Monday, November 10, 2014

Jasmine Cheatham
11/10/14

In this lesson it talks about how your sentences should flow and balance out. The title of this lesson is Elegance. Authors should give their readers something that makes them want to keep reading, something that will draw their attention and gives them pleasure every time they recall something they read. Just like first impressions you want to stand out and give people something memorable about you. If you don’t give them something memorable then you just blend in with everyone else.  By having balance in your writing you can talk about your topics and ideas by lurching one part to the next.  By having these series of movements your paper is more appealing to your audience. But it is also acceptable to have uncoordinated balance in your writing. When your writing has uncoordinated balance you can balance structures that are not grammatically coordinated. This means that your subordinate clauses can balance out your main clause. This form of writing can help your readers think of ways that they wouldn’t.  I just learned this through this book because I was taught that this format of writing was grammatically incorrect and wouldn’t be acceptable. When ending a sentence you should end the sentence with words that deserve stress. This creates strength to your writing and readers. Also in this lesson it talks about sentence length, the length of your sentence can set a tone to your writing. To sum it up elegant writing should have simplicity of characters as subjects and actions as verbs, complexity of balances syntax, meaning, sound and rhythm as well as emphasis on artful stressed endings.  One thing that really stuck with me was that the authors stated you can’t have elegant writing by reading this book it is something that will or will not naturally occur.  

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Jasmine Cheatham
11/4/14
Lesson 9

The concision sums up the other lessons we have previously talked about, making sure that characters match actions to your subjects and verbs. I have a problem sometimes with saying I believe or in my opinion. Is saying “I believe” the same as in my opinion? Or is it okay to use in a paper? When I first entered college, when writing papers I would never proof read. It wasn’t until recently that I started revising and diagnosing my papers. Proof reading is very helpful because there are some things that at the time sounded like it made sense but then proof reading I seen the mistakes I made or some confusion in my sentences.  Also this can make your sentences more direct and clear, what your audience wants. By turning negatives to affirmatives you will express the same idea just taking out words and/or changing them.  The way you organize your paper and the concepts you use will help your paper be strong and direct. Getting to the point and keeping your reading intrigued in what you have to say. This was a helpful book because it has helped me become more aware in the way I write and the structure of my sentences. 
Jasmine Cheatham
English 304
Lesson 8

Your introduction should draw your readers in. You should motivate your readers by stating something that they care about and are interested in. Also, state key points and concepts that you will further discuss in your paper. When writing you should make sure that all of your writing goes together. You shouldn’t bounce around from topic to topic because not only is the writing unorganized but it will confuse the reader. Doing it in a structural sense will help your readers get a clear picture of what you are trying to say as well as lead them up to what you are going to talk about next. In class you asked us if it would be more beneficial to us if we used subheadings. Subheadings will help organize the paper as well as give the reader a hint as to what you will be talking about in the section. Always make sure that there is a point being made in your body paragraphs. I used to ramble when I didn’t know what else to say. In some cases it worked well because I was repeating some of my main points but too much repetition can damage a paper.
            Papers need coherence. As a writer you should make sure that your paper is relevant to your thesis and main points. With being relevant as I mentioned before you have to be organized. You can organize your paper so that it is chronological which a sequence of events is from earlier to recent or vice versa. Coordinating your paper you have two or more sections are equally supporting a common topic. A logical paper is the most complex order, the example and generalization. I have more experience using chronological order because that is what I have been taught to do since grade school. For me it is the most helpful because it helps me build me ideas off of one another.

            Clarity should always be an author’s goal. You want to make your ideas and points as clear and to the point as possible. You don’t want to give your readers a confused idea because that makes your paper less desirable to read and understand.