The Composition Handbook
(View Complete Item Description)This handbook is used as a supplemental for composition one class as a resource for grammar and research and sourcing with APA 7th and MLA 9th updated guides.
Material Type: Textbook
This handbook is used as a supplemental for composition one class as a resource for grammar and research and sourcing with APA 7th and MLA 9th updated guides.
Material Type: Textbook
THE BLOOM'S CLASSIFICATION OF EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES IS REALLY A PATH SHOWING TO THE TEACHERS OF ALL CATEGORIES i.e. PRE PRIMARY, PRIMARY, MIDDLE SCHOOL, SECONDARY, SENIOR SECONDARY AND EVEN TEACHERS AT HIGHER EDUCATION. IT GUIDES ABOUT THE GOALS TO BE ACHIEVED IN THE CLASSROOM BY THE TEACHERS.
Material Type: Lecture, Lesson, Module, Teaching/Learning Strategy, Unit of Study
In the Writing Strategies series, Peer Learning Facilitators from the UCLA Undergraduate Writing Center give their top writing tips! Each video includes interactive questions to test your knowledge. In this video, learn all about topic sentences with Jessica!
Material Type: Homework/Assignment
This is a compilation of open essays to supplement an argument and rhetoric class.
Material Type: Reading
Purpose of this essay is to reinforce student's understanding of Rhetorical Strategies and how they are used in everyday works.
Material Type: Assessment, Homework/Assignment
This is a textbook for an Argument and Rhetorical Modes composition class at the community college level.
Material Type: Textbook
This assignment allows students to analyze a bias by agreeing or disagreeing with a speaker. There is a provided podcast episode, but we encourage instructors to select their own in the realm of the course.
Material Type: Homework/Assignment, Teaching/Learning Strategy
This writing assignment--the formal argument--requires students to use the comparison/contrast mode to support a stand on a controversial historial issue, along with material from sources chosen by their instructor.
Material Type: Assessment, Homework/Assignment
This writing assignment--The Profile Essay--requires students to use a variety of rhetorical modes to support a thesis statement.
Material Type: Homework/Assignment
This video presents "division and classification" as a rhetorical mode. Students can select a captioned version, an un-captioned version, and/or a full transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This video presents "comparison and contrast" as a rhetorical mode. Students can select a captioned version, an uncaptioned version, and/or a full transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This lecture reviews "comparison and contrast" as a rhetorical mode by indentifying it in reading selections. The lecture is offered here in three different formats: video without captions, video with captions, and a text transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This video presents "narration" as a rhetorical mode. Students can select a captioned version, an uncaptioned version, and/or a full transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This video explains how facts and short examples can be used to illustrate a point in composition.
Material Type: Lecture
This video presents "description" as a rhetorical mode. Students can select a captioned version, an uncaptioned version, or a full transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This lecture presents "Definition" as a rhetorical mode. The lecture is offered in three different formats: a video without captions, a video with captions, and a full transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This lecture presents Illustration as a rhetorical mode for composition. The lecture is offered here in three different formats: video without captions, video with captions, and a full text transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This lecture reviews "cause and effect" analysis as a rhetorical mode by indentifying it in reading selections. The lecture is offered here in three different formats: video without captions, video with captions, and a text transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This lecture presents Process Analysis as a rhetorical mode for composition. The lecture is offered here in three different formats: video without captions, video with captions, and a text transcript.
Material Type: Lecture
This lecture introduces figurative language or "figures of speech"--including metaphor, simile, and personification--and provides examples of their use in everyday, literary, and academic writing. The lecture is offered here in three different formats: video with captions, video without captions, and a text transcript.
Material Type: Lecture