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Writing and Reporting News: A Coaching Method

by Carole Rich

Pulling examples straight from recent headlines, WRITING AND REPORTING NEWS: A COACHING METHOD, 8e uses tips and techniques from revered writing coaches and award-winning journalists to help you develop the writing and reporting skills you need to succeed in the changing world of journalism. Full-color photographs and a strong storytelling approach keep you captivated throughout the book. <P><P>An entire chapter is devoted to media ethics, while ethical dilemmas in each chapter give you practice working through ethical issues before you face them on the job. Offering the most up-to-date coverage available, the Eighth Edition fully integrates multimedia content into the chapters-reflecting the way the news world actually operates. It also includes an all-new book glossary featuring many of the newer terms used in Journalism. Integrating new trends in the convergence of print, broadcast, and online media, WRITING AND REPORTING NEWS equips you with the fundamental skills you need for media careers now-and in the future.

Writing Arguments: A Rhetoric And Reader

by Brenda Herbert Harker

A reading companion for both the teachers and the students as they pursue the argumentative writing course; equipped with essays with different styles selected for viewpoint and meaning.

Writing Arguments: A Rhetoric With Readings

by John D. Ramage John C. Bean June Johnson

Teach students to read arguments critically and to produce effective arguments. Writing Arguments: A Rhetoric with Readings, Concise Edition, Seventh Edition integrates four different approaches to argument: the enthymeme as a logical structure, the classical concepts of logos, pathos, and ethos, the Toulmin system, and stasis theory. Focusing on argument as dialogue in search of solutions instead of a pro-con debate with winners and losers, it is consistently praised for teaching the critical-thinking skills needed for writing arguments. Major assignment chapters each focus on one or two classical stases (e.g. definition, resemblance, causal, evaluation, and policy). Each concept is immediately reinforced with discussion prompts, and each chapter ends with multiple comprehensive writing assignments.

Writing Broadcast News: Shorter, Sharper, Stronger

by Mervin Block

Mervin Block- who has written for the best in the business- offers timeless advice, guiding both first-year students and seasoned professionals through the essentials of writing for the ear. With countless scripts collected from writing workshops in newsrooms across the country, this resource is studded with insightful- and at times entertaining- comments, suggestions and much-needed corrections. Readers will find Block's clear and incisive voice coming through in the expanded "Top Tips of the Trade" and the "Dozen Deadly Sins"—reminding us that mistakes can be our best teachers. New "WordWatcher" boxes highlight the challenges in writing for print versus broadcast.

Writing Companion, Grade 6

by Perfection Learning

The first chapter of this book provides instruction and activities to help develop the characteristics of good writing listed above. Each of the next five chapters focuses on a different type of writing. In each of these five chapters, the first several lessons highlight the elements particularly important to one type of writing. For example, the chapter on arguments includes lessons that focus on claims and counterclaims. The next-to-last lesson in each chapter takes you, step-by-step, through writing a text. Built into these lessons are instruction and practice in grammar and usage that address the most common writing problems. The final lesson in each chapter provides prompts for you to demonstrate your skills in gathering, analyzing, and using information in your writing. This lesson ends with a checklist based on the characteristics of good writing.

Writing Companion, Grade 8

by Perfection Learning

The first chapter of this book provides instruction and activities to help develop the characteristics of good writing listed above. Each of the next five chapters focuses on a different type of writing. In each of these five chapters, the first several lessons highlight the elements particularly important to one type of writing. For example, the chapter on arguments includes lessons that focus on claims and counterclaims. The next-to-last lesson in each chapter takes you, step-by-step, through writing a text. Built into these lessons are instruction and practice in grammar and usage that address the most common writing problems. The final lesson in each chapter provides prompts for you to demonstrate your skills in gathering, analyzing, and using information in your writing. This lesson ends with a checklist based on the characteristics of good writing.

Writing Companion, High School Level-B

by Perfection Learning

The first chapter of this book provides instruction and activities to help develop the characteristics of good writing listed above. Each of the next five chapters focuses on a different type of writing. In each of these five chapters, the first several lessons highlight the elements particularly important to one type of writing. For example, the chapter on arguments includes lessons that focus on claims and counterclaims. The next-to-last lesson in each chapter takes you, step-by-step, through writing a text. Built into these lessons are instruction and practice in grammar and usage that address the most common writing problems. The final lesson in each chapter provides prompts for you to demonstrate your skills in gathering, analyzing, and using information in your writing. This lesson ends with a checklist based on the characteristics of good writing.

Writing Essentials

by Sandra Panman Richard Panman

This book teaches students the kind of writing required for school assignments, written exams, and the workplace. It consists of twelve chapters grouped into three major sections. The first part of the book teaches how to write resumes and business letters. The second section focuses on writing essays using four of the major writing strategies: narration, description, exposition, and persuasion. The last part guides students through writing book reports, short reports, and research papers.

Writing First With Readings: Practice In Context

by Laurie G. Kirszner Stephen R. Mandell

Best-selling authors and veteran college writing instructors Laurie Kirszner and Stephen Mandell believe that students learn to write best when they use their own writing as a starting point. In Writing First with Readings: Practice in Context, designed for the paragraph to essay course, Kirszner and Mandell take seriously the ideas and expressive abilities of developmental students, as well as their need to learn the rules of writing and grammar. Visual writing prompts that open every chapter get students writing immediately. By moving frequently between their own writing, writing models and instruction, and workbook-style mastery exercises, students get constant reinforcement of the skills they are learning. Thoughtful chapters on college success, research, and critical reading, along with high-interest essays, round out the text, making it the perfect introduction to college writing.

Writing For Life (Second Edition)

by D. J. Henry

D. J. Henry wrote Writing for Life from the ground up for today's college student. The ground-breaking approach of combining instruction and visual tools makes writing, reading and thinking processes visible, and shows the processes rather than just telling students about them. Highly graphic layouts and unique visual pedagogy empower students to transfer the learning strategies they already use in interpreting the visual world to the task of writing.

Writing for Psychology

by Janina M. Jolley Mark L. Mitchell Robert P. O'Shea

WRITING FOR PSYCHOLOGY, Fourth Edition offers concise assistance for students writing their research analyses using APA style. By providing concrete examples of common errors, the authors show rather than merely tell students what to do and what to avoid. This manual will help students adhere to the basics of APA style; refine critical thinking skills, library search skills, revising skills, editing skills, and proofing skills; and avoid plagiarism. Checklists precede a summary at the end of every chapter, giving students the chance to make sure they have been thorough in their reports.

Writing for Success

by Scott Mclean

Scott McLean's Writing for Success is a text that provides instruction in steps, builds writing, reading, and critical thinking, and combines comprehensive grammar review with an introduction to paragraph writing and composition. Beginning with the sentence and its essential elements, this book addresses each concept with clear, concise and effective examples that are immediately reinforced with exercises and opportunities to demonstrate, and reinforce, learning.

Writing for Visual Media (3rd Edition)

by Anthony Friedmann

Writing for Visual Media looks at the fundamental problems a writer faces in learning to create content for media that is to be seen rather than read. It takes you from basic concepts to practice through a seven-step method that helps you identify a communications problem, think it through, and find a resolution before beginning to write. Through successive exercises, Writing for Visual Mediahelps you acquire the basic skills and confidence you need to write effective films, corporate and training videos, documentaries, web sites, PSAs, TV shows, nonlinear media, and other types of visual narratives. You'll explore your visual imagination and try out your powers of invention. The companion web site enriches the content of the printed book with video, audio, and sample scripts. It includes scripts and the video produced from them; visual demonstrations of concepts; and an interactive, illustrated glossary of terms and concepts.

Writing & Grammar 9

by Elizabeth Rose Dawn L. Watkins Denise L. Patton Dana Gibby Gage

People study language for a variety of reasons. Some study in order to secure a job that pays better; some study to make good grades or to impress others with their vocabulary and knowledge. Some may actually study grammar and mechanics for the fun of it! You might ask yourself whether those reasons are good ones. Why should a Christian study the English language? Christians should study language and any other subject seriously because of Who God is. Just think about the fact that the God of the universe used language to bring the world into existence (Gen. 1:3)! God created every man and woman in His own image, and He called mankind to exercise dominion over the earth. Exercising dominion is accomplished in part through man's use of language (Gen. 1:28; 2:19-20). Perhaps the most exciting aspect of English study is the part language plays in God's plan to redeem the world to Himself (John 1:1-18). Part of that plan could be for Christians to use language for redemptive purposes. One example of such a redemptive purpose might be writing a play that confronts an audience with a distinctively Christian way to handle conflict. Blogging from a biblical worldview about issues facing the culture would be another example.

Writing & Grammar Grade 10 Student Text (Fourth Edition)

by Bob Jones University

This updated fourth edition of BJU Press' Writing and Grammar, Grade 10 student text features full-color pages with historical examples and context from all eras. Charts, sample sentences, enrichment focusing on thinking skills and Bible letters, and ESL notes all provide additional insights and interest to the chapter's primary focus. Lessons feature an excerpt, grammar exercises, and writing activities. This grade 10 text covers parts of speech, sentences, phrases, clauses, agreement, verb use, pronoun reference, capitalization, punctuation, writing, library skills, study skills, and more.

Writing in Action (Level A)

by K12 Inc.

Writing to a Prompt, Writing a Report, Writing Poetry, Writing from Personal Experience

Writing in Action (Level D)

by K12

If you want to become a great writer then this is a very good book to refer to. It covers: writing to a prompt, writing a persuasive paper, writing news articles and writing a play.

Writing in Response

by Matthew Parfitt

Writing in Response is a flexible, brief rhetoric that offers a unique focus on the critical practices of experienced readers--analysis and reflection--the skills at the heart of academic writing. It helps students compose academic essays by showing how active reading and exploratory writing bring fresh ideas to light and how informal response is developed into polished, documented prose. Extensively class tested,Writing in Response emphasizes the key techniques common to reading, thinking, and writing throughout the humanities and social sciences by teaching students the value of a social, incremental, and recursive writing process.

Writing in Response (Second Edition)

by Matthew Parfitt

Writing in Response is a flexible, brief rhetoric that offers a unique focus on the critical practices of experienced readers, analysis and reflection, the skills at the heart of academic writing. It helps students compose academic essays by showing how active reading and exploratory writing bring fresh ideas to light and how informal response is developed into polished, documented prose. Extensively class tested, Writing in Response emphasizes the key techniques common to reading, thinking, and writing throughout the humanities and social sciences by teaching students the value of a social, incremental, and recursive writing process. The new edition includes more on working with digital tools, more help for writing, and updated readings.

Writing In The Social Sciences: A Guide For Term Papers And Book Reviews

by Jake Muller

Ideal for students new to academic writing, Writing in the Social Sciences, Second Edition, is a clear, step-by-step guide to the entire writing process. Students will learn how to select and research a topic, develop and refine their ideas into a comprehensive outline, and convert the outline into a research paper or book report.

Writing in the Sciences: Exploring Conventions of Scientific Discourse

by Ann M. Penrose Steven B. Katz

A rhetorical, multi-disciplinary guide, Writing in the Sciences discusses the major genres of science writing including research reports, grant proposals, conference presentations, and a variety of forms of public communication. Multiple samples from real research cases illustrate a range of scientific disciplines and audiences for scientific research along with the corresponding differences in focus, arrangement, style, and other rhetorical dimensions. Comparisons among disciplines provide the opportunity for students to identify common conventions in science and investigate variation across fields.

Writing in Transit

by Denise K. Comer

Ideal for both firstyear composition and interdisciplinary writing courses, Writing in Transit offers a twotiered approach to multidisciplinary writing. Author Denise Comer presents strategies and instruction for navigating the purposes for writing through riting transfer, which encourages students to reflect on what they learn in one context about writing, and about themselves as learners and writers, and then apply, extend, reject, or otherwise modify this knowledge for other disciplinary, interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary contexts. Writing in Transit teaches students how to build practical bridges between disciplines’ discourse conventions by learning about the research and writing process.

Writing Interactive Music for Video Games: A Composer's Guide (Game Design)

by Michael Sweet

Written by the developer of Berklee School of Music’s pioneering game scoring program, this guide covers everything professional composers and music students need to know about composing interactive music for video games, and contains exclusive tools for interactive scoring―tools that were previously available only at Berklee. <p><p> Drawing on twenty years of professional experience in the game industry, Michael Sweet helps you master the unique language of music storytelling in games. Next, he walks you through the entire music composition process, from initial conceptualization and creative direction through implementation. <p><p> Inside, you’ll find dozens of examples that illustrate adaptive compositional techniques, from small downloadable games to multimillion dollar console titles. In addition, this guide covers the business side of video game composition, sharing crucial advice about contracts, pricing, sales, and marketing.

Writing Literature Reviews: A Guide for Students of the Social and Behavioral Sciences

by Jose L. Galvan

This easy-to-follow guide instructs students in the preparation of literature reviews for term projects, theses, and dissertations. There are numerous examples from published literature reviews that illustrate the guidelines discussed in this text. New to this edition: Most of the examples have been updated with material from recently published research. Also new: Seven new model literature reviews for discussion and evaluation have been added. Guides students in the preparation of literature reviews for term projects, theses, and dissertations. Chapters are conveniently divided into easy-to-follow guidelines, sequential steps, or checklists. Numerous examples throughout the book show students what should and should not be done when writing reviews. Emphasizes critical analysis of reports of empirical research in academic journals-making it ideal as a supplement for research methods courses. This book makes it possible for students to work independently on a critical literature review as a term project. Nine model literature reviews at the end of the book provide the stimulus for homework assignments and classroom discussions. The activities at the end of each chapter keep students moving toward their goal of writing a polished, professional review of academic literature. New to this edition: Most of the examples have been updated with material from recently published research. Also new: Seven new model literature reviews for discussion and evaluation have been added.

Writing Logically, Thinking Critically

by Sheila Cooper Rosemary Patton

This concise, accessible text teaches students how to write logical, cohesive arguments and how to evaluate the arguments of others. Integrating writing skills with critical thinking skills, this practical book teaches students to draw logical inferences, identify premises and conclusions and use language precisely. Students also learn how to identify fallacies and to distinguish between inductive and deductive reasoning. Ideal for any composition class that emphasizes argument, this text includes coverage of writing style and rhetoric, logic, literature, research and documentation.

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