone directly. ● An average American teenager consumes enormous quantities of junk food.

Writing a topic sentence (2) It is not too broad and not too specific. ▪ Padang food is delicious. (too broad) ▪ Padang food is has strong taste and greasy because the Minangkabau use too many spicies and because everything is in oil . (too specific) ● It has too many ideas: Jakarta is famous for its hot climate, heavy traffic, narrow streets and less friendly people. (too many ideas) 

Coherence  For

a paragraph to be coherent, the sentence should be arranged logically and flow smoothly from one to the next.  Ways to achieve coherence: 1. Arranged sentences in specific order. a. Time order b. Space order c. Order of climax d. General to particular e. Particular to general

Coherence (2) Ways to achieve coherence: 2. Make the relationship among sentences clear. a. Maintain consistency in point of view. (Eliminate shifts in person, number and tense) b. Use a parallel construction c. Repeat the key word d. Use transitional markers.

Note on Cohesion 

For a paragraph to be cohesive, use grammar devices to make sentences flow smoothly.



The house is surrounded by a large garden. There are many trees such as mango, guava and star fruit trees in the garden. Bamboo benches lie under the trees, purposely made to while away time in the cool shades… The house is surrounded by a large garden. In the garden there are many trees such as mango, guava and star fruit trees. Under the trees lie bamboo benches purposely made to while away time in the cool shades.



ADEQUATE DEVELOPMENT (1)  How

much detail has to be provided to support the main idea?  Is the detail sufficient/adequate?  The length of the paragraph depends on:    

1. The type of the audience 2. The complexity of the subject matter 3. The construction of the topic sentence 4. The purpose of the paragraph

ADEQUATE DEVELOPMENT (2) 

Methods of paragraph development: 1. Detail 2. Example 3. Illustration 4. Comparison and contrast 5. Analogy 6. Cause and effect 7. Analysis 8. Classification 9. Definition

Points to remember (1)  Information   

should be:

1. Relevant : Air pollution in Jakarta. 2. Truthful : She is very popular. 3. Accurate : He won many gold medals. Elvys Presley.

Points to remember (2)  Arguments      

should be:

Be logically sound. Be supported with facts/data/evidence from a reliable resource. Fallacies (hasty generalization) Distortion in language (negative: eg. radical, permissive, cover-up) False issues (misleading information) Discrediting to proponents (attacking a person’s character)

Related Documents

Guidelines In Writing_rz
November 2019 5
Guidelines In Lesson.docx
December 2019 10
Guidelines
November 2019 60
Guidelines
April 2020 41