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Expository Writing

Expository Writing. Expository writing is…. Meant to inform, explain, or define the author’s subject to the reader. One of the most widely used forms of writing in colleges and universities. An excellent way to assess student learning. Kinds of Expository Writing. Process Writing

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Expository Writing

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  1. Expository Writing

  2. Expository writing is… • Meant to inform, explain, or define the author’s subject to the reader. • One of the most widely used forms of writing in colleges and universities. • An excellent way to assess student learning.

  3. Kinds of Expository Writing • Process Writing • Compare and Contrast • Classification and Division • Defining • Cause and Effect

  4. Process Writing • Process writing explains how to do something or how something occurs. • It usually presents a sequence of steps and shows how those steps lead to a particular result.

  5. Process EQ’s • Explain how you solve and inequality? • Explain the steps in administering CPR. • How did the U.S. become involved in Vietnam?

  6. Process GO

  7. Cause and Effect • Process explain how to do something or how something happens • Cause and effect is used to explain WHY something happens or to predict an outcome given a particular cause.

  8. Compare and Contrast • Describes how two or more subjects are similar and/or different.

  9. Compare and Contrast G.O.

  10. Subject by Subject Comparison Look at each subject separately, but discuss the same points for each subject. • Example: Compare and contrast Iago and Macbeth. Iago Point 1: Ambitious Point 2: Plots against O. without remorse Macbeth Point 1: Ambitious Point 2: At first, hesitant to murder Duncan

  11. Point By Point • Make a point about one subject, then follow with a comparable point about the other: • Compare and contrast Iago and Macbeth. Ambition • Iago’s Ambition • Macbeth Ambition Willingness to Plot --Iago Willing --Macbeth Unwilling

  12. Classification and Division • Classification is the process of sorting Items into categories • Division takes a whole and breaks it into parts • We use these methods to put random bits of information into a useful coherent order.

  13. Classification G.O.

  14. Division G.O.

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