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Table of Contents About Unit 3
This unit introduces you to one of the most important patterns of expository writing, the "analytical paragraph." It is a pattern of explanation that you can witness every day--on the evening news, on the radio, and certainly in written communications. The analytical paragraph is an explanatory paragraph that includes within it references or direct quotations from an outside source of information. The word "analytical" refers to the process of analysis employed in the use of the outside source material. Each reference to or passage from an outside source has been selected for use through the process of analysis of the entire source. Furthermore, how the writer develops information from the source in the paragraph also reflects the critical thinking skill of analysis.
Studies and assignments completed in this unit emphasize the following educational objectives: Increasing Writing Skills You will be able to:
You will be able to:
You will be able to:
You will be able to:
You will be able to:
Concepts and Terminology Discussed in Unit 3 (1) the generation of thesis and topic sentences
Following is a list of assignments and directions for completing the analytical paragraph exercises. (1) analysis of a news magazine article (2) completion of a worksheet (3) completion of three analytical paragraphs
Steps in the Assignments for Unit 3 Goal:
Objectives:
Steps: 1. Select an article on a subject of national or international significance from a news magazine (US News and World Report, Time, Newsweek, etc.). The article should probably be more than nine paragraphs long. 2. Beside each paragraph write a word or brief phrase that identifies the main idea. 3. On a separate sheet of paper, in a column, copy the main ideas for each paragraph as you have written them beside each paragraph in the article. 1. drought in the Southeast
4. Circle three ideas in the list in Step #3 that seem to have something in common. 5. Complete the following statements: Complete: "These three ideas are about (subject category)____________________." Example: "These three ideas are about (subject category) the continuing drought ." Complete: "These three ideas are (functional category) ." Example: "These three ideas are (functional category) effects ." 6. Write a periodic thesis sentence that focuses on these three ideas that you have circled. Use the following sentence frame to develop the initial draft of your thesis: Example: Three effects of the continuing Southeastern drought are (1) a pledge of government support, (2) an outpouring of outside help, but (3) a prospect of crossover problems in farm-related industries. 7. Write three topic sentences, each one reflecting one of the three main ideas in the thesis. Examples:
8. On separate sheets of paper, compose three analytical paragraph, each one beginning with one of the topic sentences that you developed in Step #7. 9. Following the topic sentence in each paragraph, compose a lead-in statement for a quotation from the article that includes the following information: (a) name of the author (if unknown, refer to the
"correspondent," the "reporter," etc.)
An example of a lead-in statement: In his August 4, 1986, Time article, "Shedding Sweat, Tears and Dollars," Stephen Koepp reviews the federal government's reaction to the lingering drought. 10. Select a passage from your magazine article that fits the main idea in your topic sentence of each paragraph and write it after the lead-in statement. 11. Develop the third part of each paragraph using a combination of two techniques such as paraphrase and interpretation. Underline once the words that illustrate your use of the first technique; underline twice the words that illustrate your use of the second technique. Once you have used a technique in paragraph for this assignment, use different techniques in the development of the third part of the other paragraphs. What to hand in: At the end of your writing, you should have ready to hand in the following assignments and its components: (1) your magazine article with the main ideas of each paragraph clearly identified in a word or phrase (see example); (2) a sheet with a list of the main ideas of each paragraph in the article, three circled main ideas, a thesis sentence using those three main ideas, and three topic sentences derived from the thesis; and
(3) three additional pages, each of which contains
an analytical paragraph, each one beginning with a topic sentence listed
on the first page above.
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