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How to Write a Paragraph: The Art of Substantive Writing (Thinker's Guide Library)

Author Linda Elder, Richard Paul
Publisher Foundation for Critical Thinking Press
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Book Details
ISBN / ASINB00QL9NO70
ISBN-13978B00QL9NO72
Sales Rank308,672
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Skilled writers do not write blindly, but purposely. They have an agenda, goal, or objective. Their purpose, together with the nature of what they are writing (and their situation), determines how they write. They write in different ways in different situations for different purposes. There is also a nearly universal purpose for writing, and that is to say something worth saying about something worth saying something about.

In general, then, when we write, we translate inner meanings into public words. We put our ideas and experiences into written form. Accurately translating intended meanings into written words is an analytic, evaluative, and creative set of acts. Unfortunately, few people are skilled in this work of translation. Few are able to select and combine words that, so combined, convey an intended meaning to an audience of readers.

At present students are poor writers, not because they are incapable of learning to write well, but because they have never been taught the foundations of substantive writing. They lack intellectual discipline as well as strategies for improving their writing. This is true on the one hand because teachers often lack a clear theory of the relationship between writing and learning and, on the other, are concerned with the time involved in grading written work.

This guide provides techniques that enhance student learning and foster the ability to communicate clearly and logically what one is learning.