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The Basic Checklist

The Basic Checklist. Chapter Overview. 1 . The Basic Checklist 2. Writing Effectively 3. Speaking Effectively. Lesson Overview. What is the purpose of the basic checklist? What are the six steps in the basic checklist? What is your purpose? Why is understanding your audience important?

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The Basic Checklist

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  1. The Basic Checklist

  2. Chapter Overview 1. The Basic Checklist 2. Writing Effectively 3. Speaking Effectively Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  3. Lesson Overview • What is the purpose of the basic checklist? • What are the six steps in the basic checklist? • What is your purpose? • Why is understanding your audience important? • What are ways of conducting research? Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  4. Lesson Overview • How do you support your ideas? • What are the benefits of getting organized? • What are the organizational patterns? • What are the benefits of outlining? • What are the benefits of drafting and editing? • What are the benefits of fighting for feedback? Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  5. Quick Write Imagine… that a new community service organization at your school has decided to sponsor a program, the “Lunch Project,” to make, package, and deliver meals for a local outreach center. The center serves food to the homeless in your community. One committee of the Lunch Project has the job of publishing a four-page monthly newsletter about the program. The newsletter, called Lunch Lines, will go to students, alumni, parents, teachers, local businesses, and community members. Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic # 20132907 www.clipart.com

  6. Quick Write You are going to be a writer on the newsletter staff. What do you think the purposes of the newsletter should be? • To inform? • To promote the program? • To solicit donations? • To profile the families helped? Think about the kinds of stories you and the other writers might want to cover. Make a list of five specific story ideas. Share it with a partner in class. Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  7. Purpose of the Basic Checklist • The key to good writing is process • The basic checklist is a set of guidelines to help you through the process Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  8. Fight for feedback • Draft and edit • Get organized • Support your ideas • Conduct research to support your ideas • Analyze purpose and audience Steps in the Basic Checklist Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  9. Your Purpose • Your purpose is what you want your audience to think, do, say, or believe after they’ve read what you’ve written • Some possible purposes of your writing: • to inform • to direct • to persuade • to inspire Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  10. Purpose Statement A purpose statement is a single sentence that sums up what you’re trying to do—your “bottom line” Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  11. Understanding Your Audience The better you know your audience, the better you’ll be able to write a message that will accomplish your purpose Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  12. Your Tone • When you are writing, think about the tone of your message • Tone is not what you say, but how you say it • Pay close attention to how your writing sounds Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  13. Conducting Research Researchis the process of digging up information that supports your purpose—it can help you become an expert on your topic Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  14. Using the Library • Librarians (real, live human beings) can help you find information and give basic research advice • Free access to books and periodicals—most of which aren’t available on the Internet • Information has been critically reviewed—it’s more trustworthy Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  15. Using the Internet • Convenient source of information • Search engines are a good place to start—such as Google or Ask Jeeves • But be careful! How do you know if information on the Internet is reliable? Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  16. Using the Internet • Ask yourself: Who created the website? What are the authors’ motives? • If you find the same piece of information at two or more sites, the chances of its accuracy are greater • It’s better to refer to original material than to rely on someone else’s interpretation of it Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  17. Supporting Your Ideas • Sort through the information that provides the best support • For a controversial question or problem, arrange the evidence in a logical argument Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  18. Using Good Evidence • A definition is the precise meaning or significance of a word or phrase • Anexampleis a specific instance chosen to represent a larger fact in order to clarify an idea or support a claim • Testimony is the comments of authorities that are used to support a claim • Statistics provide a summary of data in a numerical format • Explanation makes a point plain or understandable or creates a relationship between cause and effect Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  19. Logical Arguments are Important • They make a case, or a series of statements intended to persuade others • They give your readers enough information to make decisions on your subject Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  20. Benefits of Getting Organized Time Saver… • You’ll save time and frustration • Help your audience see your points • If you take the time to organize and outline your work before starting to write, you’re halfway toward your goal Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  21. Organizational Patterns: To Inform • Topical Pattern • Follows a logical order that reflects the nature of the material and the purpose of the writing • If you were writing about types of foods needed for the Lunch Project program, you might categorize the material according to the Food Guide Pyramid Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of USDA.gov

  22. Patterns: To Inform • Chronological Pattern • Use this pattern to discuss events, problems, or processes in the sequence of time in which they take place or should take place (histories, processes, biographies) • In profiling a Lunch Project volunteer in the newsletter, you might tell, in chronological order, how the student became involved with the project Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  23. Patterns: To Inform • Spatial/Geographical Pattern • Start at some point in space and proceed in sequence to other points • It is based on a directional strategy—north to south, clockwise or counterclockwise, bottom to top, right to left, and so on • Maybe Lunch Lines could publish a map and directions for getting to the community outreach center Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  24. Patterns: To Persuade • Problem/Solution Pattern • Use to identify a problem and one or more possible solutions, or to describe an issue and possible techniques for resolving it • If scheduling deliveries for the Lunch Project becomes complicated, for example, Lunch Lines might publish an article on how to solve the problem Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  25. Patterns: To Persuade • Cause/Effect Pattern • Use to show how one or more ideas, actions, or conditions lead to other ideas, actions, or conditions • You can begin with the effects, and then identify the causes, or vice versa • For instance, an editorial in Lunch Lines might discuss how poverty leads to unhealthy, high-risk behaviors Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  26. Patterns: To Persuade • Reasoning/Logic Pattern • State a position and then provide support for it • Use this pattern when your purpose is to present research that will win over your audience • If you are trying to persuade teachers to support the Lunch Project, look at this issue through their eyes: Start out with the argument that they are most likely to accept, and then move on Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  27. Benefits of Outlining Outlining will: Test the flow of ideas Ease the pain of writing the first draft Help you focus on your purpose statement Save you effort when you edit Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  28. Drafting • Drafting is a quick, first writing of a paper, focused on ideas and not style • When you draft, you are a creator Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  29. Editing • When you edit, you shift from creator to critic • Editingis the slow, careful examination of a piece of writing to correct and clarify ideas and to ensure the proper form Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  30. Three-Step Approach to Editing • First pass: the big picture Arrangement/flow of ideas, purpose, length, introduction, conclusion, completeness • Second pass: paragraph structure and clarity Organization of main points and support, unity of focus, topic sentences • Third pass: details Unclear language, wordiness, and grammar and spelling errors; read your paper aloud as you edit Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  31. Fight for Feedback! • Feedbackis the response of another person to your writing • Why is a second pair of eyes necessary? • Even the best writers get so close to their projects that they can no longer see them objectively • You may omit vital information, fail to see a weakness in an argument, or overlook need for a transition Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  32. Accept Feedback • To make good use of feedback, you need an open mind • Learn to accept criticism • Don’t take comments personally Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

  33. Review • Experienced writers know that the key to good writing is process • The basic checklist can help guide you through that writing process • The checklist has six steps: analyze purpose and audience, conduct research, support your ideas, get organized, draft and edit, and fight for feedback Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  34. Review • Your purpose is what you want your audience to think, do, say, or believe after they’ve read what you’ve written • The better you know your audience, the better you’ll be able to write a message that will accomplish your purpose • Researchis the process of digging up information or evidence that supports your purpose. It can help you become an expert on your topic • For informative writing, you provide facts to support your ideas. For a controversial question or problem, you must assemble sound evidence as your foundation Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  35. Review • The organizational pattern you choose should depend on your purpose, the needs of your audience, and the nature of your material • You’ll save time and frustration if you take time to organize your thoughts and write an outline • When you draft, you are a creator. When you edit, you shift from creator to critic • Fight for feedback, accept it willingly and use it constructively—it’s an important step in the writing process Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  36. Summary • What is the purpose of the basic checklist? • What are the six steps in the basic checklist? • What is your purpose? • Why is understanding your audience important? • What are ways of conducting research? Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  37. Summary • How do you support your ideas? • What are the benefits of getting organized? • What are the organizational patterns? • What are the benefits of outlining? • What are the benefits of drafting and editing? • What are the benefits of fighting for feedback? Chapter 2, Lesson 1

  38. Next • Done—the basic checklist • Next—writing effectively Chapter 2, Lesson 1 Graphic courtesy of Clipart.com

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