BASIC WRITING 1000, SECTION VII

September 28, 2007

Online Class — September 28th, 2007

Filed under: September 28 — sfcenglish @ 6:45 am

CH. 4 – THE NARRATIVE PARAGRAPH (a paragraph that tells a story)

Major Points:

Stories are also called NARRATIVES. They are based on a series of events. Here are questions to answer when you’re writing a narrative paragraph:

WHAT happened?

WHEN and where did it happen?

WHY did it happen?

WHAT did it mean to you?

Begin by freewriting. Think of an event or experience that caused you to feel a certain emotion – love, anger, embarrassment, loyalty.

Don’t worry about grammar or spelling at this point. Just right down whatever you can remember. By reading what you put down on paper during freewriting, you will see whether your topic is interesting enough and whether it’s worth developing and editing. Your topic sentence will underline the emotion you felt. For example: My first day at St. Francis College was the scariest day of my life.

Make up a list of details involved in the experience. To help connect your details use such words as first, then, after, next, while, during, and finally.

Be sure to give your paragraph a title. E.g. My First Day of School, The Bus Ride, How I Learned to Swim

VOCABULARY BUILDER 1. Abound. 2. Automaton. 3. Prognosticate. 4. Matron. 5. Compound.

Abound – to exist in great numbers

Prognosticate – to predict a future event

Automaton – a mechanical person; a robot

Matron – an older married woman

Compound – to increase or add to

Fill in the blanks. Some of the missing words we learned in class on Wednesday. Refer to your exercise handout.

The worlds of narrative paragraphs _________________ with wonders. Yet people who don’t like stories have ______________ that in a hundred years the humans on planet Earth will no longer need storytellers. What everyone, from a teenager to a _________ , will need is an ______________programmed to do his or her domestic tasks. To _________ the story haters’ prediction, some _________ scientists believe that before the end of this century planet Earth will be _________ with book-devouring robots.

You don’t have to bring this exercises to class. But be sure to memorize the new words and know how to use them in sentences. There may be a quiz on Monday.

ASSIGNMENTS:

1) Write a NARRATIVE PARAGRAPH, upload it to your page on the class wiki, and comment on the paragraphs written by your groupmates.

2) Memorize the TEN new words (FIVE from Wednesday’s class) and know how to use them in sentences. (You didn’t save your Wednesday’s handout?
Here are the words: voracious, indiscriminate, eminent, steeped, replete.)

3) Read the narrative paragraph written by Helen Keller (Ch. 4). Using Biography Reference Bank database on the library website (hint: click on the Find Articles link on the homepage) find the list of books written by Helen Keller, PRINT it out (the page that lists the books) and BRING the page to class. (Note that you can access the library databases from home. You will need your Blackboard login information, i.e. username and password.)

FOR MONDAY — Read the short story titled A Different Kind of Love Story and be prepared to discuss it in class. To read the short story CLICK HERE.

Any Questions?

sfcenglish@gmail.com

See you on Monday.

September 20, 2007

Online Class — September 21, 2007

Filed under: September 21 — sfcenglish @ 1:00 am

 

Summary of Ch. 3

Major Points:

1. Paragraphs that give examples

Examples are facts and specific cases that support a statement by illustrating it or providing a clearer picture of it. Examples answer questions like these:

  • Can you explain that to me?
  • Can you be more specific?
  • Can you show that to me?

Remember that examples should be relevant to your topic.

2. Choosing your topic

Jonathan Gold’s topic is Street Food.

Lara Flynn Boyle’s topic is Sundays in Chicago.

Writers often think of examples first and then discover a topic they want to write about.

3. Brainstorming

Keep in mind that even if you have a topic, before you begin writing you need to brainstorm or pre-write. Think of examples and write them down. In what order do your want to present them to your readers?

Do a few drafts of your topic sentence. Which one describes your topic better? Do your examples support your topic sentence?

4. Discovery Draft

A discover draft is a rough draft that helps you understand what you want to write about. Thinking about your ideas is important when you’re gathering them; but it won’t help you write a good draft. Remember that good writing is REWRITING. Get it out of your system first, then edit it.

Verb Moods and Tenses

Below is a summary of what we discussed in class on Wednesday.

The subjunctive mood is used in dependent clauses that do the following: 1) express a wish; 2) begin with if and express a condition that does not exist (is contrary to fact); 3) begin with as if and as though when such clauses describe a speculation or condition contrary to fact; and 4) begin with that and express a demand, requirement, request, or suggestion.

  • She wishes her boyfriend were here.
  • If Juan were more aggressive, he’d be a better hockey player.
  • We would have passed if we had studied harder.
  • He acted as if he were guilty.
  • I requested that he be present at the hearing.

Sequence of Tenses

Brought to you by the Purdue University Online Writing Lab.

Strictly speaking, in English, only two tenses are marked in the verb alone, present (as in “he sings”) and past (as in “he sang”). Other English language tenses, as many as thirty of them, are marked by other words called auxiliaries. Understanding the six basic tenses allows one to recreate much of the reality of time in his writing. The six are:

  • Simple Present: They walk
  • Present Perfect: They have walked
  • Simple Past: They walked
  • Past Perfect: They had walked


Future:
They will walk.
Future Perfect: They will have walked

Problems in sequencing tenses usually occur with the perfect tenses, all of which are formed by adding an auxiliary or auxiliaries to the past participle, the third principal part.

ring, rang, rung
walk, walked, walked

The most common auxiliaries are forms of “be,” “can,” “do,” “may,” “must,” “ought,” “shall,” “will,” “has,” “have,” “had,” and they are the forms we shall use in this most basic discussion.

Present Perfect

The present perfect consists of a past participle (the third principal part) with “has” or “have.” It designates action which began in the past but which continues into the present or the effect of which still continues.

1. Betty taught for ten years. (simple past)
2. Betty has taught for ten years. (present perfect)
The implication in (1) is that Betty has retired; in (2), that she is still teaching.

1. John did his homework. He can go to the movies.
2. If John has done his homework, he can go to the movies.
Infinitives, too, have perfect tense forms when combined with “have,” and sometimes problems arise when infinitives are used with verbs such as “hope,” “plan,” “expect,” and “intend,” all of which usually point to the future (I wanted to go to the movie. Janet meant to see the doctor.)

Past Perfect

The past perfect tense sets up a sequence by marking the action which began and usually was completed before the action in the main verb.

1. If I had been there, I would have said hello to her!
2. John had hoped to have won the trophy.

Thus the action of the main verb points back in time; the action of the perfect infinitive has been completed.The past perfect tense designates action in the past just as simple past does, but the action of the past perfect is action completed in the past before another action.

1. John raised vegetables and later sold them. (past)
2. John sold vegetables that he had raised. (past perfect)
The vegetables were raised before they were sold.

1. Renee washed the car when George arrived (simple past)
2. Renee had washed the car when George arrived. (past perfect)
In (1), she waited until George arrived and then washed the car. In (2), she had already finished washing the car by the time he arrived.
In sentences expressing condition and result, the past perfect tense is used in the part that states the condition.

1. If I had done my exercises, I would have passed the test.
2. I think George would have been elected if he hadn’t sounded so pompous.
Notice: There can be only one “would have” action group in a sentence.

Future Perfect Tense

The future perfect tense designates action that will have been completed at a specified time in the future.

1. Saturday I will finish my housework. (simple future)
2. By Saturday noon, I will have finished my housework. (future perfect)

Review

1. Judy saved thirty dollars. (past)

2. Judy will save thirty dollars. (future)

3. Judy has saved thirty dollars. (present perfect)

4. Judy had saved thirty dollars by the end of last month. (past perfect)

5. Judy will have saved thirty dollars by the end of this month. (future perfect)

Assignments 

1. Choose ONE of the four topics on p.69 (Discoveries) and write a paragraph. Your paragraph should have a TOPIC SENTENCE and supporting sentences that provide examples.

Keep in mind that not every sentence you write should have an example in it. There are transitional sentences that don’t require examples.  This paragraph should be at least 7-10 sentences long. If you wish to make the paragraph longer, that’s perfectly fine too. 

UPLOAD your paragraph to your page on the wiki. Comment on the paragraphs written by the members of your group. 

Questions to keep in mind: 

What do I like best about this paragraph?
Does it have a clear topic sentence?
Are the examples interesting?
Which sentences (if any) should be moved or reorganized? 

2. Are these sentences correct? Type them on a separate page, put a C(correct) or W (wrong) next to them, and bring the page to class.

  1. If she was in love with him, they would get married. 
  2. It’s crucial that Bob come on time.
  3. If this classroom was any smaller, we’d have to go out in the hallway to change our minds.
  4. Doug wished that Elvis were still alive to star in a new movie set in Vegas. 
  5.  Once he had wrote a paragraph, he went upstairs to take a nap.
  6. Yesterday the plane have flown over our house.
  7. John has forbade us to play with the cats.
  8.  I will have wash the car when they come home tomorrow.

Click Here to go back to the Class Wiki.

 

 

September 13, 2007

ONLINE CLASS — 9/14/07

Filed under: September 14 — sfcenglish @ 11:29 pm

Summary of Ch. 2

Major Points:

A PARAGRAPH is a group of sentences that focus on a single topic.

A Topic Sentence announces the topic of the paragraph. The rest of the paragraph presents information and supporting ideas.

Concluding Sentence lets readers know the paragraph is finished.

What is a good topic? Any topic that interests you. Ask yourself: How much do I know about the topic? Is the topic focused enough to be explained in a paragraph?

THREE MAIN REASONS TO WRITE:

to Express, to Inform, to Persuade.

How to gather ideas:

  • Brainstorm – list thoughts about the topic
  • Freewrite – writing nonstop for a set period of time
  • Cluster – drawing a map of your ideas.

The SIX QUESTIONS journalists use to gather information:

WHO? WHAT? WHEN? WHERE? WHY? HOW?

Strengthen your paragraph focus:

  • Check that your topic sentence expresses a main point.
  • Make sure every supporting sentence refers directly to the topic sentence.
  • Delete any sentence that is off topic.

Click here for more tips on the Web.

Sample Paragraph:

Queen Elizabeth Park, filled with the scent of pine and cedar, gives me much pleasure when I walk my dog. QE park, as the neighbours call it, shines as a beautiful place to go: the lower reaches, which I prefer, offers evergreens, a pond, and a stream. Tashi loves to sniff along the stream banks. When we round the hill to the south side of the park, if we’re lucky that day, we catch the sun as we walk into the wind on the crest, where fine views of Galiano Island and Tsawassen await and the air smells like fresh line-dried laundry. Then, we head down the steep hill amid the trees on the west side of the park, down to where the ground is marshy and the ducks swim on a large pond. QE Park speaks softly when we are walking. (from http://palc.sd40.bc.ca/palc/classes/sample.htm)

Library Instruction

http://library.stfranciscollege.edu/instruction/basics.htm

http://library.stfranciscollege.edu/instruction/SFCcatalog.htm

Assignments:

1. Write a TOPIC SENTENCE for the following topics:

  • St. Francis College
  • My family
  • My country at war
  • Rowdy neighbors

2. Work on your group paragraph.

Both assignments are DUE MONDAY, Sept. 17. If you experience problems or do no know how to upload the assignments, print them out and bring them to class.

*Upload Assignment #1 to the page on the class wiki that has your

name.

Upload Assignment #2 (the paragraph) to your Group’s Assignment page. Give your files names, so I know who wrote what.

E.g. lewis_assignment1_9_14_07, or group3_9_15_07

For Monday’s Class

Read Ch. 22, Sections A and B. Go over the activities in those sections. We’ll do them together in class.

Prof. K.

sfcenglish@gmail.com

718-489-3445

CLICK HERE to go back to the Class Wiki.

Blog at WordPress.com.