Published by Pearson (October 3, 2013) © 2014
Chris Anson | Robert SchweglerPART 1 WRITING FOR READERS
1 Writers, Readers, and Communities
Academic, public, and work communities
1 Communities in action
2 Choices and limits
Identifying electronic communities
2 Discovering and Planning
Getting started
1 Try informal writing
2 Use listing
3 Ask strategic questions
Keeping a writing/reading journal
1 How to keep a reading and writing journal
2 Thinking, writing, and discovering
Structuring ideas and information
1 Draw a cluster
2 Create a tree diagram
3 Build a time sequence
4 Create a problem-solution grid
5 Outline
Planning: Paper in progress
3 Purpose, Thesis, and Audience
Recognizing your purpose
1 Identify the focus
2 Define the purpose
Using purpose to guide your writing
1 Rough out a purpose structure
Defining a thesis or main idea
1 Turn topics into theses
2 Complicate or extend your rough thesis
3 Expand your thesis with specifics
4 Modify your thesis
Different kinds of thesis statements
Recognizing your audience
Specific readers and communities of readers
Adapting to readers and communities of readers
4 Drafting
From planning to drafting
1 Draft in manageable parts
2 Develop a general structure
3 Assess your purpose and redraft
Drafting strategies
1 Write about your writing
2 Draft quickly
3 Semidraft
4 Talk it out or take a break
Collaborative drafting
1 Do parallel drafting
2 Do team drafting
3 Do intensive drafting
5 Revising, Editing, and Proofreading
Major revisions
1 Redraft unworkable material
2 Reorganize poorly arranged paragraphs or sections
3 Add new material
4 Delete unnecessary or redundant material
Minor revisions
1 Revise for sense
2 Revise for style
3 Revise for economy
Collaborative revising
1 Respond helpfully
2 Make the most of response
3 Workplace collaboration
Revising: Paper in progress
Editing your own writing
1 Final editing for economy and style
2 Editing for grammatical problems
Collaborative editing
Editing on the computer
1 What computer editors can do
2 What computer editor can’t do
Proofreading
6 Paragraphs
Focused paragraphs
Creating paragraph focus
1 Topic sentence at the beginning
2 Topic sentence plus a limiting or clarifying sentence
3 Topic sentence at the end
4 Topic sentence implied rather than stated
Paragraph coherence
Creating paragraph coherence
1 Repeating words and phrases
2 Supplying transitions
3 Using parallel structure
Developed paragraphs
1 Developing paragraphs with details
2 Creating paragraph structures
Introductory and concluding paragraphs
1 Creating introductory paragraphs
2 Creating concluding paragraphs
7 Sentences
Clear sentences
1 Use significant subjects
2 Avoid unnecessary nominalizations
3 Use I, we, and you as subjects
4 Be careful with strings of nouns
5 Use clear and specific verbs
6 Keep subjects and verbs clearly related
Direct sentences
Emphatic sentences
1 Use sentence beginnings and endings
2 Create emphatic sentence patterns
3 Use the passive voice with care
Revising for variety
1 Vary sentence length
2 Vary sentence types
3 Vary sentence structure and patterns
4 Create surprise
8 Assessing Writing
Assessing your own writing
1 Saying what you want to say
2 Sharing what you want to share
3 Being honest about things th