Friday, November 27, 2015

The Writing Process to Date

The elements that impacted me the most in the writing process is the writing process itself. The steps of writing the body first, the conclusion second, and the introduction last have been immensely helpful in preventing writer's block. Getting all your thoughts on a piece of paper before writing an introduction or conclusion is a great aid to starting. I always feared writing essay's because I couldn't figure out how to start them, and I felt that I never had enough content, but writing everything down that I know about the subject first has completely prevented those "freaked out" feelings from happening. 
The other tools that have impacted me are the rhetorical tools that we should include in the essay. It's helped me to identify the audience I am speaking to and it's also helped with how I should talk to that audience. Rhetorical tools rule! 

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Methodology Used When Writing An Essay

The methodology used when writing an essay sounds like a scary process because most people don't know what methodology is. So, to help out the audience, let's define methodology and then move on to how that applies to writing an essay.

Methodology: the systematic, theoretical analysis of the methods applied to a field of study.

Now that we have defined methodology, we can apply it to writing an essay. Specifically, the process that is best used when writing an essay. The first step in writing an essay is to write the body of the essay. This doesn't have to be an organized or perfected thing. Step one is to get all your thoughts and everything you know on that paper. The methodology (or analysis) of this step can help us understand why we write the body of the essay first, and it is simply this: because you have gotten all your thoughts on that paper, you can more easily organize those thoughts and edit what you have written. The introduction and conclusion both come from the body of the essay.
A conclusion is the last part of the essay. It's typically the very last paragraph. This is where you sum up what you have said. Because you have the body written, the conclusion becomes very easy. You know your main points and it's simple to sum them up in a few sentences and finish with your thesis, which is the main argument your essay is a part of.
An introduction is designed to tell the audience what you are going to be talking about and what specific rhetorical tools you will be using. If you have the body and conclusion of your essay written, you know the direction of the essay and the introduction becomes very easy to write. As you begin to edit your essay you include rhetorical tools that speak to your desired audience. Including various rhetorical tools will help focus your essay and draw in the proper audience.
These three steps to writing an essay are designed to make the process more simple and faster for students or other people that have to write a paper. The reason this method works is because it applies to any form of writing. Get your thoughts out, edit, conclude, edit some more, introduce, and finalize the essay. It's fool proof work.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Methodology of Process Explanation Essay

The steps I will take to teach my audience about the writing process are as follows:

Step 1: The audience will understand how to write the body of an essay. I will explain to the audience how to first begin an essay with the body and then how to edit and review their essay. This step includes teaching the audience how to include rhetorical tools like logos, ethos, pathos, or division and classification, etc.
Step 2: The audience will understand how to write a conclusion. This is the next step in the writing process, but the audience will need to understand that to write a conclusion, you sum up your main points in the body of your essay. This step will include mic droppers and a discussion of a successfully summarized essay.
Step 3: The audience will understand how to write an introduction. This step includes the explanation of a sentence hook and a definition of a thesis. I will be sure to have the audience understand why the introduction is last.

These steps are important to the process of teaching an audience about the writing process because they follow the outline of writing the body of an essay, then the conclusion, and last, the introduction. Using this format will give the audience a broader understanding with more depth. Using this process will be the best and easiest way to teach my audience the writing process.

The Perfect Introduction

An introduction is a crucial part of a successful essay. It's important to have the introduction because this is the paragraph in your essay that pulls the audience in and lets them know what you are going to be talking about. People often get disinterested if they don't instantly know what they are reading about, so having that introduction will help the audience gain a broader understanding of what you are going to be discussing and will be more likely to continue to read if you have captured their attention.

Steps to creating the perfect introduction:

Step 1: Open with a hook. Capture the audience's attention! Make them want to continue reading.
Step 2: Follow up with back ground information. Begin to give the audience an idea of what you are going to be talking about in the body of your essay. This is best done by splitting up your essay into sections and giving that section a topic in the introduction.
Step 3: Present your thesis statement. Your thesis is what your whole essay is going to be discussing, so make it match the overall theme of your essay.

If you follow these steps when writing your introduction, you will have the essay of a life time!

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Extended Definition of Classification and Division

Classifying and diving a subject lets you analyze and explain a subject more in depth. It identifies the major discussion your topic is a member of, and shows in order of importance the different aspects of your topic in a research paper.

Beginning at the largest portion of a research paper, you select your topic. A topic, for example, could be food. Now that we have a subject, you can create a focused topic within that realm of. An example focused topic in the realm of food could be fruit. This is the actual topic you will be researching and it is the thing you will be further dividing and classifying.

After selecting a topic within the large subject, you can classify the different aspects of your topic. In our case, we are discussing fruit; so to classify different parts of "fruit", we can select different types of fruit (preferably your favorite), keeping in mind to classify the most important things first and the least important things last. For our example, it would be your most favorite fruit first leading to your least favorite (still probably a solidly delicious fruit). There can be many classifications, but we will list only three for the sake of this example: 1. Watermelon, 2. Raspberries, 3. Strawberries. (there are many other good fruits like peaches and apricots and apples, but there are just too many to really have a favorite)

Now that we have classified the subject of "fruit", we dive deeper, which leads to the divisions of each classification. The divisions examine the various elements of each major classification. For example:

1. Watermelon: Red on the inside, green on the outside. Crisp. Juicy. Seed spitting contests. Summer time. Things that remind you of watermelon.
2. Raspberries: Red, small, juicy. Sweet. Bees.
3. Strawberries: Red. Oh so sweet. The good ones are the small ones. Chocolate strawberries.

Following the pattern of classifying and dividing your topic will lead to a successful research paper and effectively analyze the discussion your topic is a part of. Congratulations!