Transcript Writing IV

Using Rhetorical Modes to
Reinforce Deaf Students’ Writing
Skills at Different English
Proficiency Levels
John Panara
NTID English Department
Writing II and Writing IV
Course Descriptions
WRITING II
Students learn how to use personal experience and resource
materials to develop and organize their thoughts on various
topics. Students organize and develop paragraphs and brief
compositions of various discourse forms, with particular
emphasis on description and process.
WRITING IV
Students gather information from various sources, plan, draft,
revise, and edit longer essays (of at least 500 words) of various
discourse types, with particular emphasis on description and
exemplification. They learn how to organize and develop their texts
for various topics, purposes, and audiences.
Rhetorical modes typically used in lowerand upper-level NTID writing courses
At NTID, specific rhetorical modes are emphasized at the
lower and higher English proficiency levels in writing
courses, and, in my classes, particular emphasis is
placed on the value of outlining.
Writing II
• Narration
• Description
• Process
• Opinion
Writing IV
• Cause and Effect
• Comparison and Contrast
• Exemplification
Other writing:
• Summary and peer review
Some of the writing and grammar
concepts that correlate to each mode
Writing II Level
 Traditional paragraph structure
 Outlining
 Verb tense use and consistency
 Adverb clauses in complex sentences
 Sentence structure variety –
prepositional phrase placement
 Point of view (1st, 2nd, 3rd)
 Basic transition words
Paragraph as a “Sandwich”
Topic sentence (topic + controlling idea)
Relevant Details
Closing sentence (related to topic sentence)
Strategy: Inferring the topic sentence of a
paragraph
The Importance of Outlining
Emphasize outlining as a fundamental
part of the paragraph writing process
Gives students a chance to work on content and
organization without worrying about grammar.
Students seamlessly segue to the paragraph, and
outline markers easily become transition words.
Strategy: Practice creating outlines from paragraphs
Tense Considerations
Remind lower-proficiency students of the need for
verb tense consistency within modes. Narrative
writing often involves past verb tense while
process writing often involves present verb tense.
In addition, narrative writing involves adverb
clauses with time order words.
Strategy: Practice identifying consistent verb tense use vs.
inconsistent verb tense use in narrative writing, along with
examples of complex sentences with adverb clauses.
Sentence Structure
Descriptive Writing is particularly challenging to deaf
students whose sentence structure skills are weak.
So, part of the emphasis can be on:



Recognizing prepositions and prepositional phrases of
location
Thinking about sentence structure variety in terms of
placement of prepositional phrases
Using the expletive “there”
Strategy: Find examples of the concepts listed above—
used correctly and used incorrectly
Point of View in Writing –
2nd person vs. 1st and 3rd Person
Process Writing
As teachers, we often imply the subject of our
sentences (you) when we write homework directions
to students. So, covering “process writing”
represents a good time to discuss:
imperative sentences
modal verbs
present tense verbs
Time/transition words to show order
Strategy: Arrange a list of sentences in the correct
sequence to make a process paragraph.
Rhetorical modes typically used in
upper-level writing courses at NTID.
Writing IV
Comparison and Contrast
Cause and Effect
Exemplification
Other writing:
Summary writing
Peer review
Some writing and grammar concepts that
correlate to the types of writing
Writing IV Level
 Traditional essay structure
 Outlining
 Verb use
tense shifts within an essay
 Coherence Strategies
 Parallelism (word form and word order balance)
within sentences
 Paraphrasing strategies
active voice vs. passive voice
Traditional Essay and Outline
 Emphasize traditional essay structure with an
introduction, body, and conclusion.
 Include outlining in the writing process as a way
of checking content and organization. Students
can transition from outline to essay seamlessly.
 Provide students with an outline “template”
for the assigned rhetorical mode.
Strategy: Respond to a student’s cause and effect essay outline.
Verb Tense Shifts
Discuss situations in which a writer shifts verb
tense within his or her writing.
Encourage higher-proficiency students to “think
outside the one-verb-tense box” and to recognize
when shifts are appropriate.
Strategy: Analyze verb tense in a cause and effect essay.
Coherence Strategy
Discuss “coherence” with upper-level writing
students. Good writers achieve coherence by
sometimes including a closing sentence in body
paragraphs to remind the reader of the
paragraph’s point, especially if the paragraph is
lengthy. Encourage students to include a closing
sentence in some of their body paragraphs.
Strategy: Examine closing sentences to a cause and effect essay.
Achieving balance (parallelism)
Discuss “parallelism” with upper-level writing
students. Good writers achieve parallelism by
balancing words in a pair or series so that they
have the same structure and form, especially in a
thesis sentence that includes a “preview” of the
essay’s points.
Discuss the relationship between parallelism and
word forms/word order.
Strategy: Practice parallelism in sentences.
Strategies for Teaching Writing to
Higher Proficiency Students
Introduce students to paraphrasing techniques
Steps:
1. Understand what you are reading
2. Notice the sentence structure--decide whether
the sentence is in active voice or passive voice
3. Rewrite the sentence in your own words and
possibly with a different sentence structure.
Strategy—revise active vs. passive voice sentences and apply
the strategy to writing paraphrases and a summary.
Strategies for Teaching Writing to
Higher Proficiency Students
Analyze Structure and Technique in
Professional Writing
Provide “accessible” reading selections
demonstrating that the “pros” use many of
the same strategies learned by students
Strategy—examine an article using the same criteria that students
use to evaluate each other: content, organization, unity, coherence,
and sentence skills.