Chapter 5: Focus on Supporting Details From this chapter, you’ll learn 1. how topic sentences and supporting details work together to create meaning. 2.
Download ReportTranscript Chapter 5: Focus on Supporting Details From this chapter, you’ll learn 1. how topic sentences and supporting details work together to create meaning. 2.
Chapter 5: Focus on Supporting Details From this chapter, you’ll learn 1. how topic sentences and supporting details work together to create meaning. 2. how to tell the difference between major and minor details. 3. how writers rely on readers to infer supporting details. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 1 5.1 Defining Terms Supporting Details • are specific sentences that explain, prove, or suggest the main idea. • can be reasons, illustrations, statistics, definitions, etc. • change according to the main idea they explain, prove, or imply. • clarify key terms and prove the author’s point. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 2 5.1 Connecting Topic Sentences and Supporting Details Topic Sentences • use general language. • make statements that raise questions. Supporting Details • place limits on how the general language can be understood. • answer the questions. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 3 5.1 Topic Sentences Raise Questions Topic Sentence: Lyndon Johnson, the thirty-sixth president of the United States, did much good and even more harm during his term in office. Questions raised: 1. How did Johnson do good? 2. How did he do harm? 3. How is it possible to do both at the same time? Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 4 5.1 Four Supporting Details Answer The Three Questions 1. Johnson was responsible for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. 2. Thanks to Lyndon Johnson, those over the age of sixty-five now have federally funded medical assistance in the form of Medicare. 3. Yet, although all the signs were there that the Vietnam War was disastrous for the United States and for Vietnam, Johnson kept the war going. 4. His stubborn determination in the face of guaranteed failure cost immeasurable suffering. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 5 Just so You Know In 1964, Lyndon Baines Johnson won the presidential election by so many votes, he was nicknamed “Landslide Johnson.” But by 1967, he had mired the United States in the Vietnam War in Southeast Asia, a war that he himself had worried would prove disastrous for the country and for his presidency. As public opinion turned against him, Johnson wasn’t sure he could win a second term. On March 31, 1968, he announced on television that he would not be a presidential candidate. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 6 5.2 Defining Terms Major Details • refer directly to the topic sentence. • clarify or prove some part of the topic sentence. Minor Details • follow and further develop major details. • are the most specific sentences in the paragraph. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 7 5.2 Major and Minor Details Work Together to Develop the Topic Sentence If diagrammed, the topic sentence along with the major and minor details, would look something like the ladder-like diagram that follows: Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 8 5.2 Diagram of Major and Minor Details with Topic Sentence Main idea: Most people don’t realize that the holiday we call Labor Day began under very sad circumstances. Major Detail: It got its start when President Grover Cleveland sent troops to break up a railroad workers’ strike, and many striking workers were injured; the strike was broken but the public was angry. Minor Detail: To calm the public’s outrage, Congress rushed the national holiday, called “Labor Day,” into law. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 9 A Word to the Wise Don’t be misled by the words major and minor. Minor details can add important information as they do in the previous example. While some add just emphasis or repetition, others provide key details. Always evaluate the minor details. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 10 5. 2 Can you Identify the Topic Sentence Along with the Major and Minor Details? 1. The e-mail usually includes quotations from the Bible. 2. With this scam, the target receives an e-mail from someone, supposedly a foreigner, who wants to spread the word of God but needs financial help because of illness, age, or government interference. 3. One popular Internet scam involves people of the Christian faith. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 11 5.2 Topic Sentences Can Offer Clues to Major Details. Some topic sentences provide explicit clues to major details. These topic sentences • include very general words and phrases that are plural and need individual examples to become meaningful, for instance, “various characteristics,” “new studies,” and “typical practices.” • leave it up to the major details to define each characteristic, study, and practice. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 12 5.2 Which Topic Sentence Provides a Clue to the Major Details? • The American painter Jackson Pollock (1912-1956) became a superstar in the art world practically over night, after his picture appeared in a 1949 issue of Life magazine. • History has not been kind to John C. Calhoun (1782-1850), the former vice-president and senator from North Carolina. • Early in the twentieth century, the Supreme Court’s rulings in a number of key cases put teeth into the Constitution’s guarantee of free speech. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 13 5.2 Recognizing Major Details • The correct answer is the third sentence: “Early in the twentieth century, the Supreme Court’s rulings in a number of key cases put teeth into the Constitution’s guarantee of free speech.” • The topic sentence announces to readers that each ruling or case will be a major detail. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 14 5.2 Recognizing Major Details Here’s a topic sentence. Read it carefully so you can determine how it relates to the sentences that follow: “For centuries, Chinese tradition celebrated the birth of a male child but despaired over the birth of a female, encouraging families to give male children better care than females, but as the society suffers a growing shortage of women to men, the government has launched a campaign designed to counter the traditional view of female insignificance.“ Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 15 5.2 Recognizing Major Details Which sentences would be major details in relation to the previous statement? 1. The government has begun offering bonuses to families with more than one female child. 2. The government has also changed inheritance laws making it easier for daughters to inherit family property. 3. The bonuses are not large but they are an incentive for most families. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 16 A Word to the Wise Although they aren’t as reliable as the topic sentences just covered, transitions are also clues to major details. Transitions like next, first, second, and finally frequently introduce major details. In effect, they say to readers, “Here’s another one. Pay attention.” Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 17 5.3 Writers Often Expect Readers to Infer Some Supporting Details. Where in the following passage does the author tell readers that the second sentence illustrates the first? “Cross training is used by many organizations to eliminate job tedium. At Ciba-Geigy, an agricultural chemical plant, workers set schedules, handle costs, and do job training.” Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 18 5.3 Inferring Supporting Details The correct answer is nowhere, because the writer expects readers to infer that the second sentence illustrates the first. Writers don’t put all the supporting details on the page. They often expect readers to supply a few, so be prepared to supply the necessary connections and details that the author suggests but does not express in words. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 19 5.3 Inferring Supporting Details What inferences is the reader expected to supply in order to make the following passage meaningful? Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 20 5.3 Inferring Supporting Details In 1965, John Lewis, Georgia’s long-time congressional representative, was a passionate civil rights activist, who participated in the march over Selma, Alabama’s blockaded Edmund Petrus bridge. During the march, Lewis and 90 other demonstrators were badly hurt. But the televised violence against the demonstrators, outraged the public, and increased support for African-American civil rights. Twenty-three years later, when Barack Obama was inaugurated, Lewis said, “Barack Obama is what comes at the end of that bridge in Selma.” Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 21 Finishing Up: Focus on Supporting Details You’ve previewed the major concepts and skills introduced in Chapter 5. Take this quick quiz to test your mastery of those skills and concepts, and you are ready to read the chapter. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 22 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details 1. If this is the topic sentence—”Prior to 2001, women in the American military rarely saw combat, but that is no longer true today.”— which one of the following sentences should be the major detail? Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 23 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details a. In the military, women are barred from joining combat branches like the infantry and special forces. b. In Iraq and Afghanistan, Army commanders, short of male soldiers, have quietly “attached” women to combat units. c. In 1948, women were granted permanent status in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 24 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details 2. In the the following topic sentence, what words would you expect the major details to further develop: “Giacomo Rizzolatti of Italy’s University of Parma has done some very interesting research on “mirror neurons.” Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 25 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details Explaining Answer 2: The most obvious phrase to be addressed by the major supporting details is “mirror neurons.” Even an audience of experts would expect some kind of definition. But “Rizzolatti’s interesting research” would also require some explanation. Without a definition of mirror neurons and an explanation of the research, the topic sentence would raise expectations in the reader that go unanswered. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 26 Just So You Know Mirror neurons are nerve cells activated in the brain when animals, including humans, watch someone else perform an activity. For instance, if you were intently watching someone putting together the pieces of a book shelf, the neurons firing in your brain would resemble those of the person you are watching. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 27 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details 3. In this pair of sentences, sentence a is a major detail and sentence b a minor one. Can you explain what makes the difference? a. Abraham Maslow was a psychologist, who tried to explain the commonly reported of experience of being suddenly overwhelmed by feelings of wonder and happiness. b. Maslow called that feeling a “peak experience.” Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 28 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details 4. In the two topic sentences that follow, which word or phrase provides a clue to the major supporting details? a. Astonishing though it might seem, many industries have begun advocating for more government intervention. b. The early twentieth century saw the emergence of several significant art movements. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 29 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details 5. What follows are two supporting details for this topic sentence: “The Civil War that tore the country apart had a powerful impact on the country’s farmers.” After you read the topic sentence, explain what information the reader has to supply to make the three sentences make sense. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 30 Finishing Up: Focusing on Supporting Details a. The Civil War had ravaged the countryside, leaving thousands of farmers with barely enough money to make ends meet. b. From that desperation emerged “The Farmers Alliance,” an agricultural organization determined to gain political power and change how the nation was run. Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 31 Brain Teaser Challenge Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 32 Brain Teaser Challenge Read the following four quotations. Then decide which more general main idea they illustrate. a. “I don’t care if a dude is purple with green breath as long as he can swing.” ( Miles Davis) b. “So what if we’re Asian. Listen to the flow of our rhyme, and you’ll forget what color we are.” (Chops, former member of the Asian-American rap group, Mountain Brothers) Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 33 Brain Teaser Challenge c. Long before the Civil Rights Act, long before Brown vs. The Board of Education, and long before President Truman’s integration of the armed forces, black and white musicians were breaking social taboos to learn from each other. (Jeff Perry, diversity trainer) d. “I don’t care if he’s purple [referring to white rapper Eminem], as long as he can rap!” (Dr. Dre) Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 34 The four quotes about music and musicians provide support for which more general quotation? 1. Music of all the arts has the most influence on the passions. (Napoleon Bonaparte) 2. If music be the food of love, play on. (Shakespeare) 3. Music is the universal language of mankind. (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow) 4. I don’t know anything about music. In my line, you don’t have to. (Elvis Presley) Copyright Laraine Flemming 2009 35