Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts

Monday, 9 May 2016

Deconstructing Paragraphs: two examples

One of the first things that I find I need to teach my first year English students is how to construct a paragraph. I had really excellent English teachers in high school, but it seems that the provincial standards for what constitutes satisfactory written work varies widely. (I hope this does not detract from the truly hard work that high school English teachers put in to their efforts ... I'm not sure it's their fault that the standards are so low).

In any case, I often find that my students have difficulty with their writing structure. For many, this might seem petty; however, I often find that without the structure of a decent thesis, followed by clear topic sentences, the rest of the paragraph falters. This leads to formulaic essays in the middle-range, but it often gives a base-line of structure to more talented writers to jump off from. This formula of paragraph-writing is a method I use to get mediocre to moderate writers to get much better, and for the students who put in the effort, the results are enormously rewarding. (The students who are equipped with good ideas benefit from seeing how the structure can emphasize and augment their existing arguments).

In this lesson, I used two sample paragraphs (one about Lethal Weapon, one of my obsessions!) and a topic on travel (which happened to be one of the choices for their first essay). I was thinking here in particular of my students who are visual and spatial-kinesthetic learners: the visual learners see the colours, and the spatial-kinesthetic learners see the shapes and patterns that are formed by the colours, and the construction of the paragraph becomes clearer. (These are not my best paragraphs, so use your own if you like!)

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De/Constructing a Paragraph:
Labelling the parts of a paragraph

Key:
Dark purple: topic sentence and tieback to topic sentence
Light purple: one kind of evidence: a definition or term
Red: another kind of evidence: specific examples
Green: explanation of the evidence (in this case, also linking the term with the examples)
Light grey: summary of previous paragraph (over two sentences in this paragraph, which is not ideal!)
Bold: thesis statement

Note: Your paragraphs will look different from this one, because it is a hybrid of an intro paragraph and a body paragraph.
1)      Your body paragraphs will not have thesis statements, but they do need to tieback to the topic sentence!
2)      Your introductory paragraphs will have a thesis statement, so the tieback is less critical.
3)      Your body paragraphs will have evidence; your introductory paragraphs do not need evidence, but they do need to introduce the topic quickly, as I have done here.


Sample paragraph:
The Lethal Weapon franchise may be the best buddy cop series of the 80s and 90s, but its importance in popular culture is as a pre-cursor to the “bromance” phenomenon of the 2000s. Television and movies about cops who are friends – buddy cops – featured a pair of cops who solved crimes together, often engaging with one another humorously, but always demonstrating the limits of their friendship as posed by traditional masculinity. Early examples of buddy cops include “Starsky and Hutch,” “Beverly Hills Cop,” “Point Break,” etc. Such friends could not be emotional, could not demonstrate their affection for one another – even though such affections often existed – and could not speak to one another about serious personal or philosophical issues, unless under extreme duress. The bromance relationship of the 2000s is different from a buddy cop relationship because the former tests those traditional limits of male relationships, by having more frequent interactions that are emotional or discuss personal feelings. Examples include “I Love You, Man” (as the quintessential bromance), “The Hangover,” “Hot Fuzz,” and “Scrubs.” Often in these examples, there is both comedy and drama in the situations where the male characters are forced to confront their affection for each another; despite being completely platonic, our society has a significant problem with males having emotional relationships with one another. The appeal of the bromance is both the awkwardness of that confrontation, as well as the emotional satisfaction of their genuine moments with each other. The relationship between Riggs and Murtagh in Lethal Weapon has elements of the tension of buddy cops, as they try to maintain the expectations of their masculinity within their relationship. However, over the course of four films, the two men suffer injuries, loss, and near-death experiences which bring them closer together and force them to confront their affection for one another, making Lethal Weapon an early example of a bromance.


Second example:
In this example, I will clearly demonstrate the differences between the intro paragraph and the body paragraph, but I will use the same key as above, so you can see how the construction of the paragraph a) stays the same across all paragraphs b) looks in an essay similar to one you have already done.

               If given the opportunity to travel anywhere in the world, where cost is not a factor, I would choose to go to London, England. People choose to go to England for many reasons; they might choose its historic importance, its arts, its culture, or even its fashion. However, as a student of literature – with an inadvertent focus on the British parts of the English canon – I would go to London with the desire of seeing as much as I can about authors whose lives intersected with that city. I would go on a walking tour of the city, mapping out locations where famous authors lived or died, and where they set their stories. I would go to the Globe Theatre to see a Shakespearean play, and then fast-forward four hundred years to go to the Warner Brother’s Studio Tour of the Harry Potter films. I would want to experience both of these hallmarks of British literature in the places where they were first produced. I would go to the London Film Museum to see an exhibit on James Bond. Finally, I would go to a poetry slam, so I could witness the up-and-coming writers of Britain performing their pieces. Places often define the literature that come from them, in many unexpected ways. Now that I have experienced the literature, I want to experience the literature in the place that it originated from. In this hypothetical trip, I would choose to go on a journey of London, to experience its literature.
               I would go on a walking tour of London to see how British authors experienced the city. Plenty of maps of authors, authors’ houses, and fictional characters already exist, but I would make a new one with an eye to my favourites. I first learned about these maps from Professor Allison Muri’s Grub Street Project, an online database of mapped literature in London. Since then, I have been intrigued by mapping literature. But seeing the maps online or even making them is not enough; I need to go to the city and follow the maps to connect the places in my head and in literature with real places in the world. I want to see how British authors imagined their spaces, and how they lived their everyday lives. I would be able to see both of those things just by witnessing the space as they did. My literary journey of London would be incomplete without a literal journey through London’s literary streets to experience the lives of both authors and characters.

So what did I do in the previous paragraphs?

1)      The topic sentence of the first paragraph clearly sets out the topic, right off the top. It does not have to be a repetition of the thesis statement (and you’ll notice, the thesis statement adds the “because” part, only the word “because” is implied: “to experience its literature”).
2)      The green parts in the intro are explanation.
3)      The blue parts in the intro are what Kevin calls the “table of contents” (I call “signposting”) of the essay: you can see from this list that I will have four different sections based on things I would do, but signposting still has not indicated the argument of the paragraph; the topic sentence will introduce the argument.
4)      The thesis statement is shaded purple to show that it concludes the paragraph and ties back to the topic sentence, but it’s also bolded to indicate that it is the thesis statement. “In this hypothetical trip, I would choose to go on a journey of London, to experience its literature.
5)      In the first body paragraph, you discover why I would choose to go on a walking tour of London: “to see how British authors experienced the city.” For this argument, I will need to justify why going there is important to me.
6)      I justify that argument by giving evidence: the Grub Street Project, which first inspired me.
7)      I explain the evidence and how that relates to the topic by saying “seeing the maps online or even making them is not enough.  … . I want to see how British authors imagined their spaces, and how they lived their everyday lives” When you write your second essay, your evidence will be direct quotations from the text (unless you’re talking about some element of form like line spacing or stanzas, but that’s the only exception!)

8)      My concluding sentence does two things: 1) ties back to the thesis (reminds the reader why we’re there): “My literary journey of London would be incomplete2) it ties back to the topic sentence: “without a literal journey through London’s literary streets to experience the lives of both authors and characters..”  It might seem a bit repetitive at first, because we’ve essentially just repeated the topic sentence, however, I’ve connected it to the thesis statement simply by saying the journey mentioned in the thesis statement would be incomplete without the actions of the first body paragraph. 

Thursday, 15 May 2014

The Mathematical Formula of Essays

My students thought I was crazy after I showed them this. Once you've labeled the parts of the essay with a letter, you can show them the structure of how an essay works by building the letters up and complicating the formula with what you want to accomplish. I've taught a variation of this formula twice. This is a better version of the formula, but I taught the other much earlier in the course. I suspect that teaching this formula after the first or second essay (rather than in the second term) would make more of an impact. Certainly, anyone who feels like one of their biggest comments is "tie backs!" or "organization?" or "thesis?" this formula will help them. Students who are a bit more advanced may either find it useful as a nice check, or there are ways to show them how to complicate the formula so that it suits their needs: add more evidence, more paragraphs, address oppositional evidence, etc.
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Formula for writing Essays
Here is a really simple formula for you to figure out the organization of your essays. Keep it on hand. God bless you on your journey if math is a problem for you.

Introduction – is very flexible. Introduce topic early; don't talk about history, or fiction, or abstract topics, even if they seem related. Write your intro last so that you don't ramble off topic. It is second-least important beside your conclusion.
The last sentence of your intro MUST be your thesis statement. [ I know I said there were exceptions. You're not there yet. I just didn't want to limit your creative geniuses. But now I am.]

TS= thesis statement. It is your argument. Every other thing you talk about must answer the question of how you are proving this hypothesis to be the case. If your essay is going in another direction, either re-write the thesis, or reign yourself in.

Body 1: Let's call it B1

Must include

To1 = topic sentence – what is this paragraph about?
ExA = explain the relevance of this topic. This is where summary goes. NOT the To1 > 2 sentences
Ev1 = first piece of evidence, introduced as a complete sentence.
ExB = To1 + Ev 1 =explain the evidence in relation to the topic
C1= To1 + TS = To conclude, combine your topic sentence and your thesis statement (rewrite it so it's not repetitive) to show how they're connected. If you got to this point and it doesn't work yet, something is missing in the middle.

B2:

To2
ExA
Ev2
ExB = To2 + Ev2
C2= To2+TS

B3:

To3
ExA
Ev3
ExB = To3+ Ev3
C3=To3+ TS

Conclusion = C1 + C2 + C3


What do you do once you've mastered this formula?

  1. Add more evidence. This is the formula for an essay that requires you to use a text with a secondary source (you should have one piece of evidence from each, and you need to relate them to one another).
To4
ExA
Ev4
ExB = To4+ Ev4
ExC – optional, more like an introduction
Ev5
ExD = To4+ Ev5
C4= To4 + TS

  1. Deal with opposing evidence (imagine as if you were debating your parents. If you pre-butt their argument with a rational reason for why their argument fails, yours will be/seem more complex)

To5 = Recognize Ev1X
ExA
Ev1X
ExB = To5 + Ev1X
ExC- But!
Ev2
ExD = Ev1X = wrong
ExE = Ev2 > Ev1 because of ExD
C5 = (To5 – Ev1X) + TS


You should be shooting for a paragraph with at least 7 sentences in it.
Your essay should have 6-8 paragraphs. (6 at the very least)
Other ways to play around with this formula:

  1. What would you do if you had three texts?
  2. Three texts and one source?
  3. One text and three sources?
  4. Three texts, one source that agrees with you and one that doesn't?

Friday, 2 May 2014

Creative Writing Prompt: Archaeology Stories

Archaeology is the study of human activity in the past. Usually, archaeologists find objects and think about them. They look at the environmental data that people of the past have left behind. This can include artifacts or objects, and even buildings.


Archaeologists often have the puzzle pieces, but no picture: they don't know what some objects were used for, or what some details might mean. For example, the Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamun died very mysteriously at the age of 19, over 3000 years ago.

There were hundreds of weird stories about his death, including snakebite, murder, and many others. To add to the weirdness surrounding his death, when they opened his sarcophagus in the early 1900s, they discovered his body had been burned! It wasn't until 2013 that they figured out why: a combination of chemicals in the embalming fluid and the linens that wrapped his body created friction and caught fire. The Egyptians would not have understood why that happened, so they would have made up stories to explain it. However, archaeologists were able to figure it out!


Can you imagine what an archaeologist 3000 years in the future might think of the things you own? Their lives will be so different! Maybe they won't have electricity, because they'll have replaced fuel with solar power, or some kind of battery. Maybe there won't be any children, because they've figured out how to beat the effects of ageing. Maybe everyone will live in space, and no one will know how to garden. Maybe they have never seen snow.

Your job today will be to tell the story of a future archaeologist discovering something from today and trying to ask questions to figure out what it is. You will have to think about how their life has changed from yours, and then try to think how a total stranger to your every way might ask questions about the object:
What does it look like? (does it still have all of its original colours? Has it been damaged by weather?)
What was it used for? (how can he or she tell?)
Was it important? (maybe people used it for worship, or to vote, or to count, or eat, or play, etc)
Who owned it? (kings and queens? Children?)
Was it a toy or a tool?
Remember when you tell your story that an archaeologist doesn't always have all the information, so sometimes they get things wrong!
What kinds of details might they get right?
What might they get wrong?


Here are some weird and random objects that just might stump an archaeologist from the future. You can pick one of these, or anything else you think might make an archaeologist from 3000 years in the future really scratch their heads!



  • silly putty
  • a picture of a polar bear
  • a toy from a sandbox
  • an Ipod / IPad
  • an origami frog
  • plant labels from a garden
  • a Barbie doll shoe
  • a yo-yo
  • a CD
  • a pencil
  • a potato peeler
  • an empty tube of lipstick (the lipstick would be all gone, probably!)
  • a picture of you in a frame
  • a snowshoe
  • a fork
  • a pair of earrings made of keyboard letters
Can I eat this?
How do you explain purple??!!



Was this part of a traditional naming ceremony?
What if all you ever found was Cilantro?


... soup strainer? (Remember, global warming = no snow)
Imagine if ten years AFTER you find this, you find a picture of people crossing the a white expanse with big long sticks attached to their feet. Do you instantly make the connection? How do you explain the white stuff?

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Group Essay on _Oryx and Crake_


In your group, come up with a thesis for your given essay topic, as well as body topics and evidence to support the thesis. Your evidence should be integrated as a sentence. If the evidence is a word or short phrase that requires some explanation, take the time to give that explanation.

There is a twist to this group assignment: each person in your group will be randomly assigned a role to fulfil within the context of the group. While all members will have specific guiding questions (outlined below), ALL members should confer on:
-        ideas
-        the wording of the topic sentences and the thesis
-        thinking of the evidence to support the idea

Here are the roles which may be assigned to you:

1)      Moderator:
- This member is the leader, but not the boss. Their job is to ask the following questions of themselves, and say constructive things with these questions in mind: is the group on task? Are you answering the essay question? What needs to be completed in order to move on to the next section? Can any tasks be delegated, or how can you help the other members do their roles?
2)      Speaker:
- This member should be participating and listening in equal measure, because they will report the group's findings to the rest of the class. They should ask these questions of themselves: Do you understand the group's answers in such a way that you can teach them to your audience? If not, are you asking clarifying questions to ensure that you are giving the best answer possible?
3)      Writer:
- This person collects the information on the hand out provided, and ensures that the hand out is given to Elyn at the end of the class. (Even if they have to pry it out of someone's hands). They should ask these questions: Is the answer you record whole and complete? Do you need to explain the evidence or embellish a point? Do you understand the answer well enough to write it so that others comprehend your meaning easily? Is the answer convincing? If not, how can you help change the wording so it is more convincing?
4)      Detective:
- This person is in charge of finding evidence in the text. They may participate less in the discussion (in fact, discussion should continue while they look for evidence), but they are no less important, as they will ask these questions of their work: Are you able to find evidence that supports the ideas of your group members? Are you able to distinguish between defensible and non-defensible positions? Are you being meticulous about your evidence (that is, are you searching or the BEST evidence possible?) Are you asking for help from your group members when you need it?

* This person should ask the others to find specific pieces of evidence when necessary. There may be more than one detective if there are five members in the group.