(a)
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Create a variety of written communications using various elements of discourse (e.g., purpose, speaker, audience, form) in narrative, expository, persuasive, informative, and/or descriptive texts:
- Address audience needs, stated purpose, and context
- Develop a thesis statement
- Create an organizing structure appropriate to purpose, audience, and context
- Include relevant information and exclude extraneous information
- Provide facts and details, describe or analyze subject, explain benefits or limitations, compare or contrast, or provide graphics or illustrations
- Clarify and defend positions with relevant evidence, including facts, expert opinions, quotations, and/or expressions of commonly accepted beliefs and logical reasoning
- Use a variety of rhetorical devices to support assertions (e.g., appeal to logic through reasoning, case study, and analogy)
- Anticipate potential misunderstanding, problems, or mistakes that might arise for audience
- Structure drafts using standard forms and predictable structures (e.g., headings, white space, and graphics) and customary formats (including proper salutations, closing, and signature when writing a letter)
- Provide a coherent conclusion.
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(b)
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Select, use, and evaluate deliberately a wide variety of before, during, and after strategies to communicate meaning when writing. |
(c)
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Apply accurately and effectively the language cues and conventions to construct and communicate meaning when writing. |
(d)
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Write a position paper (convincing argument):
- Address an issue the writer feels strongly about
- Introduce topic and state position in beginning
- Support writer's position with the most important facts, details, and logical reasons arranged in a coherent and convincing order
- Defend position against an important objection
- End with a strong restatement of the writer's position
- Defend position well and compel reader to act
- Create confidence in position through a clear and strong voice
- Use inclusive and respectful language
- Use "fair" words and qualifiers
- Ensure all parts work together to build a thoughtful convincing position.
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(e)
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Write a comparative essay:
- Reveal new insights about topic because of the comparison
- Capture reader's attention and provide details that lead up to thesis or focus statement in a well-developed introduction
- Discuss each topic point by point in the body
- Sum up, reflect on, or comment on the comparison in a coherent, convincing conclusion.
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(f)
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Write a letter of inquiry (or request):
- Explain adequately what the inquiry is about and what the reader is to do in response to the letter (e.g., advice; information from a government agency; information on a product or service; copy of an official document; request for credit; application materials; estimates or bids)
- Make letter courteous and clear
- State who the writer is and give status or position
- State what the inquiry is about and explain specifically what the recipient should do
- Include the necessary details (e.g., date information is needed, services, etc.)
- Thank the recipient for his/her time
- Follow a standard letter format.
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(g)
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Write a story or essay using parody, satire, and/or irony:
- Choose one scene from a print text
- Use a tone that seems straightforward but leads the reader to know that the real intention is to criticize or ridicule and, in the end, illuminate a problem.
- Use exaggeration and/or understatement.
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(h)
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Write a critique of an author's style:
- Consider purpose and intended audience
- Address author's treatment of subject (specific, concrete, direct, general, abstract, philosophical)
- Analyze form chosen to express ideas: tone (e.g., informal, conversational, professional critical, satirical, amused, encouraging, pensive); point of view (e.g., first person or third person); arrangement and organization of ideas; sentence structures; diction (e.g., formal or informal; colloquial or technical); images and symbols; use of rhetorical devices; other distinctive mannerisms
- Identify the writer's overall, distinctive approach or "style."
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(i)
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Experiment with different forms and formats (e.g., proposal, script, letter to government officials advocating change) and techniques, and explain their appeal. |