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The Brief McGraw-Hill Handbook 2e with MLA Booklet 2016 and Connnect Composition Access Card
, by
Maimon, Elaine
;
Peritz, Janice
;
Blake Yancey, Kathleen
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ISBN: 9781259993015 | 1259993019
Cover: Package
Copyright: 4/22/2016
The Brief McGraw-Hill Handbook 2e with MLA Booklet 2016 and Connnect Composition Access Card
> ISBN13: 9781259993015
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Table of Contents
Supplemental Materials
The Brief McGraw-Hill Handbook, Second Edition
*Indicates new content or a chapter/section with major revisions. In addition, content is being updated and revised throughout.
Introduction: Writing to Learn
*RESOURCES FOR WRITERS (Foldout): Start Smart: Addressing the Writing Situation
a. Studying a range of academic disciplines
b. Using writing as a tool for learning
c. Taking responsibility for reading, writing, and research
*d. Achieving the core outcomes of successful writing
*e. Exploring the situation as a means of approaching any writing task
*f. Recognize audience and academic English in a multilingual world
Part 1. Writing and Designing Texts
1. Reading and Writing: The Critical Connection
a. Reading critically
b. Writing critically
2. Planning and Shaping
a. Learning how to approach assignments
b. Exploring your ideas
c. Developing a working thesis
d. Planning structure
*e. Considering visuals, audio, and video
3. Drafting
a. Developing ideas using patterns of organization and visuals
b. Writing focused, clearly organized paragraphs
*c. Integrating multimedia elements effectively
4. Revising and Editing
a. Getting comments from readers
b. Using electronic tools for revising
c. Focusing on the the writing situation (topic, purpose, audience, medium, genre)
d. Making sure you have a strong thesis
e. Reviewing the structure of your draft
f Revising for paragraph development, unity, and coherence
*g. Revising visuals and multimedia
h. Editing sentences
i. Proofreading carefully
j. Using campus, Internet, and community resources
k. Learning from one student’s revisions (updates AWR 4e—peer review)
5. Designing Academic Texts and Portfolios
a. Considering audience and purpose
b. Using the tools available in your word-processing program
c. Thinking intentionally about design
d. Compiling an effective print or electronic portfolio
Part 2. Writing in College and beyond College
6. Informative Reports
a. Understanding the assignment
b. Approaching writing an informative report as a process
*c. Student paper: Informative report
7. Interpretive Analyses and Writing about Literature
a. Understanding the assignment
b. Approaching writing an interpretive analysis as a process
c. Student paper: Interpretive analysis
8. Arguments
a. Understanding the assignment
b. Thinking critically
c. Approaching writing an argument as a process
*d. Student paper: Argument
9. Other Kinds of Writing Assignments
a. Personal essays
b. Essay exams
10. Oral Presentations
a. Planning
b. Drafting
*c. Using presentation software
d. Preparing
11. Multimedia Writing
a. Learning about tools for creating multimedia texts
b. Interpreting images
c. CreatingWeb sites
*d. Creating and interacting with blogs and wikis
12. Writing beyond College
a. Addressing the community
*b. Designing brochures, posters, and newsletters
c. Internships
d. Résumés
e. Job application letters and interviews
f. Writing on the job
Part 3. Researching
13. Understanding Research
a. Primary and secondary research
b. Research and college writing
c. Choosing a research question
d. Understanding the research assignment
e. Creating a research plan
14. Finding and Managing Print and Online Sources
a. Using the library in person and online
b. Kinds of sources
c. Keyword searches
d. Printed and online reference works
e. Print indexes and online databases
f. Search engines and subject directories
g. Using the library’s online or card catalog
h. Government documents
i. Online communication
*15. Finding and Creating Effective Visuals, Audio, and Video
a. Finding quantitative data and displaying it visually
b. Searching for appropriate images in online and print sources
*c. Searching for or creating appropriate audio files or videos
16. Evaluating Sources
a. Print sources
*b. Internet sources
c. Evaluating a source’s arguments
17. Doing Research in the Archive, Field, and Lab
a. Ethics
b. Archival research
c. Field research
d. Lab research
18. Plagiarism, Copyright Infringement, and Intellectual Property
a. Definitions
b. Avoiding plagiarism
c. Fair use
19. Working with Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism
a. Maintaining a working bibliography
b. Creating an annotated bibliography
c. Taking notes
d. Taking stock
e. Integrating quotations, paraphrases, and summaries
20. Writing the Paper
a. Planning and drafting your paper
b. Revising your draft
c. Documenting your sources
Part 4. MLA Documentation Style
RESOURCES FOR WRITERS (Foldout): Identifying and Documenting Sources: MLA Style
21. MLA Style: In-Text Citations MLA In-Text Citations: Directory to Sample Types
22. MLA Style: List of Works Cited MLA Works-Cited Entries: Directory to Sample Types
23. MLA Style: Explanatory Notes
24. MLA Style: Paper Format
*25. Student Paper in MLA Style
Part 5. APA Documentation Style
RESOURCES FOR WRITERS (Foldout): Identifying and Documenting Sources: APA Style
26. APA Style: In-Text Citations APA In-Text Citations: Directory to Sample Types
27. APA Style: References APA Reference Entries: Directory to Sample Types
28. APA Style: Paper Format
*29. Student Paper in APA Style
Part 6. Editing for Clarity
*RESOURCES FOR WRITERS (Foldout): Identifying and Editing Common Problems/Quick Reference for Multilingual Writers
30. Avoiding Wordiness
a. Redundancies and unnecessary modifiers
b. Wordy phrases
c. Roundabout sentences
31. Adding Missing Words
a. Compound structures
b. The word that
c. Words in comparisons
d. The articles a, an, the
32. Unscrambling Mixed Constructions
a. Mixed-up sentences
b. Illogical predicates
33. Fixing Confusing Shifts
a. In point of view
b. In tense
c. In mood and voice
d. Between direct and indirect quotations and questions
34. Using Parallel Constructions
a. Items in a series
b. Paired ideas
c. Function words
35. Fixing Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers
a. Misplaced modifiers
b. Ambiguous modifiers
c. Disruptive modifiers
d. Split infinitives
e. Dangling modifiers
36. Using Coordination and Subordination Effectively
a. Coordination for equal ideas
b. Major ideas in subordinate clauses
c. Excessive subordination
37. Varying Your Sentences
a. Sentence openings
b. Length and structure
c. Cumulative and periodic sentences
d. Inversions, rhetorical questions, and exclamations
38. Choosing Active Verbs
a. Alternatives to be verbs
b. Active voice
39. Using Appropriate Language
a. Slang, regional expressions, and nonstandard English
b. Levels of formality
c. Jargon
d. Euphemisms and doublespeak
e. Biased or sexist language
40. Using Exact Language
a. Connotations
b. Specific and concrete words
c. Standard idioms
d. Clichés
e. Figures of speech
f. Misusing words
g. Using the dictionary
41. Glossary of Usage
Part 7. Editing for Grammar Conventions
42. Fixing Sentence Fragments
a. Dependent-clause fragments
b. Phrase fragments
c. Other types of fragments
43. Repairing Comma Splices and Run-on Sentences
a. Adding a coordinating conjunction
b. Using a semicolon
c. Separating into two sentences
d. Making one clause dependent
e. Transforming two clauses into one independent clause
44. Maintaining Subject-Verb Agreement
a. Subject separated by a word group from the verb
b. Compound subjects
c. Collective subjects
d. Indefinite subjects
e. When the subject comes after the verb
f. Subject complement
g. Relative pronouns
h. –ing phrases
i. Titles, company names, or words representing themselves
45. Recognizing Problems with Verbs
a. Regular and irregular verbs
b. Lay and lie, sit and set, rise and raise
c. –s or –es endings
d. –d or –ed endings
e. Tenses
f. Past perfect tense
g. Present tense
h. Complete verbs
i. Mood
46. Fixing Problems with Pronouns
a. Pronoun agreement
b. Pronoun reference
c. Pronoun case
d. Who and whom
47. Recognizing Problems with Adjectives and Adverbs
a. Adverbs
b. Adjectives
c. Positives, comparatives (-er), and superlatives (-est)
d. Double negatives
48. Special Editing Topics for Multilingual Writers
a. Learning in English as a Second Language
b. Articles (a, an, the)
c. Helping verbs
d. Verbs followed by gerunds or infinitives
e. Complete subjects and verbs
f. Using only one subject or object
g. Adjectives
h. Adverb placement
i. Prepositions
j. Direct objects with two-word verbs
k. Coordination and subordination
l. Word order
m. If clauses
Part 8. Editing for Correctness: Punctuation, Mechanics, and Spelling
49. Commas
a. After an introductory word group
b. Between items in a series