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SCHEDULE OF CLASSES AND ASSIGNMENTS Week 1 MONDAY, AUGUST 29 Go over introduction—talk about course goals and expectations. Introductions of class members. PART I: BASIC SENTENCE PATTERNS INTRODUCTION: You will begin with the basics of grammar: parts of speech, sentence patterns, and alterations of the basic patterns. These first six chapters are the foundation for the rest of the course; therefore, you must go through these chapters very carefully. Please do not get behind. If you are having trouble mastering either the definitions or the application of the concepts, make an appointment to see me as soon as possible. As you study Lesson 1 and get a feeling for what is meant by parts of speech, remember that these terms are only a way of classifying the words in the English language. Of far more importance is how the word functions. In English a word can be used in a variety of ways. For example, look how the word fish functions in the following three sentences. 1. I fish every Saturday afternoon. Here the word fish is used as a verb describing an action. 2. I eat fish every Friday. In this sentence the word fish is used as a noun because it names. 3. I like fish stew. The word fish here is used as an adjective. An adjective is a word which limits or defines a noun or a pronoun. Here fish tells what kind of stew I like. In other words, fish limits or defines the noun stew. The point is that while knowing the part of speech is important—a quick glance at any dictionary, which gives you all of the parts of speech that a word can be used as, should convince you of this point—it is not as important as recognizing how the word FUNCTIONS. Function determines form! PART I OBJECTIVE: You must understand and be able to recognize the function of words in the English sentence and how these words form the five basic sentence patterns. Homework for next time: Read Part I, Lesson 1, “The Simple Sentence; Subjects and Verbs.” To prepare for class discussion, complete Practice Sheet 1 and also work the first 10 sentences of Exercise 1. We will be discussing these 10 sentences in class. In addition Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part I Basic sentence patterns and do exercises: 1.1 and 1.7 and email results to [email protected] WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31 INTRODUCTION: As you have seen from Lesson 1, nouns and noun substitutes—pronouns— not only name persons, places, and things but also function as the subjects of sentences. Functioning as a subject—the actor or agent—of the sentence is one of a number of positions in the sentence that nouns and pronouns fill. We will be looking at other functions later, but for now you should understand that we are looking at these words on two levels: part of speech— noun or pronoun—and function—subject. Verbs, on the other hand, do not change their name to reflect their function. When we discuss verbs, we are always discussing part of speech and function simultaneously. The verb’s function is to name the action—mental, physical—or a condition within the sentence. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lessons 1: Learning to identify nouns and pronouns as subjects and recognizing verbs. Also look at Class Website and discuss how it will be used. *POST Introduction in Discussion forum that is labeled “Introductions” Homework for next time: Read Lesson 2, “Verbs, Adjectives, Adverbs, and Prepositions.” To prepare for class discussion, complete Practice Sheet 2 and the first 10 sentences of Exercise 2. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part I Basic sentence patterns and do exercises: 2.1 and 2.2 and email results to [email protected] FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 INTRODUCTION: Every sentence can be divided into two parts: the subject and the predicate. The subject is a noun or pronoun (actor or agent) plus all modifiers of the noun or pronoun. The predicate is the verb, any objects or complements, and all modifiers of those words. For example, in the sentence, The girls’ soccer league will meet at the school this afternoon, the complete subject is The girls’ soccer league and the complete predicate is will meet at the school this afternoon. The noun league is called the simple subject because it is the noun/agent about which the sentence is written. The words The, girls’, and soccer are adjectives. They limit and define league. The simple predicate is the verb will meet. The simple predicate is always the verb or verb phrase. The group of words beginning with the preposition at and ending with the noun school is used as a single adverb, called a prepositional phrase. It is an adverb because it tells where the league will meet. The word afternoon, which is usually used as a noun, functions as an adverb because it tells when the meeting will take place. Nouns that name time, like today, yesterday, morning, or evening, are often used as adverbs. The pronoun this functions as an adjective because it modifies a noun. Confusing? Not really. Just remember that function determines form. You must always look at how the word is being used in the sentence before you determine its part of speech. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 2: Recognizing and identifying adjectives, adverbs, and prepositions with their noun or pronoun objects. **Take a look at sentence diagramming Begin writing paragraphs in class—post in discussion groups by Wednesday. Homework for next time: QUIZ #1 Write a paragraph of four to five sentences. You will be asked to describe a “feel-good” place. Once the paragraph is typed, you will be asked to identify all nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositions by placing an N, PRON, V, ADJ, ADV, or PREP in parentheses after the word. If you have a choice between two parts of speech, the possessive pronouns for example, choose function. We will share the paragraph in class. For us to do this, you will need to transfer a copy of the paragraph to an assigned discussion group on the Internet before you leave class. WEEK 2 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 LABOR DAY – NO CLASSES WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 INTRODUCTION: The purpose of this assignment is to make you aware of the variety of words you are using and to prepare you for editing your own sentences more effectively. CLASS DISCUSSION: In-class workshop on the paragraph identifying the parts of speech. Post to discussion forums and begin peer reviewing each other’s paragraphs. Homework for next time: Continue working on peer reviews of each other’s paragraphs and make revisions on your own paragraph to prepare for submission to homework manager for grading. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 CLASS DISCUSSION: We will spend Friday finishing up peer reviews in your discussion groups. You will then post your final draft to homework manager. Save your quiz as Quiz #1 (last name). I will introduce Chapter 3 on Basic Sentence patterns - Types 1 and 2. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 3, “Basic Sentence Patterns with Intransitive Verbs.” To prepare for discussion, complete Practice Sheet 3 and the first 20 sentences of Exercise 3. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part I Basic sentence patterns and do exercise: 3.1 and email results. Also work on Quiz #2: Write ten Pattern Two sentences using a different linking verb in each sentence. Place the sentences in your discussion group before class time. Post Final Quiz #1 by midnight. WEEK 3 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 INTRODUCTION: As I mentioned before, parts of speech are a way of classifying the words of the English language. This classification brings order to the thousands of words in your vocabulary. Additionally, an understanding of the parts of speech will help you know where a word belongs in the sentence. Nouns and pronouns, for example, are used as subjects, indirect objects, direct objects of verbs or prepositions; verbs are used as verbs—words describing action, occurrence, or a state of being. These are their sentence functions. Think of the parts of speech, therefore as being renamed by how they function—subject, subject complement, object, object complement, indirect object—in the sentence. These functions of the parts of speech are the building blocks of the five major sentence patterns in the English language. Learn them. You will have to have a thorough knowledge of them to complete the course. CLASS DISCUSSION: Workshop on the ten Pattern Two sentences. Correct the sentences you missed and send a copy to the Homework manager section on the Internet before you leave class. Class Discussion Lesson 4: Introduction of Transitive verbs Patterns 3, 4, & 5. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 4, “Basic Sentence Patterns with Transitive Verbs.” To prepare for class discussion, work the first 10 sentences of Practice Sheet 4 (Work the rest of the sentences if you are having trouble). Also work the first 20 sentences of Exercise 4. Post Final Quiz #2 by midnight. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part I Basic sentence patterns and do exercise: 4.1. and email results. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14: INTRODUCTION: The majority of English sentences can fit into the five sentence patterns of these two chapters. You’ve seen two intransitive patterns—subject+verb, and subject+linking verb+subject complement. It is important to remember that the linking verb acts as an equal mark between the subject and the complement. The subject and the complement are the same thing or the complement modifies the subject. The linking verb does not describe an action. It states a condition. The three patterns of Lesson 4, however, use a verb, which does describe an action. The subject performs the action being described by the verb. Keep in mind that regardless of which pattern we are discussing, the subject will always be a noun or a pronoun; the subject complement will be a noun, a pronoun, or, because of the linking verb, an adjective; the object, whether it is direct or indirect, will be a noun or pronoun; the objective complement can be a noun, pronoun, or adjective. Also remember that you cannot have an indirect object or an objective complement unless the sentence contains a direct object. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 4, recognizing transitive sentence patterns. QUIZ #3: Write the 20 sentences requested on page 38. Place these sentences in your discussion group for peer review on Friday. (See pp. 9-10 for help on verb tenses) FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16: In-class writing assignment focusing on intransitive verbs. Peer review each other’s quiz #3. Post final to Homework Manager by midnight. Introduction of Lesson #5. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 5, “Forms of the Verb: Auxiliary Verbs.” To prepare for class, complete the first 20 sentences of Practice Sheet 5 and all of Exercise 5. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part I Basic sentence patterns and do exercise: 5.1. (submit to my email address) WRITER’S GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK (WGR): Entries so far should include: 1. Quiz #1 a paragraph identifying the parts of speech in your sentences--notes from lessons 1 & 2 2. Quiz #2 ten sentences using linking verbs—notes from lesson 3 WEEK 4 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 INTRODUCTION: This chapter is packed with information that you will be using for the rest of the semester, so it’s important that you spend time and effort with these concepts. The principal parts are important because it is from these three forms—present, past, and past participle—of the verb that all of our tenses are formed. If you learn what these forms are for all the verbs, and especially the ones you have trouble with, you will have much more control over your writing and editing. Just as there are only five sentence patterns in grammar, there are only six tenses: present, past, and future, present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect, and six progressive forms: present progressive, past progressive, future progressive, present perfect progressive, past perfect progressive, and future perfect progressive. All in all, there are just twelve verb structures, not very many when you consider the hundreds of sentence you write for the average essay or business letter. These verbs are not difficult to recognize either. The key is the auxiliary verb. In the simple tenses—present, past, and future—there is no auxiliary. The perfect tenses will always consist of the same two verb forms: has, have, or had as the auxiliary plus the past participle of the main verb. The progressive form will always use a form of the be verb—is, am, are, was, were, be, been—plus the present participle (the verb form that ends with ing) of the main verb, and the perfect progressive will always use two auxiliaries: has, have, or had plus been plus the present participle (-ing) of the main verb. The other group of auxiliary verbs consists of the modal auxiliaries. These six or seven forms can be used in all of the tenses to add a condition to the verb. The modals are can, in the present; could in the past; may in the present, might in the past; shall in the present; should in the past; will in the present; would in the past. The conditions they place on the verb are very specific. Can and could express a mental or physical ability, possession of a specific power or right or of a specific capacity or skill, possibility or probability. Can is sometimes used to express permission or request, but it should be used only to mean the capacity to do something, and may should be used to express permission. May, Might, must mean to allow or permit, or a certain measure of likelihood or possibility. Must means to be obliged. Shall and should are used to express determination, promise, inevitability, command, or a directive or requirement. Shall is used as an indicator of the future tense. Strictly speaking, shall should be used with the first person while will is used in the second and third persons. This is reversed when the meaning indicates determination, promise, obligation, permission, or inevitability. With these definitions will is used in the first person and shall is used in the second and third persons. However, even in formal writing these distinctions are seldom observed. Shall, it seems, is slowly being replaced by will in all three persons. Will and would mean likelihood or certainty, willingness, requirement or command, customary or habitual action, capacity or ability. Will, as has already been discussed, is the future tense indicator. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 5, recognizing the forms of verbs and auxiliaries. Go over exercises and discuss questions. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 6 “Alterations of basic Sentence Patterns.” To prepare for class discussion, complete the first set of ten sentences of Practice sheet 6 and the second set of 15 sentences on the next page. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part I Basic sentence patterns and do exercise: 6.4. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 INTRODUCTION: So far, with the exception of sentences which begin with there, we have dealt only with sentences whose words are considered to be in the normal order, that is, subject first and verb second. In this chapter we will study two changes in that pattern: first, with the passive voice, and second, with the sentences that ask a question. Voice is a term that is used to indicate whether the subject of the verb is performing the action the verb describes or whether the subject is being acted upon by the verb. For example, in a sentence like The boy hit the ball, the voice is active because the subject boy is performing the action of hitting. But, if we change the voice to passive, the subject being acted upon by the verb, for example, “The ball was hit by the boy.” The verb is was hit, and the subject is ball. Ball is not performing the action of hitting. The subject is being acted upon by the verb. This is an alteration of the normal order. In the passive voice the direct object becomes the subject, and the subject is moved to a subordinate position in a prepositional phrase, becoming the object of the preposition. Stylistically, most writers prefer the active voice because it puts the emphasis on the subject— the doer of the action. Sentences that show someone doing something are much more interesting to read than those in which the subject is always being acted upon. Also, use of the passive voice tends to weigh down the sentence because nothing happens in such sentences. There are however, valid reasons for using the passive. The passive is very useful if the writer wants to put the emphasis on the action instead of the subject or when the subject or doer of an action is unknown. This discussion, then, is about choice, but before you can choose, you must know how to recognize the passive voice and know how to change it to the active voice if there is no clear reason to the use passive. The second alteration to the basic sentence order is the sentence which asks a question. In this sentence, too, the basic order is changed, usually by starting the sentence with an interrogative pronoun and putting the subject between the auxiliary verb and the main verb or by starting the sentence with the auxiliary verb which is then followed by the subject. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 6, recognizing alterations of the basic sentence patterns. QUIZ #4: Type the ten sentences of Exercise 6 (p. 55) onto the computer. Under each passive voice sentence write the active voice asked for. Post them in “Assignments” by midnight—no peer review. I will correct and grade them. These sentences will be put in to your WGN after you have corrected any mistakes. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 Today we will finish the discussion of verbs and transformations. There will be an in-class test review and then the tests will be available online—they must be completed by Monday at midnight. Open note/open book, but you cannot help each other. Also, introduction of Lesson 7 for Monday. Test Review ONLINE EXAM AVAILABLE TODAY DUE: MONDAY, SEPT 26 Homework for next time: Part II “Clauses and Phrases.” Read Lesson 7, “Coordination: Compound Sentences” for Monday. To prepare for the discussion, complete all of Practice Sheet 7 and the first 10 sentences of Exercise 7. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part II Clauses and Phrases and do exercise: 7.1. WRITER’S GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK (WGR): 1.Quiz #3 twenty sentences identifying patterns 2. Notes from lesson 4 PART II: CLAUSES AND PHRASES INTRODUCTION: So far you have seen how words are classified according to their part of speech and then reclassified according to how they are used or function in the sentence. You have also learned that a complete sentence must have two parts—a subject, which is a noun or pronoun naming what the sentence is about—and a verb, which describes the action of the sentence. In this next group of lessons you are going to learn to recognize coordinate word groups—those that express parallel ideas—and subordinate word groups—those which must rely on complete word groups, called main clauses or independent clauses for their meaning. Some of these subordinate groups of words act as modifiers (adjectives or adverbs) and some act as noun substitutes (naming word groups). This is no different from the concept that you have already learned, namely, that a single word can limit and qualify another word in the sentence. Here we are dealing with groups of words, some with their own subjects and verbs, acting in the same way. The entire group of words acts as a single unit to perform the same function as the single word. You will see that none of these subordinate word groups can stand by themselves as complete thoughts or sentences even though some of them have a subject and a verb. Other subordinate word groups, like the phrases, do not have subjects and verbs and take their names from the kind of word that begins the phrase. Perhaps the most difficult concept to learn with the clauses is that both the main clause and the subordinate clause contain a subject and a verb in any one of the five sentence patterns you have already learned. What makes the difference between whether a clause is considered main or subordinate is one word, called a subordinating conjunction. Conjunctions are a part of speech just like nouns, pronouns, verbs, etc. When a subordinate conjunction begins a group of words containing a subject and verb, it automatically subordinates it. Likewise, the phrases are equally identifiable because they begin with a head word that helps the writer or editor identify it; for example, the prepositional phrase always begins with a preposition. The head word (preposition) plus the noun or pronoun called its object and any modifiers of the object combine to form a prepositional phrase—a group of words used or functioning as a single part of speech, usually an adjective or an adverb. Generally, all English sentences can be classified as one of four types: simple, which you have already studied in some detail; compound, which is the subject of Lesson 7; complex, which contains both independent and dependent clauses; and compound-complex. These four types of sentences provide the writer and editor with sentence variety. PART II OBJECTIVE: You must learn the difference between independent word groups and subordinate ones and the difference between phrases or clauses. You should also know the names of and be able to recognize both clause and phrase word groups in order to be able to edit your essays for greater sentence variety. WEEK 5 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 ONLINE EXAM DUE by midnight THE COMPOUND SENTENCE INTRODUCTION: So far, you have been working with the simple sentence, which expresses one thought. Now you are going to analyze sentences that contain more than one thought. The compound sentence, for example, contains two complete thoughts. Think of it as two simple sentences properly joined, of course. The part of speech which joins the two simple sentences is called a coordinate conjunction, which always joins grammatical items of equal rank and differs from a subordinate conjunction, which joins grammatical items of unequal rank. The coordinate conjunction, then, joins two nouns, two adjectives, two adverbs, or two simple sentences. The subordinate conjunction joins a subordinate (an idea of lesser importance) to a main idea. The list of coordinate conjunctions is very short (fanboys), so it shouldn’t be difficult to remember them. They are and, which means addition. You are, in effect, adding one idea to another idea. And is the most commonly used coordinate conjunction. But means contrast. When you use but, you are still telling your reader that the ideas are equal in rank, but the logic that you are using to join them is one of contrast. The other coordinate conjunctions are for, which means cause; or, which means choice; nor, which means negative choice; and so, which means result. So as a coordinate conjunction should not be confused with so used as subordinate conjunction. The coordinate conjunction means and so and will be punctuated with a comma, but the so used as a subordinate conjunction means so that and will usually be used without a comma. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 7, coordinating sentences for great sentence variety. Begin QUIZ #5—Write a paragraph in which you present two or three reasons why you dislike something. Your purpose in writing is to practice two sentence types: the simple and the compound. Limit yourself to these two types. Once you have finished the paragraph, go back over it to label and make sure that all compound sentences are correctly punctuated. Label them by placing a [compound] at the end of each compound sentence and a [simple] at the end of each simple sentence. Practice using a variety of joining techniques. Use your book if you have to remind yourself what these three ways are. Post in your discussion forums for peer review on Wednesday. Homework for next time: Post QUIZ #5 in discussion groups before class for peer review on Wednesday. It is important that you post your paragraph and peer review the others in your group for participation points. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 We will continue the discussion of coordination and compounding. QUIZ #5: Peer review each other’s paragraphs in your discussion groups. Make revisions and post completed paragraph in Homework manager. Introduction of complex sentences—dependent clauses—1st of 3 types: Adverb Clause. Homework for next time: Post QUIZ #5 in homework manager. Read Lesson 8, “Subordination: Adverb Clauses.” To prepare for class discussion, complete all of Practice Sheet 8 and the first 20 sentences of Exercise 8. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part II Clauses and Phrases and do exercise: 8.2. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30 SUBORDINATION--CLAUSES INTRODUCTION: Lessons 8, 9, and 10 introduce the third type of sentence, the complex. Unlike the compound sentence, which contains two main clauses, the complex sentence contains only one. In addition to the one main clause, the complex sentence utilizes one or more subordinate clauses to add information that is of lesser importance to the sentence than the information in the main clause. Stylistically, then, a writer must always be sure that important information be placed in a main clause and never in a subordinate one. Adverb subordinate clauses can always be easily identified because they begin with a subordinate conjunction. These are in your textbook. Learn them. The conjunction is followed by a subject and a verb, and the entire group of words acts just like a single adverb modifying the verb of the main clause, an adjective in the main clause (quite often a subjective complement), or another adverb in the main clause. The subordinate conjunction provides the logic that links the two clauses together to make the writer’s meaning clear. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 8, recognizing, writing, and editing adverb clauses. QUIZ #6 on Adverb clauses: Think of the various part-time or full-time jobs you have held, and write about one you have either liked or disliked. Consider what has made the job a good one for you or a bad one, and present your case for or against the job in a clear topic sentence. The purpose of the writing exercise is to practice subordination using adverb clauses. After you have written the paragraph, please, identify all adverb clauses by placing [adv of (fill in the logic here)] after the dependent clause. You should have at least six or seven examples of adverb clauses. Example: When I went to school this morning (adv of time), I nearly froze to death because the temperature was minus two (adv of cause or reason). —work on in class and post in discussion groups. Homework for next time: Finish writing paragraph for QUIZ #6 and post in discussion groups for peer review before class on Monday. Also Grammar Notebook Check on Monday— Quizzes 1-5 and notes from lessons WRITER’S GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK (WGR): Entries so far should include: 1. Quiz #4 ten passive voice sentences-- notes from lesson 6 2. Quiz #5 paragraph on compounds—notes from lesson 7 WEEK 6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 3 *Grammar Notebook Check—Quizzes 1-5 and notes from lessons Continuation of the discussion of subordination and the adverb clause—Quiz #6 Peer review Homework for next time: POST QUIZ #6 in homework manager. Read Lesson 9, “Subordination: Adjective Clauses.” To prepare for class discussion, complete the first 20 sentences of Practice Sheet 9 and all of Exercise 9. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery website Student Resources. See Part II Clauses and Phrases and do exercise: 9.7. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5 INTRODUCTION: Like the adverb clause the adjective clause is a modifier, which means that it limits or defines a word in the main clause. Also, like the adverb clause, the adjective contains a subject and a verb and could be a complete sentence except for one word—the relative pronoun. The relative pronoun acts in the same way as a subordinate conjunction in that it subordinates the entire group of words that it heads, but the link is to a noun or pronoun in the main clause instead of to a verb, adjective, or adverb. CLASS DSICUSSION: Go over exercises on Adjective Clauses. Introduce QUIZ #7: Write a paragraph in which you discuss two to three of the qualities you admire in a close friend. Make it clear that you are praising him or her for the characteristics you describe. This process is called a eulogy, which is a tribute to someone’s virtues or achievements. The purpose here is to practice using adjective clauses for subordination. Please use as many as possible. Once you have written the paragraph, go back and identify all adjective clauses and whether they are restrictive or nonrestrictive by placing (adj—N or R) in parentheses() after the subordinate adjective clause. After you have identified them, make sure that all of them are punctuated correctly, according to formal academic grammar. Lastly, identify all adverb clauses, by placing (adv) in parentheses() after the subordinate adverb clause. In addition make sure that all compound sentences are punctuated correctly. Homework for next time: Post Final Quiz #6 on Blackboard by midnight. Finish QUIZ #7 paragraph on adjective clauses and post in discussion group for peer review on Friday. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7 Peer Review paragraphs for QUIZ #7 on adjective clauses. Make revisions and Post Final draft in Homework manager, and I’ll read and comment on it. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 10, “Subordination: Noun Clauses.” To prepare for class discussion, complete the first 10 sentences of Practice Sheet 10, the first 10 sentences of Exercise 10, and work the first 20 sentences of Exercise 10A. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources. See Part II Clauses and Phrases and do exercise: 10.2. WEEK 7 MONDAY, OCTOBER 10 INTRODUCTION: The noun clause is probably the most difficult of the three types because, unlike the adverb and adjective, this clause does not modify another word in the main clause. It is used as the major part of the sentence. Because it is a noun—a namer—it can function as the subject of a verb, as the subjective complement of a linking verb, as the direct object of an action verb, or as the object of a preposition. It is introduced by a relative pronoun, just like the adjective, or a relative adverb, and it contains a subject and a verb. Remember that this clause functions in any way that a noun can function. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 10, recognizing, writing, and editing noun clauses. Go over exercises. Introduction of Quiz #8 Begin writing paragraph—time will be given during class on Wednesday to finish and post in discussion groups. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12 INTRODUCTION: The purpose of today’s class is to make you aware of and give you practice in using the types of coordination and subordination that we have been studying. QUIZ# 8 Write a paragraph on a subject of your choice using coordination and subordination for sentence variety. You should have at least two examples of coordination, three examples of subordination using adverb clauses, two examples of adjective clauses, and at least one noun clause. Identify the sentences in the following way: place ADV in parentheses after each adverb clause, an ADJ in parentheses after each adjective clause, a N in parentheses after each noun clause, and a COMP in parentheses after each compound sentence. Your paragraph should be at least 5 or 6 sentences. We will spend Friday in a peer workshop, so post a copy to a Discussion group before class. Homework for next time: Write a paragraph on a subject of your choice using coordination and subordination for sentence variety. You should have at least two examples of coordination, three examples of subordination using adverb clauses, two examples of adjective clauses, and at least one noun clause. Identify the sentences in the following way: place ADV in parentheses after each adverb clause, an ADJ in parentheses after each adjective clause, an N in parentheses after each noun clause, and a COMP in parentheses after each compound sentence. Try to have 5 or 6 sentences. We will spend Friday in a workshop, so post a copy to a Discussion group before class. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14 INTRODUCTION: The purpose of today’s class is to make you aware of give you practice in using the types of coordination and subordination that we have been studying. Peer workshop on QUIZ #8 sentence variety paragraph. Once you have received feedback, you will make revisions and post the final paragraph to homework manager. After I’ve graded it, you will edit any errors and place it in your WGN. Introduction of Gerund and Infinitive phrases Lesson 11. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 11, “Subordination: Gerund Phrases; Infinitive Phrases.” To prepare for class discussion, complete the first 10 sentences of Practice Sheet 11, the first 10 sentences on the next page, and the first 10 sentences of Exercise 11. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources See Part II Clauses and Phrases Do exercise: 11.1. WRITER’S GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK (WGR): Entries so far should include: 1. Quiz #6 a paragraph on adverb clauses 2. Quiz #7 a paragraph on adjective clauses 3. Quiz #8 a paragraph demonstrating sentence variety WEEK 8 MONDAY, OCTOBER 17 SUBORDINATION—PHRASES INTRODUCTION: LESSONS 11 and 12 present subordination of a more sophisticated type. Both chapters discuss the use of verbals—verb forms used as other parts of speech. They take their name from the verb form that begins the phrase. These are phrases because they do not have subjects and verbs. They may, however, have subjective complements and direct objects. They are sort of condensed clauses, and they offer the writer another way to vary sentence structure and provide variety for the reader. The first of these are the gerund and the infinitive. The gerund is always a present participle (the verb form that ends in –ing.) When the present participle is used as a noun, we call it a gerund. You will see in the next chapter that the present participle can be used as an adjective; as such it keeps its name—participle. But when it functions as a noun, we give it a new name by calling it a gerund. The infinitive is the base form of all verbs, and it functions as an adverb, an adjective, or a noun. It can fill any of these slots, so you have to look very carefully at the sentence in which it appears to determine how the writer intends the phrase to be used. Verbals are yet another way for you to achieve sentence variety in your writing or editing. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 11, recognizing and writing gerund and infinitive phrases to increase sentence variety. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 12, “Subordination: Participial Phrases; Absolute Phrases.” To prepare for class discussion, complete the first 20 sentences on Practice Sheet 12 and Exercise 12. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources See Part II Clauses and Phrases Do exercise: 12.7 and email results to [email protected]. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19 INTRODUCTION: The participle both in the present (-ing) and in the past functions as an adjective modifying a noun or pronoun. The problem for most students is the present participial form, which ends in –ing. The solution is to recognize how the word being used in the sentence. When the word is used to fill a noun slot, (a subject, subjective complement, a direct object, for example), grammar changes the word’s name and calls the present participle a gerund. When the word is used as an adjective to modify a noun or pronoun, it keeps its grammatical name— participle. Analogous to this is the number of names you have. The person you are doesn’t change, but depending on the situation you find yourself in, your name often can and does change. For example, you may have a name of endearment, used only by the close members of your family. You may have a nickname that only your close friends use. You have a formal, legal name— quite often used by your mother to get your attention. In business or academic situations, a title like Mr. Mrs. Miss or Ms is often placed before your surname to indicate the formality. You haven’t changed, but the name you are known by has changed to reflect your various functions. The absolute phrase is a special kind of participle phrase. This phrase always begins with a noun, which does not fit into one of the noun slots in the sentence and is followed by a participle phrase. The absolute offers the writer the opportunity to point out relationships modifying the entire sentence rather than just one word within the sentence. Stylistically, absolutes offer the writer versatility. Write Quiz #9 Paragraph using verbal phrases. Write a paragraph in which you discuss one of the rules by which you live. Explain why you believe in this rule or why and how it works for you. The purpose of this writing assignment is to practice writing and identifying verbal phrases in your own writing. Place a G for gerund, a P for participle, and an I for infinitive inside parentheses at the END of each of the phrases you have used. Write a minimum of two examples of each. You will probably have many more than that number. Post in discussion forums for peer review on Thursday (online in discussion groups). CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 12, recognizing and writing participial and absolute phrases. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20 (NO CLASS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21—FALL BREAK) We will do online peer review Quiz #9: It must contain two examples of each verbal (gerund, infinitive, and participle), so be sure you understand how to use them. Give each other feedback. Next time: Grammar Notebook Check—Quizzes 6-8 and notes to lessons. WEEK 9 MONDAY, OCTOBER 24 **Grammar Notebook Check—Quizzes 6-8 and notes from lessons Complete the peer reviews of the paragraphs containing verbals and make sure that the phrases have been identified: Place a P in parentheses after each participle phrase, a G after each gerund phrase and an I after each infinitive phrase. After the workshop make any corrections and post Final QUIZ #9 in homework manager by midnight. *TEST REVIEW for Midterm WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26 TEST 2 - MIDTERM Homework for next time: Read Lesson 13, “Completeness.” To prepare for class discussion, complete the first 10 sentences on Practice Sheet 13. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part III: Sentence Building and Do exercise: 13.2 and email results to [email protected] FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28 PART III SENTENCE BUILDING INTRODUCTION: Now that you have examined the terminology, you are going to study how clear and effective sentences are composed. Even though the emphasis here is on composing sentences, writing is never far away from editing. For many, those for whom grammar is ingrained, writing, and editing are so integrated that even while they are composing they are editing, deciding which ideas should be compound and which complex, checking to make sure that modifiers are not misplaced or dangling, making sure that structures are parallel. Even these writers, however, go back over every word and sentence to check for correctness before more process. The composing process comes first. Once the ideas are on paper, they change “hats” and become editors of their writing, scrupulously examining every sentence and word to make sure that they are using standard English. The latter is recommended for most beginning writers because it separates writing into two manageable parcels. The writer needs to concentrate on only one step at a time—ideas first, correctness second. PART III OBJECTIVE: You must learn to write in complete sentences, to use subordination and coordination, and to balance parallel ideas. INTRODUCTION: You have learned from preceding lessons that to be complete every sentence needs a subject and verb. A group of words without one or the other is called a fragment. Most of the time fragments are either phrases or clauses. In the case of a clause, the group of words will have a subject and verb, but what makes it a fragment is the fact that it starts with a subordinating word like a subordinate conjunction or relative pronoun. The most common phrases to become fragments are verbals. In most academic or business writing, fragments are not acceptable because incomplete thoughts usually do not communicate as effectively as complete ones and because most instructors and bosses want to know that their students or employees can write well-constructed sentences. While fragments can be used sparingly for emphasis or effect, in most writing situations you are better, off especially if you don’t know the instructor, NOT using fragments for any reason. You have already studied the two companion errors in the chapter on coordination—the run on and the comma splice. In all three cases—fragment, comma splice, run on or fused sentence— you cause your readers to stumble. You make it necessary for them to go back over your sentences and try to figure out what your meaning is. Because they have to work so hard, you risk losing your readers, for they may decide that what you are saying is not worth the effort. When you lose your readers, you lose any chance of influencing their thinking. You should, therefore, recognize and avoid these three errors in your writing. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 13, editing for fragments Quiz #10: Work the fifteen sentences of Exercise 13A. Follow the directions given. Upload a copy to “Assignments” on the Internet. I’ll correct them. After you’ve downloaded them, correct any mistakes and add them to your WGN. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 14, “Misplaced Modifiers: Dangling Modifiers.” To prepare for class discussion, complete Practice Sheet 14 and 14A. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part III: Sentence Building and Do exercise: 14.5 WEEK 10 MONDAY, OCTOBER 31 INTRODUCTION: Because most readers have a short attention span, you need to make sure that every sentence is clear and that it does the job it is intended to do. To do this, all parts of the sentence should be effectively connected. You should go back over every sentence at least once to make sure that neither you nor your typist has left out words necessary for meaning, has not written sentences that are mixed and confusing, and has not created sentences with misplaced or dangling modifiers. Most instructors consider typos and missing words the writer’s fault because the ultimate responsibility for perfect copy is the writer’s. Remember that clarity and precision of expression are the goals of every writer and editor. The dangling and misplaced modifier creates sentences that are ambiguous and sometimes ludicrous. For example, in the sentence, Alfred walked his dog wearing a tuxedo, “wearing a tuxedo” is misplaced because it is not placed next to the word it modifies, in this case Alfred. The phrase is misplaced. It should read, Wearing a tuxedo, Alfred walked his dog. A sentence containing a dangling modifier is one in which the modifier is given nothing to modify. In the sentence, Jumping from the pier into the boat, my camera fell in the lake, the phrase “jumping from the pier into the boat” dangles because there is no actor for the action being described; a camera can’t perform the action. The sentence should be rewritten so that an actor capable of performing the action is placed in the sentence, for example, Jumping from the pier into the boat, Alfred dropped his camera in the water. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 14, editing for dangling and misplaced modifiers. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2: Class day to work on Group Presentations *Small Group Activity: Class time to work on Group presentations. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 15, “Subordination.” To prepare for class discussion, complete Practice Sheet 15. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part III: Sentence Building and Do exercise: 15.1 and email results. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4 INTRODUCTION: All four of the sentence types—simple, compound, complex, and compoundcomplex—are important to you as writers and editors because they create variety of expression. A short simple sentence can provide drama, emphasis, and relief from more complex structures. The compound sentence allows you to emphasize two equal and related ideas. The complex sentence provides you with a way to subordinate ideas to the main idea of the sentence, and the compound-complex gives you an opportunity to express not only two equal ideas but also any number of lesser ideas. While few of you will decide beforehand the types of sentences you are going to use, a basic knowledge of the types will help you realize the possibilities available to you as a writer. Knowing how to construct each of the types of sentence gives you freedom of expression. Like most everything else, grammar is a matter of choices. The choice you make can affect how well you communicate your ideas to your reader. Confused sentence structure, more than likely, will result in confused readers. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 15, editing for sentence variety by using subordination. QUIZ #11: Follow the directions for Progress Test #15 pp. 345 (20 sentences). Upload a copy to “Homework” on the Internet. I’ll grade and comment on them. They will be added to you WGN. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 16, “Parallel Structure: Comparisons.” To prepare for class discussion, complete Practice Sheet 16. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part III: Sentence Building and Do exercise: 16.2 and email results. WEEK 11 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7 INTRODUCTION: Constructing interesting and informative sentences demands that the writer pay close attention to the underlying logic of what he or she is writing. Editing to make sure that sentences contain no elements that are unparallel and that comparisons are complete is essential for clarity and precision of expression. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 16, editing for clarity of expression through balanced parallel structures and completed comparisons. Quiz #12: Follow the directions for Progress Test #16 p. 347 and do the first 10 sentences. Upload a copy to Homework Manager. I will grade and comment on them. After the corrected exercise is sent back, make the necessary changes and place it in your WGN. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 17, “Punctuation.” To prepare for class, complete Practice Sheet 17 and Exercise 17. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part IV: Punctuation and Do exercise: 17.5. and email results. WRITER’S GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK (WGR): Entries so far should include: 1. Quiz #9 a paragraph identifying verbals 2. Quiz #10 correcting sentence fragments WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9 PART IV PUNCTUATION INTRODUCTION: Punctuation was not invented to torment students, no matter what you might think. It was conceived to help writers communicate and readers to understand. Imagine this passage from E. M. Forster’s essay title “Voltaire’s Laboratory” without any punctuation, capitalization, or the other writing conventions: his anxiety over shells led him ever further than we should expect he feared that if once a flood was admitted noahs arks would come sailing in and consequently had to ridicule all the theories of the universe that emphasized water there was the fish oannes who came out of the euphrates to preach to the babylonians there was thales who thought that the stars lived on mist there was buffon who ascribes mountains to the action of waves there was maillet who deduced from a heap of shells at cairo that egypt had once been under the sea and the egyptians fish voltaire mocks them all indiscriminately in spite of the present passion for genealogies there are not many people who would claim descent from a turbot or cod Do you know where the sentences start and stop? Can you tell the common from the proper nouns? There is a quote in this passage. Can you tell where it begins and ends? Wouldn’t you agree that it is not easy reading without the conventions that mark beginnings and ends and quotes? Punctuation evolved to help writers and readers work their way through complex grammatical structures. The rules are not extremely difficult, but if you find yourself having trouble with terminology or structure, go back to the appropriate lessons in the textbook and review. You should be familiar enough with the textbook by now to use it as the resource it is intended to be. PART IV OBJECTIVE: In order to write clear sentences or edit sentences for mistakes, you should have a thorough knowledge of punctuation. INTRODUCTION: After the period, the comma is the most used mark of punctuation. If it is used correctly, it aids understanding; if used incorrectly, it can inhibit effective communication. There are places where a comma is always used, places where the comma is never used, and places where its use is optional (thankfully not many, however). Because they are closely associated with the structure of the sentences we have already studied, commas should not be hard for you to remember. The next two lessons instruct you in the major uses of the comma—first to separate and then to enclose. Good chapters to review for commas which separate are lessons 2, 7, 8, 9, 11, and 12. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 17A, editing for commas that separate. QUIZ #13: Do all 40 sentences of Exercise 17A pp. 187-188. Choose the correct response: C, S, or 0. Post by Friday midnight. *Small Group Activity: Class time to work on Group presentations. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 18, “Commas to Enclose.” To prepare for class, complete Practice Sheet 18 and Exercise 18A. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part IV: Punctuation and Do exercise: 18.4 and email results FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11 INTRODUCTION: Commas that enclose set off material from the rest of the sentence. They are interrupters of the normal sentence order, and as such when they come in the middle of the sentence, the commas must come in pairs. When they open or close the sentence, only one comma is necessary. Good lessons to review are 9, 11, 12. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 18A, editing for commas that enclose. Quiz #14: Progress Test #18 all 20 on p. 351 and upload a copy in Homework Manager by Monday midnight. I will correct and comment on them. Homework for next time: Quotation Marks,” and 20, “End Marks; Summary of Punctuation Rules for Friday. To prepare for class discussion, complete Exercises 19 and 20. Grammar Notebook Check—Quizzes 9-12 and lesson notes. Go to ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part IV: Punctuation and Do exercise: 20.3. and email results. WEEK 12 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14 INTRODUCTION: The four marks of punctuation you will study for Lesson 19 are ones that have very specific functions and few exceptions. CLASS DISCUSSION: Lesson 19, editing for apostrophes, colons, dashes, hyphens, and quotation marks and Lesson 20, review of punctuation. **Grammar Notebook Check—Quizzes 9-12 and lesson notes Homework for next time: Read Lesson 21, “Using Verbs Correctly: Principal Parts; Tense.” To prepare for class complete the first 10 sentences of Practice Sheet 21, the first 10 sentences found on the next page, as well as the first 10 sentences of Exercise 21. Quotation Marks,” and 20, “End Marks; Summary of Punctuation Rules for Friday. To prepare for class discussion, complete Exercises 19 and 20. Go to ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part V: Usage and Do exercise: 21.1. and email results. GROUP 1 WILL PRESENT THE LESSON. BE SURE THAT YOU’VE READ ALL OF THE MATERIAL SO THAT YOU CAN ASK QUESTIONS AND PARTICIPATE IN THE DISCUSSION. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 PART V USAGE INTRODUCTION: Now that you have learned the types of sentences—simple, compound, complex, compound-complex—and the patterns of the sentence—S + V, S + LV + SC, S + V +O, S + V + IO + O, and S + V + O + OC—and which of the parts of speech is slotted into each of the positions of the patterns, you are going to put that knowledge to work. In these next lessons, you are going to study the rules that govern word choices in the English sentence. These are important lessons for any writer or editor because the rules you are about to learn or review are one of the measurements by which most writing is judged. When you have the ability to make correct choices, you become more confident and self-assured as a writer. Also, once the choices become a natural part of your skills, you will have to spend less time worrying about them; thus you can spend more time with the content of your writing. Let me emphasize again, however, that you should not even begin to worry about editing for these kinds of errors until you are nearly finished with the writing project. PART V OBJECTIVE: You should be come familiar enough with the usage rules to help you make correct choice as you edit your writing projects. INTRODUCTION: Although lesson 21 can be very complex, trust your instincts. You have had years of successful communication and probably form your tenses quite naturally. In any case, most of the verbs in the English language are regular—they form their past and past participle by adding d, t, or more frequently ed to the present tense—so it is doubtful that these will cause you much trouble. The big problem most students have is with the irregular verbs. They can be very troublesome, especially lie and lay, sit and set, and rise and raise. Luckily, there are fewer irregular verbs than regular ones, and of those you probably have had difficulty with only a few. Concentrate on those few and learn them. Now is as good a time as any. However, if they still escape capture, your annotated textbook and a good dictionary will be helpful with these six and other irregular verbs. A problem that lesson 21 does not address but one that you should be aware of is using the preposition of instead of the verb have after such auxiliary verbs as could, would, should, may, might, must. For example: They could have [not of] telephoned. Lesson 26, “A Glossary of Usage,” in your textbook addresses this and other common usage problems. Take a few minutes GROUP 1 PRESENTATION: Lesson 21, editing for correct use of verb forms and tense. Homework for next time: Read Lesson 22, “Using Verbs Correctly: Subject-Verb Agreement.” To prepare for class complete Practice Sheet 22 and Exercise 21. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part V Usage: Exercise 22.7 and email results. GROUP 2 WILL PRESENT THE LESSON. BE SURE THAT YOU’VE READ ALL OF THE MATERIAL SO THAT YOU CAN ASK QUESTIONS AND PARTICIPATE IN THE DISCUSSION. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18 INTRODUCTION: As you have probably noticed, editing for grammar is largely a matter of making choices consistent with standard English—the measurement used by business, government, and academe to evaluate one aspect of writing. Because communication would be greatly hampered by the absence of a standard or norm, you are studying these choices so that your writing conforms to those patterns of educated usage. The study of grammar, therefore, is learning to make “correct” choices based on standard English. The rules that govern subject-verb agreement are not complicated, but you may need to memorize one or two of them. Most students find that while they have difficulty with a few of the rules, they use most of them correctly. You may want to take the time to review Lessons 3 and 4 (sentence patterns) for finding the simple subject of the sentence and other terminology, for you will be locating the simple subject and then matching it with the verb. The process of matching the subject with the verb is called agreement. Subjects and verbs match or agree when they are the same number (singular or plural), and the same person (first, second, or third). Luckily, in English you do not have to make them agree in gender—masculine or feminine—as you do in some foreign languages. GROUP 2 PRESENTATION: Lesson 22 editing for subject-verb agreement. CLASS DISCUSSION QUIZ #15: Do Progress Test 23 p. 359 all 20 questions. Post by Monday at Midnight Homework for next time: Read Lesson 23, “Using Pronouns Correctly: Reference and Agreement.” To prepare for class complete Practice Sheet 23 and Exercise 23. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part V Usage: Exercise 23.2 and email results. GROUP 3 WILL PRESENT THE LESSON. BE SURE THAT YOU’VE READ ALL OF THE MATERIAL SO THAT YOU CAN ASK QUESTIONS AND PARTICIPATE IN THE DISCUSSION. WEEK 13 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21 INTRODUCTION: As you have seen, pronouns can be tricky. Not only does there seem to be an inexhaustible supply of them, but also they seem to be controlled by an endless series of rules. However, when you consider how often writers use pronouns, it is a wonder that there are not more rules than there are. An antecedent is the noun (sometimes another pronoun) to which the pronoun, which is a noun substitute, refers. The rules which govern pronoun-antecedent agreement, like those of subjectverb agreement, are not very complicated; but, like those rules, you may have to memorize them to be successful in an editing or a test situation. Otherwise, use your textbook and Writer’s Grammar Notebook to help you when you edit. Most of the rules concerning pronounantecedent agreement center around number (singular and plural) because few native English speakers or writers make mistakes with gender. You would never refer to a woman as he or a man as she, for example. There are not many rules controlling ambiguous reference, but they are important to you as a writer because without clarity of reference, you run the risk of being misunderstood. Since one of the goals of all writing is clarity of thought and purpose, it is important that you edit for clear pronoun reference. GROUP 3 PRESENTATION: editing for pronoun reference and agreement. CLASS DISCUSSION Homework for next time: Read Lesson 24, “Using Pronouns Correctly: Case.” To prepare for class complete Practice Sheet 24 and Exercise 24. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part V Usage: Exercise 24.3 and email results. GROUP 4 WILL PRESENT THE LESSON. BE SURE THAT YOU HAVE READ ALL OF THE MATERIAL SO THAT YOU CAN ASK QUESTIONS AND PARTICIPATE IN THE DISCUSSION. NOV 23–25—THANKSGIVING BREAK!!! WEEK 14 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28 INTRODUCTION: Not only should you edit your own writing for agreement and reference, but you should also make sure that you have used the correct case of the pronoun. Case is a term used to classify personal and relative pronouns according to how they are used in the sentence. The pronouns I, he, she, we, they, and who, for example, can only be used as subjects, and the pronoun me, him, her, us, them, and whom can only be used as objects. When you use these pronouns, the, it is always wise, when you edit, to make sure that the case of each is correct. CLASS DISCUSSION GROUP 4 PRESENTATION: editing for modifiers and prepositions Homework for next time: Read Lesson 25, “Using Modifiers and Prepositions Correctly.” To prepare for class complete Practice Sheet 25 and Exercise 25. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part V Usage: Exercise 25.7 and email results. GROUP 5 WILL PRESENT THE LESSON. BE SURE THAT YOU’VE READ ALL OF THE MATERIAL SO THAT YOU CAN ASK QUESTIONS AND PARTICIPATE IN THE DISCUSSION. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30 INTRODUCTION: Adjectives and adverbs are among the most useful words in English, for they enhance your ideas with specifics that help you readers “see” What you are writing about. The must, like all words in the language, be used correctly. GROUP 5 PRESENTATION: editing for modifiers and prepositions Homework for next time: Read Lesson 26, “A Glossary of Usage.” To prepare for class complete Practice Sheet 26 sentences 1-20 and Exercise 26 sentences 1-20. Go to www.ablongman.com/emery Student Resources Part V Usage: Exercise 26.5 and email results. READ THROUGH CHECK SHEET on pp. 289-293. Also Write Letter of self-reflection* for Monday and bring two hard copies. *As part of your Writer’s Grammar Notebook, I would like you to write a letter to yourself reflecting on what you have learned in this class. You might consider the following ideas. What was the easiest concept for you? Why? What was the hardest concept for you? Why? What gave you the most help? Peers? Exercises? Evaluating your own writing? What was the single most valuable concept you learned? Why? How valuable do you think the concepts you’ve learned will be in the future? Be honest and write about anything else that accounts for your learning about grammar and writing. Use plenty of specific details. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2 Go Over Lesson 26 and the exercise in class. Peer Review Letter of Self Reflection next time –bring 2 hardcopies to class. WEEK 15 MONDAY, DECEMBER 5 Peer Review Letter of Self Reflection WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7 GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK WORK DAY - Because your Writer’s Grammar Notebook is due Friday, you will need to work on this assignment. I will be in he computer room to help you with any last minute problems. The notebook is DUE Friday by 9:30am or sooner. Homework for next time: HAND IN COMPLETED WRITER’S GRAMMAR NOTEBOOK (WGR) FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9 Grammar Notebook Due/Final Exam Review - your Writer’s Grammar Notebook is due today LAST DAY OF CLASS WILL BE USED AS A REVIEW FOR THE FINAL EXAM.