did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

We're the #1 textbook rental company. Let us show you why.

9780134140162

Quick Access Plus MyLab Writing with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780134140162

  • ISBN10:

    0134140168

  • Edition: 8th
  • Format: Package
  • Copyright: 2016-02-11
  • Publisher: Pearson

Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.

Purchase Benefits

  • Free Shipping Icon Free Shipping On Orders Over $35!
    Your order must be $35 or more to qualify for free economy shipping. Bulk sales, PO's, Marketplace items, eBooks and apparel do not qualify for this offer.
  • eCampus.com Logo Get Rewarded for Ordering Your Textbooks! Enroll Now
List Price: $118.07 Save up to $33.06
  • Buy Used
    $85.01
    Add to Cart Free Shipping Icon Free Shipping

    IN STOCK USUALLY SHIPS WITHIN 24-48 HOURS.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

Summary

NOTE: Before purchasing, check with your instructor to ensure you select the correct ISBN. Several versions of Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products exist for each title, and registrations are not transferable. To register for and use Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products, you may also need a Course ID, which your instructor will provide.

 

Used books, rentals, and purchases made outside of Pearson

If purchasing or renting from companies other than Pearson, the access codes for Pearson's MyLab & Mastering products may not be included, may be incorrect, or may be previously redeemed. Check with the seller before completing your purchase.

 

For courses in first-year composition.

This package includes MyWritingLab™.


The most balanced coverage of the writing process, grammar, research, and other issues important to today’s students

Perfect for students seeking support at any stage of the writing process, Quick Access: Reference for Writers, Eighth Edition continues its emphasis on critical thinking and reading as fundamental skills, integral to quality writing and sound research practices. Trusted authors Lynn Troyka and Doug Hesse provide everything that composition students need – how to write college papers, use and document sources, write online, write with visuals, master grammar, and use correct punctuation. Designed for easy use and speedy entry into all topics, this book welcomes students into a conversation about becoming better writers.

 

Personalize learning with MyWritingLab™

MyWritingLab is an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with this text to engage students and improve results. Within its structured environment, students practice what they learn, test their understanding, and pursue a personalized study plan that helps them better absorb course material and understand difficult concepts.

 

0134140168 / 9780134140162  Quick Access Plus MyWritingLab with Pearson eText – Access Card Package

Package consists of:

  • 0133954706 / 9780133954708  MyWritingLab with Pearson eText – Access Card
  • 0134123506 / 9780134123509  Quick Access

Author Biography


Lynn Quitman Troyka, Adjunct Professor of English (retired) in the MA Program in Language and Literature at the City College (CCNY) of the City University of New York (CUNY), and emeritus professor of English and basic writing at Queensborough Community College, CUNY, Dr. Troyka is a past chair of the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC); the College Section of the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE); the Writing Division of the Modern Language Association (MLA); and The Two-Year College English Association (TYCA). She has won many awards for teaching, scholarship, and service, including CCCC’s highest honor, The Exemplar Award. She has conducted hundreds of faculty workshops about teaching writing and its relation to college-level reading. She is currently on the board of directors of “The Reading Team,” a New York City, Harlem-based, award-winning literacy center, where she teaches literacy mentors.

 

Douglas Hesse is Professor of English and Executive Director of Writing at the University of Denver, one of only forty writing programs to receive the CCCC Certificate of Excellence. Dr. Hesse is currently president of the NCTE. He is also a past chair of CCCC and a past president of the Council of Writing Program Administrators (WPA). Dr. Hesse has edited WPA: Writing Program Administration, chaired the MLA Division on Teaching as a Profession, and served on the MLA Committee on Contingent Labor. Author of over sixty articles and book chapters, he has been named University Distinguished Scholar at the University of Denver. 

Table of Contents

TAB 1      HANDS-ON ADVICE FOR WRITERS

1. Five Top Tips for College Writers

1) Be specific: use RENNS.

2) Develop your ability as a critical reader and thinker.

3) Check Tab 3, “Frames for College Writing,” for ideas.

4) Use logical, ethical, and emotional appeals.

5) Record source information.


2. Ten Troublesome Mistakes Writers Make

1) Sentence fragments

2) Comma splices and run-ons

3) Mistakes in subject—verb agreement

4) Mistakes in pronoun—antecedent agreement

5) Unclear pronoun reference

6) Sentence shifts

7) Misplaced modifiers

8) Mistakes with homonyms

9) Comma errors

10) Apostrophe errors

 

3. Essential Processes for Reading

A               Importance of reading

B               Purposes for college reading

C               SQ3R reading process

D               Reading comprehension strategies

 

4. Reading and Thinking Critically

A               What “critical” means

B               Rhetorical appeals

C               Levels of meaning

D               Critical thinking and reading processes

E                Close and active reading

F                Analyzing

G               Synthesizing and evaluating

H               Inductive and deductive reasoning

I                 Reading images critically

J                How images persuade

K               Analyzing words with images

 

TAB 2      WRITING PROCESSES

5. Planning Your Writing

A               Writing processes

B               Thinking like a writer

C               Planning a writing portfolio

D               Purposes for writing

E                Audience

F                Developing ideas

G               Thesis statement

H               Outlining

 

6. Drafting, Revising, Editing, and Proofreading

A               First draft

B               Writer’s block

C               Revising

D               Revising using thesis statements and essay titles

E                Revising for style and tone

F                Editing

G               Editing software and apps

H               Proofreading

 

7. Composing Paragraphs

A               What a paragraph is

B               Introductory paragraphs

C               Topic sentences

D               Body paragraphs

E                Coherent paragraphs

F                Rhetorical strategies to develop body paragraphs

G               Concluding paragraphs

 

8. Designing Documents               

A               Document design

B               Principles of design

C               Text

D               Headings

E                Photographs

F                Other visuals

G               Page layout

 

TAB 3 FRAMES FOR COLLEGE WRITING

9. Personal Essays

A               Personal essays

B               Planning and revising

C               Frame for a personal essay

D               Sentence and paragraph guides

E                Student essay example

 

10. Informative Essays

A               Informative essays

B               Planning and revising

C               Frame for an informative essay

D               Sentence and paragraph guides

E                Student essay example

 

11. Essays Analyzing a Text

A               Textual analysis

B               Generating ideas

C               Frame for a textual analysis

D               Sentence and paragraph guides

E                Student essay example

 

12. Argument Essays

A               Arguments

B               Planning and revising

C               Logical fallacies

D               Frames for arguments

E                Sentence and paragraph guides

F                Student essay example

 

13. Proposal or Solution Essays

A               Proposal or solution essays

B               Planning and revising

C               Frame for a proposal or solution essay

D               Sentence and paragraph guides

E                Student essay example

 

14. Evaluation Essays

A               Evaluation essays

B               Planning and revising

C               Frame for an evaluation essay

D               Sentence and paragraph guides

E                Student essay example

 

TAB 4      USING SOURCES IN YOUR WRITING

15. Avoiding Plagiarism

A               Understanding plagiarism

B               Avoiding plagiarism

C               Understanding patchwriting

D               Avoiding plagiarism of intellectual property

E                Avoiding plagiarism of Internet sources

F                What not to document

 

16. Quoting, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

A               Integrating sources

B               Quoting sources

C               Paraphrasing sources

D               Summarizing sources

E                Verbs for integrating sources

 

17. Writing About Readings

A               Typical assignments

B               Summary essays

C               Response essays

D               Synthesis essays

 

TAB 5      RESEARCH WRITING

18. Starting a Research Project

A               Understanding research              

B               Topic choice

C               Research question

D               Types of research papers

 

19. Developing a Search Strategy

A               Search strategies

B               Sources

C               Field research

D               Documentation style

E                Research log

F                Working bibliography

G               Documentation software

H               Annotated bibliography

I                 Content notes

J                Research project plan

 

20. Finding Published Sources

A               Published sources

B               Using libraries

C               Search engines and databases

D               Using search engines and databases

E                Books

F                Periodicals

G               Reference works

H               Images

I                 Government documents

 

21. Evaluating Sources

A               Location of a source

B               Credibility of the publisher

C               Credibility of the author               

D               Use of evidence                

E                Other critical thinking tests

 

22. Synthesizing Sources in Research Papers

A               Synthesis of sources

B               Relationships of sources              

C               Sources on different subtopics

D               Sources agree

E                Sources partly agree

F                Sources disagree

G               Sources aren’t equally specific

 

23. Writing a Research Paper

A               Writing process

B               Drafting a thesis statement

C               Outlining a research paper

D               Drafting a research paper

E                Frames for research papers

F                Student’s research paper

G               Revising

H               Editing and formatting

 

TAB 6      MLA DOCUMENTATION

24. MLA In-Text Citations

A               MLA documentation style

B               MLA in-text documentation

C               Additional MLA guidelines for parenthetical citations

 

25. MLA Works Cited List

A               Works Cited list

B               Sources in a Works Cited list

C               Content or bibliographic notes

 

26. A Student’s MLA-Style Research Paper

A               MLA format guidelines

B               MLA-style research paper

 

TAB 7      APA, CM, and CSE DOCUMENTATION

27. APA In-Text Citations

A               APA documentation style

B               APA in-text citations

C               APA guidelines for in-text citations

 

28. APA References List

A               References list

B               Sources in a References list

 

29. A Student’s APA-Style Research Paper

A               APA format guidelines

B               APA-style research paper

 

30. CM-Style Documentation

A               CM-style documentation

B               Bibliographic notes

 

31. CSE-Style Documentation

A               CSE-style documentation

B               Sources in a list of references

 

TAB 8      GRAMMAR BASICS

32. Parts of Speech and Sentences

Parts of Speech

A               Nouns

B               Pronouns

C               Verbs

D               Verbals

E                Adjectives

F                Adverbs

G               Prepositions

H               Conjunctions

I                 Interjections

Parts of Sentences

J                Subjects and predicates

K               Direct and indirect objects

L                Complements, modifiers, and appositives

M              Phrases

N               Clauses

O               Sentence types

 

33. Verbs

A               How verbs function

B               Forms of main verbs

C               Auxiliary verbs

D               Using lie or lay

E                Verb tenses

F                Indicative, imperative, and subjunctive moods

G               “Voice” in verbs

 

34. Subject—Verb Agreement

A               What subject—verb agreement is

B               Ignoring words between a subject and its verb

C               Subjects connected by and

D               Subjects connected by or

E                Verbs with indefinite pronouns

F                Verbs with who, which, and that

G               Verbs with one of the . . . who

H               Other complicated cases

 

35. Pronouns

Pronoun—Antecedent Agreement

A               What pronoun—antecedent agreement is

B               Pronouns when and connects antecedents

C               Pronouns when or connects antecedents

D               Pronouns when antecedents are indefinite pronouns

E                Pronouns when antecedents are collective nouns

Pronoun Reference

F                Avoiding unclear pronoun reference

G               Pronouns with it, that, this, and which

H               Using you for direct address

I                 Using who, which, and that

Pronoun Case

J                What pronoun case is

K               Personal pronouns

L                Selecting the correct case

M              Case when and connects pronouns

N               Matching case in appositives

O               Subjective case after linking verbs

P               Using who, whoever, whom, and whomever

Q               Case after than and as

R               Case with infinitives and -ing words

S                Case for -self pronouns

 

36. Adjectives and Adverbs

A               Adjectives v. adverbs

B               Double negatives

C               After linking verbs

D               Comparative and superlative forms

E                Nouns as modifiers

 

TAB 9      SENTENCES AND WORDS

37. Sentence Fragments

A               Recognizing fragments

B               Subordinating word fragments

C               Fragments without verbs

D               Fragments without subjects

E                Compound predicate fragments

F                Intentional fragments

 

38. Comma Splices and Run-On Sentences

A               What comma splices and run-on sentences are

B               Correcting comma splices and run-on sentences

 

39. Sentence Shift Problems

A               Consistent person and number

B               Consistent subject and voice

C               Consistent mood

D               Consistent verb tense

E                Consistent direct and indirect discourse

F                Sentences with mixed parts

G               Ellipticals and comparisons

 

40. Misplaced Modifiers

A               Misplaced modifiers

B               Squinting modifiers

C               Split infinitives

D               Disrupting

E                Dangling modifiers

 

41. Conciseness

A               Writing concisely

B               Avoiding redundancies

C               Avoiding wordy sentences

D               Combining sentence elements

E                Verbs and conciseness

 

42. Coordination/Subordination

A               Coordination: Expressing equivalent ideas

B               Avoiding problems

C               Subordination: Expressing nonequivalent ideas

D               Subordination: Avoiding problems

 

43. Sentence Style

A               Understanding parallelism

B               Avoiding faulty parallelism

C               Parallelism with conjunctions

D               Strengthening a message with parallelism

E                Understanding sentence variety

F                How subjects affect emphasis

G               Adding modifiers

H               Inverting standard word order

 

44. Word Meanings and Impact

A               Words and their meanings

B               Exact words

C               Increasing my vocabulary

D               Suitable language

E                Figurative language

F                Clichés

G               Effect of tone in writing

 

45. Using Inclusive Language

A               Gender in English

B               Gender-neutral language

 

46. Spelling

A               Plurals

B               Suffixes

C               The ie, ei rule

D               Homonyms and frequently confused words

E                Other spelling errors

 

TAB 10   PUNCTUATION AND MECHANICS

47. Commas

A               When to use commas

B               With introductory words

C               Before coordinating conjunctions

D               With a series

E                Between adjectives

F                With nonrestrictive and restrictive elements

G               With quoted words

H               Other word groups to set off

I                 In dates, names, places, addresses, letter format, and numbers

J                Preventing misreadings

K               Other comma errors

 

48. Semicolons

A               Instead of periods

B               Instead of commas

 

49. Colons

A               Lists, appositives, or quotations

B               Between sentences

C               Conventional formats

 

50. Apostrophes

A               Possessive nouns

B               Possessive indefinite pronouns

C               Possessive pronouns: hers, his, its, ours, yours, and theirs

D               Verbs that end in -s

E                Contractions

F                Letters, numerals, symbols, and terms

 

51. Quotation Marks

A               Short direct quotations

B               Long direct quotations

C               Spoken words

D               Titles

E                Terms, translations, irony

F                When quotation marks are wrong

G               With other punctuation

 

52. Periods, Question Marks, and Exclamation Points

A               Periods

B               Question marks

C               Exclamation points

 

53. Other Punctuation Marks

A               Dashes

B               Parentheses

C               Brackets

D               Ellipsis points

E                Slashes

 

54. Hyphens

A               End of a line

B               Prefixes and suffixes

C               Compound words

D               Spelled-out numbers

 

55. Capitals

A               “First” words

B               Quotations

C               Nouns and adjectives

 

56. Italics (Underlining)

A               Italics versus quotation marks

B               For emphasis

 

57. Abbreviations

A               Times and amounts

B               People’s names

C               Jr., Sr., II, III, 2nd, 3rd

D               Names of countries, organizations, and government agencies

E                Addresses

F                Using etc. and other Latin abbreviations

 

58. Numbers

A               Spelled-out numbers

B               Dates, addresses, times, and other numbers

 

TAB 11   TIPS FOR MULTILINGUAL WRITERS

A Message to Multilingual Writers

59. Singulars and Plurals

A               Count and noncount nouns

B               Determiners

C               Nouns used as adjectives

 

60. Articles

A               Singular count nouns

B               Count and noncount nouns

C               Using the with proper nouns

 

61. Word Order

A               Standard and inverted word orders

B               Placing adjectives

C               Placing adverbs

 

62. Prepositions

A               Using in, at, and on to show time and place

B               Phrasal verbs

C               Passive voice

D               Expressions

 

63. Gerunds and Infinitives

A               Gerund objects

B               Infinitive objects

C               Using stop, remember, or forget

D               Sense verbs

E                Choosing between —ing and -ed adjectives

 

64. Modal Auxiliary Verbs

A               How modals differ from be, do, and have

B               Expressing ability, necessity, advisability, or probability

C               Expressing preference, plan, or past habit

 

TAB 12   SPECIFIC WRITING SITUATIONS

65. An Overview of Writing Across the Curriculum

A               Writing across the curriculum

B               Audience and purpose

 

66. Humanities

A               What the humanities are

B               Types of papers

C               Documentation styles

 

67. Literature

A               What literature is

B               Types of papers

C               Rules for writing about literature

D               A student’s literature essay

 

68. Social Sciences

A               What the social sciences are

B               Types of papers

 

69. Natural Sciences

A               What the natural sciences are

B               Types of papers

 

70. Presentations

A               What presentations are

B               Focusing the presentation

C               Organizing a presentation

D               Incorporating multimedia

E                Presentation styles

F                Collaborative presentations

 

71. Digital Environments

A               What digital environments are

B               Blogs

C               Collaborative spaces

D               Video and sound

 

72. Work

A               W

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Rewards Program