week 5- coherence transitions types of paragraphs

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Transcript week 5- coherence transitions types of paragraphs

COHERENCE,
TRANSITIONS, &
TYPES OF
PARAGRAPHS
Week 5
COHERENCE
 Sentences are sensibly organized so the reader can easily follow
your thoughts
Strategies for Writing Coherently
1. Be Clear—eliminate wordiness and avoid overly long and complicated
sentences
2. Guide the Reader—use transitional expressions, use pronouns and
synonyms for words you’ve already used, repeat key words and phrases,
and use parallel structure
3. Put Your Thoughts in Order—arrange information so that “first things
come first”
ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURES
 Chronological Order— “Time Order”
 Tell events in the order they occurred
 Use for narratives and describing steps in a process
 Spatial Order— “Where Things Are in Relation to Other
Things”
 Provide details in an orderly way (left to right, top to bottom, near to far,
etc.)
 Use for descriptions of people, places, and objects
 Order of Importance— “Degree of Importance”
 Provide details in order of increasing or decreasing importance
 Use for persuasive writing
ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURES
 Logical Order— “Grouping Based on Similarities”
 Give information in the order readers need to know it
 Use logic to determine which details to group together or where to provide
definitions or background information
 General-Specific Order— “Triangle Structure”
 Make a general (broad) statement first, then include specifics that support the
generalization
 Give specific details first and end with a generalization that grows out of the details
IN-CLASS ASSIGNMENT
Improve the paragraph for exercise 5.1 by putting its details into a clear
spatial order.
Make up details as necessary.
Add transitional expressions.
Reorder information.
Combine sentences.
Write your revised paragraph in your notebook.
TRANSITIONAL WORDS & EXPRESSIONS
 One way to improve coherence is to use words that indicate a
TRANSITION from one idea to the next.
 You use different transitions depending on how you have organized your
information
 Look at Handout 5.2
 When would you use the word however?
 What words would you use to transition from the cause to the effect?
 What expression would you use if you were explaining how something is different
from something you’ve already described?
IN-CLASS ASSIGNMENT
 Use the notes on the next slide to write a unified, coherent, well-
developed paragraph.
 You do not need to use all of the information.
 Be sure to include a clear topic sentence.
IN-CLASS ASSIGNMENT
Pericles (495-429 B.C.)
 Great leader of city-state of Athens during its Golden Age (460-430 B.C.)
 A nobleman; wealthy; well-liked
 Supported democracy
 People making decisions for themselves
 Assembly of thousands of Athenian men met many times a year; voted on city’s business
 Activities:
 Built up navy, trade by sea
 Hired best artists to create new buildings
 Encouraged scientists, philosophers
 Died in 429 B.C. during war that Sparta (another city-state) started with
Athens
TYPES OF PARAGRAPHS
DESCRIPTIVE WRITING
 The purpose for writing is to tell about a person, emotion, animal,
place, or object
 Sensory details appeal to the reader’s five sense (sight, sound, touch,
taste, smell)
 Sensory details create a main impression, or mood
 Spatial order presents the sensory details in order from left to right,
top to bottom, near to far, or inside to outside
DESCRIPTIVE WRITING
Just below the bare, rocky summit, we unexpectedly came upon a
swimming-pool-sized pond. It was gray-green and tucked in amongst
the weathered and gently rounded gray and green-gray boulders and
jagged slabs of stone. We sat for a moment and rested. Moist clouds
had enveloped the mountain, and we could see no more than a few
hundred yards distant in any direction. The icy water had a clean,
fresh, invigorating taste. Our deep breaths were rewarded with the
bracing, moist mountain air, which was sweetened by the faint
fragrance of the last of the pines just a few feet below us. And it was
quiet up there above the timber line, completely quiet. Only the
occasional harsh sounds of the hawks circling overhead intruded on
the eerie silence.
TYPES OF PARAGRAPHS
NARRATIVE WRITING
 The purpose for writing is to tell how to do something or to
recount a story (fictional or true)
 The story or process is broken down into its most critical steps or
events
 Chronological order relates the events in the order in which they
occurred
 Chronological order explains steps in a process in the order in which
each step is done
NARRATIVE WRITING—SHERMAN ALEXIE
I wander the streets with a regular crew—my teammates, my defenders, my
posse. It’s Rose of Sharon, Junior, and me. We matter to each other if we
don’t matter to anybody else. Rose of Sharon is a big woman, about seven
feet tall if you’re measuring over-all effect and about five feet tall if you’re only
talking about the physical. She’s a Yakama Indian of the Wishram variety.
Junior is a Colville, but there are about a hundred and ninety-nine tribes that
make up the Colville, so he could be anything. He’s goodl-ooking, though, like
he just stepped out of some “Don’t Litter the Earth” public-service
advertisement. He’s got those great big cheekbones that are like planets, you
know, with little moons orbiting them. He gets me jealous, jealous, and
jealous. If you put Junior and me next to each other, he’s the Before
Columbus Arrived Indian and I’m the After Columbus Arrived Indian. I am
living proof of the horrible damage that colonialism has done to us Skins. But
I’m not going to let you know how scared I sometimes get of history and its
ways. I’m a strong man, and I know that silence is the best method of dealing
with white folks.
TYPES OF PARAGRAPHS
EXPOSITORY WRITING
 The purpose for writing is to explain or inform
 Structures include comparison-contrast, cause-effect,
classification, or definition
 Main Ideas are stated as early and as clearly as possible
 Facts, examples, quotations, statistics, and definitions are used
as supporting details that develop the main idea
 Logical order is used to present details in a way that makes sense to
the reader
 Transitions are used to help the reader follow your thinking
EXPOSITORY WRITING—NEWS STORY
By MATT PHIFER, ABC News
May 13, 2011
Funding for the arts and music in schools was thrust back into the limelight last Friday as the
President's Committee on Arts and Humanities released a report urging educators to re-invest
in arts education.
Over an 18-month period, the committee gathered information from multiple studies and
sources about the benefits of arts education and offered ways to bring the arts to underserved
schools.
Taking the findings of its report, PCAH is making five recommendations to create a wellrounded K-12 education in American schools. They include building "collaborations among
different approaches" for teaching the arts, expanding "in-school opportunities for teaching
artists," and utilizing "federal and state policies to reinforce the place of arts in K-12 education."
The committee's report also revealed two major themes. One theme is the diverse style of
teaching the arts across the country due to "nonprofit community organizations, visionary
school principals, private philanthropy, and parent groups."
TYPES OF PARAGRAPHS
PERSUASIVE WRITING
 The purpose for writing is to convince someone that your opinion is
correct or to move someone to action
 Get your reader’s attention in the first sentence
 Opinion statements clearly express your view on the topic
 Reason and evidence support your opinion (facts, examples, statistics,
anecdotes, quotations, etc.)
 Details are arranged in Order of Importance—from most to least
important (or reversed)
 Includes a call to action that tells the reader what you want them to
do with the information you gave them
PERSUASIVE WRITING—SOPHIE BURNIEIKA
Stand up to bullies—Rindge Avenue Upper School
Imagine walking down the hallway on your very first day of high school.You’re
pushed into the lockers, your books are knocked out of your hand, and you're
laying on the ground crying.
“So what, it’s the first day. Everyone gets pushed around a little,” you say to
yourself.
The same thing happens the next day, and the next, and goes on throughout the
year. By sophomore year, you’re known as the most unpopular kid in school.You
get called all sorts of rude names and have more bruises than you can count. No
one wants to be your friend and you feel like dying.
What would you do?
Over 50 percent of bullying is cyberbullying. Of course all bullying is bad, but
cyber can sometimes be the worst.
WEEK 5 QUIZ
Write a paragraph for two of the topics suggested below:
1. A persuasive paragraph for or against grading students on
report cards
2. A descriptive paragraph about your favorite place, book, or
music
3. A narrative paragraph about an adventure, a contest, or a
humorous event
4. An expository paragraph explaining the rules of a game or
giving information about a career you are considering