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1. Learning across the Curriculum
1. Writing to Learna. Studying the world through a range of disciplinesb. Using writing as a tool for learningc. Taking responsibility for reading, writing, and researchd. Recognizing that writing improves with practice
2. Learning in a Multimedia Worlda. Becoming aware of the persuasive power of imagesb. Making effective use of multimedia elementsc. Taking advantage of online and other electronic tools for learning
3. Learning in a Multilingual Worlda. Becoming aware of cultural differences in communicationb. Using writing to learn more about Englishc. Using learning tools that are available for multilingual students
2. Writing and Designing Papers
4. Reading, Thinking, Writing: The Critical Connectiona. Reading criticallyb. Thinking criticallyc. Writing critically
5. Planning and Shapinga. Learning how to approach assignmentsb. Exploring your ideasc. Developing a working thesisd. Planning a structure that suits your assignmente. Considering visuals
6. Drafting Text and Visualsa. Using online tools for draftingb. Developing ideas and using visualsc. Writing focused, clearly organized paragraphsd. Integrating visuals effectively
7. Revising and Editinga. Getting comments from readersb. Using campus, Internet, and community resourcesc. Using online tools for revisingd. Focusing on the purpose of your writinge. Testing your thesisf. Reviewing the structure of your paper as a whole g. Revising for paragraph development, paragraph unity, and coherenceh. Revising visualsi. Editing sentences j. Proofreading carefullyk. Learning from one student’s revisions
8. Designing Academic Papers and Portfoliosa. Considering audience and purposeb. Using computer toolbarsc. Thinking intentionally about designd. Compiling a portfolio
3. Common Assignments across the Curriculum
9. Informative Reportsa. Understanding the assignmentb. Approaching writing an informative report as a processc. Student paper: Informative reportd. Writing reviews of the literature
10. Interpretive Analyses and Writing about Literaturea. Understanding the assignmentb. Approaching writing an interpretive analysis as a processc. Student paper: Interpretive analysis
11. Argumentsa. Understanding the assignmentb. Approaching writing an argument as a processc. Student paper: Argument
12. Other Kinds of Writing Assignmentsa. Personal essaysb. Lab reports in the experimental sciencesc. Case studies in the social sciencesd. Essays examse. Coauthored projects
13. Oral Presentationsa. Planning and shaping your presentationb. Drafting your presentationc. Preparing for your presentation
14. Multimedia Writinga. Learning about tools for creating multimedia textsb. Analyzing imagesc. Creating a hypertext essayd. Creating multimedia presentationse. Creating a Web sitef. Creating and interacting with blogs
4. Writing beyond College
15. Service Learning and Community-Service Writinga. Addressing the community on behalf of your organization or yourselfb. Designing brochures, posters, and newsletters
16. Letters to Raise Awareness and Share Concerna. Writing about a public issueb. Writing as a consumer
17. Writing to Get and Keep a Joba. Exploring internship possibilitiesb. Keeping an up-to-date résuméc. Writing an application letterd. Preparing for a job interviewe. Applying college writing to writing on the job
5. Researching
18. Understanding Researcha. Understanding primary and secondary researchb. Recognizing the connection between research and college writingc. Understanding the research assignmentd. Choosing an interesting research questione. Creating a research plan
19. Finding and Managing Print and Online Sourcesa. Using the library in person and onlineb. Consulting various kinds of sourcesc. Understanding keywords and keyword searchesd. Using printed and online reference workse. Using print indexes and online databasesf. Using search engines and subject directories to find Internet sourcesg. Using your library’s online catalog or card catalog to find booksh. Taking advantage of printed and online government documentsi. Exploring online communication
20. Finding and Creating Effective Visualsa. Finding quantitative data and displaying it visuallyb. Searching for appropriate images in online and print sources
21. Evaluating Sourcesa. Questioning print sourcesb. Questioning Internet sourcesc. Evaluating a source’s arguments
22. Doing Research in the Archive, Field, and Laba. Adhering to ethical principlesb. Preparing yourself for archival researchc. Planning your field research carefullyd. Keeping a notebook when doing lab research
*23. Plagiarism, Copyright Infringement, and Intellectual Propertya. Understanding how plagiarism relates to copyright and intellectual propertyb. Avoiding inadvertent and deliberate plagiarismc. Using copyrighted materials fairly
24. Working with Sources and Avoiding Plagiarisma. Maintaining a working bibliographyb. Creating an annotated bibliographyc. Taking notes on your sourcesd. Taking stock of and synthesizing what you have learned e. Integrating quotations, paraphrases, and summaries
25. Writing the Papera. Planning and drafting your paperb. Revising your draftc. Documenting your sources
6. MLA Documentation Style(Foldout) Resources for Writers: MLA Documentation26. MLA Style: In-Text CitationsMLA In-Text Citations: Directory to Sample Types27. MLA Style: List of Works CitedMLA Works-Cited Entries: Directory to Sample Types28. MLA Style: Explanatory Notes29. MLA Style: Paper Format30. Student Paper in MLA Style
7. APA Documentation Style (Foldout) Resources for Writers: APA Documentation31. APA Style: In-Text CitationsAPA In-Text Citations: Directory to Sample Types32. APA Style: ReferencesAPA Reference Entries: Directory to Sample Types33. APA Style: Paper Format34. Student Paper in APA Style
8. Chicago and CSE Documentation Styles35. Chicago Documentation Stylea. Chicago style: In-text citations and notesb. Chicago style: Bibliographyc. Sample Chicago-style notes and bibliography entries
36. Sample from a student paper in Chicago style
37. CSE Documentationa. In-text citations b. List of referencesCSE style: Directory to Sample Typesc. CSE name-year style: Sample references listd. CSE citation-name style: Sample references list
9. Editing for Clarity *(Foldout)Resources for Writers: Identifying and Editing Common Problems/Resources for Multilingual Writers
38. Wordy Sentencesa. Eliminating redundanciesb. Avoiding unnecessary repetitionc. Replacing wordy phrasesd. Reducing clauses and phrasese. Combining sentencesf. Making sentences straightforward
39. Missing Wordsa. Adding words needed in compound structuresb. Including that when it is needed for clarityc. Making comparisons cleard. Adding articles (a, an, the) where necessary
40. Mixed Constructionsa. Untangling mixed-up sentence structuresb. Making sure predicates fit subjectsc. Editing sentences with is when, is where, the reason . . . is because
41. Confusing Shiftsa. Making your point of view consistent in person and numberb. Keeping verb tenses consistentc. Avoiding unnecessary shifts in mood and voiced. Avoiding shifts between direct and indirect quotations and questions
42. Faulty Parallelisma. Making items in a series parallelb. Making paired ideas parallelc. Repeating function words as needed
43. Misplaced and Dangling Modifiersa. Putting modifiers close to the words they modifyb. Clarifying ambiguous modifiersc. Moving disruptive modifiersd. Checking split infinitives for ambiguitye. Fixing dangling modifiers
44. Coordination and Subordinationa. Using coordination to express equal ideasb. Using subordination to express unequal ideasc. Avoiding subordination of major ideasd. Combining short, choppy sentencese. Avoiding excessive subordination
45. Sentence Varietya. Varying sentence openingsb. Varying sentence length and structurec. Including cumulative and periodic sentences and rhetorical questionsd. Trying inversions
46. Active Verbsa. Considering alternatives to be verbsb. Preferring the active voice
47. Appropriate Languagea. Avoiding slang, regionalisms, and nonstandard Englishb. Using an appropriate level of formalityc. Avoiding jargond. Avoiding euphemisms and doublespeake. Removing biased or sexist language
48. Exact Languagea. Choosing words with suitable connotationsb. Including specific, concrete wordsc. Using standard idiomsd. Avoiding clichése. Creating suitable figures of speechf. Avoiding misuse of words
49. The Dictionary and the Thesaurusa. Using the dictionary as a habitb. Consulting a thesaurus50. Glossary of Usage
10. Editing for Grammar Conventions
51. Sentence Fragmentsa. Identifying sentence fragmentsb. Editing sentence fragmentsc. Phrases as fragmentsd. Dependent clauses as fragments
52. Comma Splices and Run-on Sentencesa. Identifying commas splices and run-on sentencesb. Learning five ways to edit commas splices and run-on sentencesc. Joining two clauses with a comma and a coordinating conjunctiond. Joining two clauses with a semicolone. Separating the clauses into two sentencesf. Making one clause dependentg. Transforming two clauses into one clause
53. Subject-Verb Agreementa. Standard subject-verb combinationsb. A word group between subject and verbc. Compound subjects connected by conjunctions (and, but, either . . .or)d. Collective subjects (committee, jury)e. Indefinite subjects (