Write 300 words on Discourse communities in workplace and academically. - Writing
2+ quotes from Writing about Writing 1st or 2nd edition. I attached the pdf version of this writing.During this course, we have discussed workplace discourse communities. With these workplace discourse communities in mind, explain some of the communicative similarities/differences between these and academic discourse communities (in terms of communication). What impact has this class had on you as a writer? Choose different readings/concepts discussed in class that have made you think differently about writing persuasively, What is the biggest lesson you will take with you concerning the social nature of language and argumentation as you move beyond ENG?
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Changing what you know v writing can change the way you write. If you change your
ideas about what writing is supposed to be, you’re likely to do different things — better
things — with your writing. Many of the things we believe about reading and writing
aren’t exactly right. We walk around with a lot of misconceptions about writing, reading, and the ways we interact with texts generally. Our lives as readers and writers
would make a lot more sense if we could see these misconceptions for what they are.
Writers construct texts by using words and images to develop ideas. Who we are
bleeds into our texts even if we strive to write “objectively” or “factually.” Different
readers bring different experiences and understandings to texts and, as a result, they
construct various meanings from them. Many of the things we believe about writing
are constructs. Our thinking about plagiarism is a set of ideas we’ve built up over time,
rather than the only way of thinking about correct ways of using source material. The
concept of error is not natural or inevitable — rather, it’s a concept that was at some
point created by people with a particular set of values. Changing what you know
about writing can change the way you write. If you change your ideas about what
writing is supposed to be, you’re likely to do different things — better things — with
your writing. Many of the things we believe about reading and writing aren’t exactly
right. We walk around with a lot of misconceptions about writing, reading, and the
ways we interact with texts generally. Our lives as readers and writers would make a
lot more sense if we could see these misconceptions for what they are. Writers construct words and images to develop ideas. Who we are bleeds into our texts even if we
strive to write “objectively” or “factually.” Different readers bring different experiences
and understandings to texts and, as a result, they construct various meanings from
them. Many of the things we believe about writing are constructs. Our thinking about
plagiarism is a set of ideas we’ve built up over time, rather than the only way of thinking about correct ways of using source material. The concept of error is not natural or
inevitable — rather, it’s a concept that was at some point created by people with a
particular set of values. Changing what you know about writing can change the way
you write. If you change your ideas about what writing is supposed to be, you’re likely
to do different things — better things — with your writing. Many of the things we believe
about reading and writing aren’t exactly right. We walk around with a lot of misconceptions about writing, reading, and the ways we interact with texts generally. Our
lives as readers and writers would make a lot more sense if we could see these misconceptions for what they are. Writers construct texts by using words and images to develop ideas. Who we are bleeds into our texts even if we strive to write “objectively” or
“factually.” Different readers bring different experiences and understandings to texts
and, as a result, they construct various meanings from them. Many of the things we
believe about writing are constructs. Our thinking about plagiarism is a set of ideas
we’ve built up over time, rather than the only way of thinking about correct ways of
using source material. The concept of error is not natural or inevitable — rather, it’s a
concept that was at some point created by people with a particular set of values.
Changing what you know about writing can change the way you write. If you change
your ideas about what writing is supposed to be, you’re likely to do different things —
better things — with your writing. Many of the things we believe about reading and
writing aren’t exactly right. We walk around with a lot of misconceptions about writing,
reading, and the ways we interact with texts generally. Our lives as readers and writers
would make a lot more sense if we could see these misconceptions for what they are.
Writers construct texts by using words and images to develop ideas. Who we are
bleeds into our texts even if we strive to write “objectively” or “factually.” Different
readers bring different experiences and understandings to texts and, as a result, they
construct various meanings from them. Many of the things we believe about writing
are constructs. Our thinking about plagiarism is a set of ideas we’ve built up over time,
rather than the only way of thinking about correct ways of using source material. The
concept of error is not natural or inevitable — rather, it’s a concept that was at some
point created by people with a particular set of values. Changing what you know
about writing can change the way you write. If you change your ideas about what
writing is supposed to be, you’re likely to do different things — better things — with
your writing. Many of the things we believe about reading and writing aren’t exactly
right. We walk around with a lot of misconceptions about writing, reading, and the
ways we interact with texts generally. Our lives as readers and writers would make a lot
more sense if we could see these misconceptions for what they are. Writers construct
texts by using words and images to develop ideas. Who we are bleeds into our texts
even if we strive to write “objectively” or “factually.” Different readers bring different
experiences and understandings to texts and, as a result, they construct various
meanings from them. Many of the things we believe about writing are constructs. Our
thinking about plagiarism is a set of ideas we’ve built up over time, rather than the only
way of thinking about correct ways of using source material. The concept of error is
not natural or inevitable rather, it’s a concept that was at some point created by people with a particular set of values. Changing what you know about writing can change
the way you write. If you change your ideas about what writing is supposed to be,
with
you’re likely to do different things — better things — with your writing. Many of the
things we believe about reading and writing aren’t exactly right. We walk around with
INTEGRATED
a lot of misconceptions about writing, reading, and the ways we interact with texts
MEDIA
generally. Our lives as readers and writers would make a lot more sense if we could
see these misconceptions for what they are. Writers construct texts by using words and
images to develop ideas. Who we are bleeds into our texts even if we strive to write
SECOND EDITION
WRITING
ABOUT
WRITING
A College Reader
“objectively” or “factually.” Different readers bring different experiences and understandings to texts and, as a result, they construct various meanings from them. Many
of the things we believe about writing are constructs. Our thinking about plagiarism is
a set of ideas we’ve built up over time, rather than the only way of thinking about correct ways of using source material. The concept of error is not natural or inevitable
rather, it’s a concept that was at some point created by people with a particular set
of values. Changing what you know about writing can change the way you write. If you
change your ideas about what writing is supposed to be, you’re likely to do different things
better things with your writing. Many of the things we believe about reading and writing
aren’t exactly right. We walk around with a lot of misconceptions about writing, reading, and the ways we interact with texts generally. Our lives as readers ad writers would
make a lot more sense if we could see these misconceptions for what they are. Writers
construct texts by using words and images to develop ideas. Who we are bleeds into
our texts even if we strive to write “objectively” or “factually.” Different readers bring
different experiences and understandings to texts and, as a result, they construct
various meanings from them. Many of the things we believe about writing are constructs. Our thinking about plagiarism is a set of ideas we’ve built up over time, rather
Elizabeth Wardle
Doug Downs
Writing about
Writing
A College Reader
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Writing about
Writing
A College Reader
Second Edition
Elizabeth Wardle
University of Central Florida
Doug Downs
Montana State University
Bedford / St. Martin’s
Boston • New York
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FOR BEDFORD/ST. MARTIN’S
Publisher for Composition: Leasa Burton
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Composition: Cenveo Publisher Services
Printing and Binding: RR Donnelley and Sons
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Copyright © 2014, 2011 by Bedford/St. Martin’s
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except as may be expressly permitted by the applicable
copyright statutes or in writing by the Publisher.
Manufactured in the United States of America.
8 7 6 5 4 3
f e d c b a
For information, write: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 75 Arlington Street,
Boston, MA 02116 (617-399-4000)
ISBN: 978-1-4576-3694-3
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments and copyrights can be found at the back of the book on pages
805–09, which constitute an extension of the copyright page.
It is a violation of the law to reproduce these selections by any means whatsoever
without the written permission of the copyright holder.
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Preface for Instructors
Writing about Writing is part of a movement that has been growing steadily for years.
As composition instructors, we have always focused on teaching students how writing
works and on helping them develop ways of thinking that would enable them to succeed as writers in college. We found ourselves increasingly frustrated, however, teaching
traditional composition courses based on topics that had nothing to do with writing. It
made far more sense to us to have students really engage with writing in the writing
course; the best way to do this, we decided, was to adopt a “writing about writing”
approach, introducing students directly to what writing researchers have learned about
writing and challenging them to respond by writing and doing research of their own.
After years of experimenting with readings and assignments, and watching our colleagues do the same, we eventually developed Writing about Writing, a textbook for
first-year composition students that presents the subjects of composition, discourse, and
literacy as its content. Here’s why we think Writing about Writing is a smart choice for
composition courses:
Writing about Writing engages students in a relevant subject. One of the major
goals of the writing course, as we see it, is to move students’ ideas about language
and writing from the realm of the automatic and unconscious to the forefront of their
thinking. In conventional composition courses, students are too often asked to write
about either an arbitrary topic unrelated to writing or, conversely, about anything at all.
In our experience, when students are asked to read and interact with academic scholarly
conversations about writing and test their opinions through their own research, they
become more engaged with the goals of the writing course and—most important—they
learn more about writing.
Writing about Writing engages students’ own areas of expertise. By the time
they reach college, students are expert language users with multiple literacies: they are
experienced student writers, and they’re engaged in many other discourses as well—
blogging, texting, instant messaging, posting to social networking sites like Facebook
and YouTube, and otherwise using language and writing on a daily basis. Writing about
Writing asks students to work from their own experience to consider how writing works,
who they are as writers, and how they use (and don’t use) writing. Students might wonder, for example, why they did so poorly on the SAT writing section or why some groups
of people use writing that is so specialized it seems intended to leave others out. This
book encourages students to discover how others—including Sondra Perl, Mike Rose,
James Paul Gee, their instructors, and their classmates—have answered these questions
and then to find out more by doing meaningful research of their own.
Writing about Writing helps students transfer what they learn. Teachers often
assume that students can automatically and easily “apply” what they learn in a writing course to all their other writing—or at the very least, to other college writing. This
v
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vi
PREFACE FOR INSTRUCTORS
assumption sees writing and reading as “basic” universal skills that work the same
regardless of situation. Yet research on transfer of learning suggests that there is nothing automatic about it: David Perkins and Gavriel Salomon found that in order to transfer knowledge, students need to explicitly create general principles based on their own
experience and learning; be self-reflective, so that they keep track of what they are thinking and learning as they do it; and be mindful, that is, alert to their surroundings and
to what they are doing rather than just doing things automatically and unconsciously. A
writing course that takes language, writing, reading, and literacy as its subjects can help
students achieve these goals by teaching them to articulate general principles such as
“Carefully consider what your audience needs and wants this document to do.” In addition, it teaches them to reflect on their own reading, writing, and research processes.
Writing about Writing has been extensively class tested—and it works. The principles of this writing-about-writing approach have been well tested and supported by the
experience of writing instructors and thousands of students across the country. The first
edition of Writing about Writing was formally class tested in a pilot at the University of
Central Florida, an experiment that yielded impressive outcomes in comparative portfolio assessment with more traditional composition courses. Assessment results suggest,
among other things, that the writing-about-writing approach had a statistically significant
impact on higher-order thinking skills—rhetorical analysis, critical thinking about ideas,
and using and integrating the ideas of others. The writing-about-writing approach also
had a significant impact on how students and teachers engaged in writing as a process.
The first edition of Writing about Writing was used in a variety of composition programs
across the country. Based on positive feedback from those users, we have even greater
confidence that this approach is successful.
Features of Writing about Writing, Second Edition
Topics That Matter to Writers
Writing about Writing is organized around concepts and principles from Writing Studies
with which we think students should become familiar: how texts in general—and ideas
about writing in particular—are constructed; what writing processes are and how they
work; what “literacy” means and how people become literate (or multiliterate); how
communities use and are shaped by discourse; and how writers can gain authority when
writing in college. These issues are framed in the text as questions, each of which forms
the basis of one chapter. Many of these are issues that were covered in the first edition,
but some are new. All have been re-ordered to create a carefully sequenced and scaffolded learning experience for students:
• Chapter 1: Literacies: Where Do Your Ideas About Reading and Writing Come From?
• Chapter 2: Individual in Community: How Do Texts Mediate Activities?
• Chapter 3: Rhetoric: How Is Meaning Constructed in Context?
• Chapter 4: Processes: How Are Texts Composed?
• Chapter 5: Multi-Modal Composition: What Counts as Writing?
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PREFACE FOR INSTRUCTORS
vii
By asking students to find their own answers to these questions, we encourage them
to reflect on past literacy experiences and to be mindful of present ones, making them
directly responsible, in the end, for their own learning.
Framed Around Threshold Concepts about Writing
The chapter concepts have been re-thought and re-ordered around what we think are some
central “threshold concepts” related to writing. Threshold concepts are concepts that learners must become acquainted with in order to progress in that area of study—they are gateways to learning. Naming and using threshold concepts is an approach that has been used
in the United Kingdom and now increasingly in the U.S. to improve teaching and learning in
various disciplines and programs. Because they are central to work in a particular field but are
often assumed and unstated, threshold concepts when explicitly identified can better help
students come to understand ideas that are central to that field or phenomenon.
Researchers Ray Land and Jan Meyer have argued that threshold concepts are often
troublesome, and can conflict with common knowledge about a phenomenon. We think
that this is particularly true when it comes to writing. Much of what we have learned
as a field about writing conflicts with commonly held assumptions about writing. For
example, many people believe that “good writers” are people for whom writing is easy,
while research about writing suggests that “good writers” are people who persist, revise,
and are willing to learn from their failures.
Threshold concepts are now the organizing theme for the second edition, and we’ve arranged
them in a sequence that we believe assists understanding of each subsequent concept.
• Chapter 1, “Literacies: Where Do Your Ideas about Reading and Writing Come From?” engages the threshold concept that writing performance is
informed by prior literacy experiences, or in simpler terms, that our reading and
writing past will shape our reading and writing present.
• Chapter 2, “Individual in Community: How Do Texts Mediate Activities?”
engages the threshold concept that writing mediates activity. In other words, that
writing gets things done, makes things happen.
• Chapter 3, “Rhetoric: How Is Meaning Constructed in Context?” introduces
students to some underlying rhetorical concepts; for example, that good writing is
dependent on the situation, readers, and uses it’s being created for.
• Chapter 4, “Processes: How Are Texts Composed?” asks students to engage
several threshold concepts about writing: that writing is knowledge-making, that
making knowledge requires ongoing and repeating processes, and that writing is
not perfectible.
• Chapter 5, “Multimodal Composition: What Counts as Writing?” emphasizes the threshold concept that writing is by nature a technology. Writing
involves tools, and writing is not “natural” (in a biological sense).
Challenging but Engaging Readings
Because our intention in putting this book together was to invite students directly into
scholarly conversations about writing, most readings in the book are articles by rhetoric
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Identify a specific consumer product that you or your family have used for quite some time. This might be a branded smartphone (if you have used several versions over the years)
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In order to
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You will need to perform a literature search for your topic
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Communication on Customer Relations. Discuss how two-way communication on social media channels impacts businesses both positively and negatively. Provide any personal examples from your experience
od pressure and hypertension via a community-wide intervention that targets the problem across the lifespan (i.e. includes all ages).
Develop a community-wide intervention to reduce elevated blood pressure and hypertension in the State of Alabama that in
in body of the report
Conclusions
References (8 References Minimum)
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*** In Task section I’ve chose (Economic issues in overseas contracting)"
Electromagnetism
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Topic: Purchasing and Technology
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Understanding Gender Fluidity
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After the components sending to the manufacturing house
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One of the first conflicts that would need to be investigated would be whether the human service professional followed the responsibility to client ethical standard. While developing a relationship with client it is important to clarify that if danger or
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No matter which type of health care organization
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Computers are being used to monitor the spread of outbreaks in different areas of the world and with this record
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One major ethical conflict that may arise in my investigation is the Responsibility to Client in both Standard 3 and Standard 4 of the Ethical Standards for Human Service Professionals (2015). Making sure we do not disclose information without consent ev
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The inbound logistics for William Instrument refer to purchase components from various electronic firms. During the purchase process William need to consider the quality and price of the components. In this case
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The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
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Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
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