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Summary
Writing and research have changed dramatically since the first hardcover handbooks appeared. Today's students don't just write papers: they create multimedia presentations. They don't just do research: they find their way through a maze of online information. They don't just read print: they analyze visuals. They don't just come to class: they participate in an online learning community. These changes have put new demands on composition courses. With its focus on writing in college and its integrated coverage of technology and visual rhetoric,The New McGraw-Hill Handbookhas been designed to meet those demands.
Table of Contents
Part One: Writing and Designing Papers
Chapter 1: Learning Across the Curriculum
1a. Use Writing to Learn as You Learn to Write
1b. Explore Ways of Learning in a multimedia world
1c. Use strategies for learning when English is your second language.
Chapter 2: Understanding Assignments
2a. Recognize that writing is a process.
2b. Find an appropriate topic.
2c. Be clear about the purpose of your assignment.
2d. Use the appropriate genre.
2e. Ask questions about your audience.
2f. Determine the appropriate tone.
2g. Meet early to discuss coauthored projects.
2h. Gather the tools you need to get started.
Chapter 3: Planning and Shaping the Whole Essay
3a. Explore your ideas.
3b. Decide on a thesis.
3c. Plan a structure that suits your assignment.
3d. Consider using visuals.
Chapter 4: Drafting Paragraphs and Thinking about Visuals
4a. Use online tools for drafting.
4b. Write focused paragraphs.
4c. Write paragraphs that have a clear organization.
4d. Develop ideas and use visuals strategically.
4e. Integrate visuals effectively.
4f. Craft an introduction that establishes your purpose.
4g. Conclude by answering "so what?"
Chapter 5: Revising and Editing
5a. Get comments from readers.
5b. Use online tools for revising.
5c. Focus on the purpose of your writing.
5d. Make sure you have a strong thesis.
5e. Review the structure of your paper as a whole.
5f. Revise your essay for paragraph development, paragraph unity, and coherence.
5g. Revise visuals.
5h. Edit sentences.
5i. Proofread carefully before you turn in your paper.
5j. Use resources available on your campus, on the Internet, and in your community.
5k. Learn from one students revisions.
Chapter 6: Designing and Proofreading Documents and Visuals
6a. Consider audience and purpose when making design decisions.
6b. Use the toolbars available in your word-processing program.
6c. Think intentionally about design.
6d. Compile a print or electronic portfolio that presents your work to your advantage.
Part Two: Common Assignments Across the Curriculum
Chapter 7: Reading, Thinking, Writing: the Critical Connection
7a. Recognize that critical reading is a process.
7b. Preview the text or visual.
7c. Read and record your initial impressions.
7d. Reread using annotation and summary to analyze and interpret.
7e. Synthesize your observations in a critical response paper.
Chapter 8:Informative Reports
8a. Understand the assignment.
8b. Approach writing an informative report as a process.
8c. Know how to write an informative report in the social sciences.
8d. Know how to write reviews of the literature.
8e. Know how to write informative papers in the sciences.
8f. Know how to write lab reports.
8g. Informative reports in the humanities.
Chapter 9: Interpretive Analyses and Writing about Literature
9a. Understand the assignment.
9b. Approach writing an interpretive analysis as a process.
9c. Learn to write interpretive papers in the humanities.
9d. Write a literary interpretation of a poem.
9e. Write a literary interpretation of a work of fiction.
9f. Write a literary interpretation of a play.
9g. Learn to write interpretive papers in the social sciences.
9h. Know how to write case studies
9i. Learn to write interpretive papers in the sciences.
Chapter 10: Arguments
10a. Understand the assignment.
10b. Learn how to evaluate an argument.
10c. Approach writing your own argument as a process.
10d. Arguments in the social sciences.
10e. Arguments in the humanities.
10f. Arguments in the sciences.
Chapter 11: Personal essays, Lab Reports, and Case Studies
11a. Understand the assignment.
11b. Approach writing a personal essay as a process.
Chapter 12: Essay Exams
12a. Prepare to take an essay exam.
12b. Learn strategies for answering essay exams.
Chapter 13: Oral Reports and Presentations
13a. Plan and shape your oral presentation.
13b. Draft your presentation with the rhetorical situation in mind.
13c. Prepare for your presentation.
Chapter 14: Multimedia Writing
14a. Learn about the tools for creating multimedia texts.
14b. Combine text and image with a word processing program to analyze images.
14c. Use a word processing program to create a hypertext essay.
14d. Use presentation software to create multimedia presentations.
14e. Create a web site.
14f. Create and interact with weblogs.
Part Three: Researching
Chapter 15: Understanding Research
15a. Understand the purpose of primary and secondary research.
15b. Recognize the connection between research and college writing.
15c. Choose and interesting research question for critical inquiry.
15d. Understanding the research assignment.
15e. Create a research plan.
Chapter 16: Finding and Managing Print and Online Sources
16a. Use the library in person and online.
16b. Consult various kinds of sources.
16c. Understand keywords and keyword searches.
16d. Use print and online reference works for general information.
16e. Use print indexes and online databases to find journal articles and other periodicals.
16f. Use search engines and subject directories to find sources on the internet.
16g. Use your librarys online catalog or card catalog to find books.
16h. Take advantage of printed and online government documents.
16i. Explore online communication.
Chapter 17: Finding and Designing Effective Visuals
17a. Find quantitative data and display it visually.
17b. Search for appropriate images in online collections, with an internet search engine, or in books and journals and other print sources.
Chapter 18: Evaluating Sources
18a. Question print sources.
18b. Question Internet sources.
18c. Evaluate a sources arguments.
Chapter 19: Doing Research in the Archive, Field, and Lab
19a. Adhere to ethical principles when doing primary research.
19b. Prepare yourself before undertaking archival research.
19c. Plan your field research carefully.
19d. Keep a notebook when doing lab research.
Chapter 20: Plagiarism, Copyright, and Intellectual Property
20a. Learn how plagiarism relates to copyright and intellectual property.
20b. Avoid plagiarism.
20c. Use copyrighted materials fairly.
Chapter 21: Working with Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism
21a. Maintain a working bibliography.
21b. Take notes on your sources.
21c. Integrating quotations, paraphrases, and summaries properly and effectively.
21d. Synthesis: Take stock of what you have learned.
Chapter 22: Writing the Paper
22a. Plan and draft your paper.
22b. Revise your draft.
22c. Document your sources.
22d. Present and publish your work.
Chapter 23: Discipline-Specific Resources in the Library and on the Internet
Part Four: Documenting Across the Curriculum
Chapter 24: MLA Documentation Style
24a. The elements of MLA documentation style
24b. MLA style: In-text citations
24c. MLA Style: List of works Cited
24d. MLA style: Explanatory notes and acknowledgments
24e. MLA style: Paper Format
24f. Student paper in MLA style
Chapter 25: APA Documentation Style
25a. the elements of APA documentation style
25b. APA style: In-text citations
25c. APA style: References
25d. APA style: Paper format
25e Student paper in APA style
Chapter 26: Chicago and CSE Documentation Styles
CHICAGO DOCUMENTATION STYLE
26a. Chicago style: In-text citations and notes
26b. Chicago style: Bibliography
26c. Sample Chicago-style notes and bibliography entries
26d. Sample from a student paper in Chicago style
CSE DOCUMENTATION STYLES
26e. CSE name-year style: In-text citations
26f. CSE name-year style: List of References
26g. Sample references list: CSE name-year system
26h. CSE number style: In-text citations
26i. CSE number style: List of references
26j. Sample reference list: CSE number system
Part Five: Writing Beyond College
Chapter 27: Service Learning and Community-Service Writing
27a. Address the community on behalf of your organization.
27b. Design brochures, newsletters, and posters with an eye to purpose and audience.
Chapter 28: Letters to Raise Awareness and Share Concern
Chapter 29: Writing to Get and Keep a Job
29a. Explore internship possibilities, and keep a portfolio of career-related writing.
29b. Keep your rsum up-to-date and available on a computer disk.
29c. Write an application letter that highlights the information on your rsum and demonstrates that your skills match the job you are seeking.
29d. Prepare in advance for the job interview.
29e. Apply what you learn in college to your on-the-job writing.
29f. Write as a Consumer.
Part Six: Grammar Basics
Test Yourself: Grammar Basics
Chapter 30: The Parts of Speech
30a. Verbs
30b. Nouns
30c. Pronouns
30d. Adjectives
30e. Adverbs
30f. Prepositions
30g. Conjunctions
30h. Interjections
Chapter 31: Sentence Basics
31a. Sentence purpose
31b. Subjects
31c. Predicates: Verbs and their objects or complements
31d. What are phrases and clauses?
31e. Noun phrases and verb phrases
31f. Verbals and verbal phrases
31g. Appositive phrases
31h. Absolute phrases
31i. Dependent clauses
31j. Sentence structures
Part Seven: Editing for Grammar Conventions
Test yourself: Grammar Conventions
Chapter 32: Sentence Fragments
32a. Learn to identify sentence fragments.
32b. Learn how to edit sentence fragments.
32c. Connect a phrase fragment to another sentence, or add the missing elements.
32d. Connect a dependent-clause fragment to another sentence, or make it into a sentence by eliminating or changing the subordinating word.
Chapter 33: Comma Splices and Run-on Sentences
33a. Learn how to identify comma splices and run-on sentences.
33b. Learn five ways to edit comma splices and run-on sentences.
33c. Join the two clauses with a comma and a coordinating conjunction such as and, but, or, nor, for, so, or yet.
33d. Join the two clauses with a semicolon.
33e. Separate the clauses into two sentences.
33f. Turn one of the independent clauses into a dependent clause.
33g. Transform the two clauses into one independent clause.
Chapter 34: Subject-Verb Agreement
34a. Learn how to identify problems with subject-verb agreement.
34b. Learn to edit errors in subject-verb agreement.
34c. Do not lose sight of the subject when other words separate it from the verb.
34d. Learn to distinguish plural from singular compound subjects.
34e. Treat most collective nounsnouns like audience, family, and committeeas singular subjects.
34f. Treat most indefinite subjectssubjects like everybody, no one, each, all, and noneas singular.
34g. Make sure that the subject and verb agree when the subject comes after the verb.
34h. Make sure that the verb agrees with its subject, not the subject complement.
34i. Who, which, and that (relative pronouns) take verbs that agree with the subject they replace.
34j. Gerund phrases (phrases beginning with an ing verb treated as a noun) take the singular form of the verb when they are subjects.
Chapter 35: Problems with Verbs
35a. Learn the principal forms of regular and irregular verbs.
35b. Learn to identify and edit problems with common irregular verbs.
35c. Distinguish between lay and lie, sit and set, and rise and raise.
35d. Do not forget to add an s or es ending to the verb when it is necessary.
35e. Do not forget to add a d or ed ending to the verb when it is necessary.
35f. Make sure your verbs are complete.
35g. Use verb tenses accurately.
35h. Use the past perfect tense to indicate an action completed at a specific time or before another event.
35i. Use the present tense for literary events, scientific facts, and introductions to quotations.
35j. Make sure infinitives and participles fit with the tense of the main verb.
35k. Use the subjunctive mood for wishes, requests, and conjecture.
35l. Choose the active voice unless a special situation calls for the passive.
Chapter 36: Problems with Pronouns
36a. Learn to identify problems with pronoun case.
36b. Learn to edit for pronoun case.
36c. Use the correct pronouns in compound structures.
36d. Use the correct pronoun in subject complements.
36e. Use the correct pronoun in appositives.
36f. Use either we or us before a noun, depending on the nouns function.
36g. Use the correct pronoun in comparisons with than or as.
36h. Use the correct form when the pronoun is the subject or the object of an infinitive.
36i. Use the possessive case in front of a gerund.
36j. Distinguish between who and whom.
36k. Learn to identify and edit problems with pronoun-antecedent agreement.
36l. Choose the right pronoun to agree with an indefinite pronoun antecedent.
36m. Avoid gender bias with indefinite pronoun and generic noun antecedents.