
From Inquiry to Academic Writing : A Text and Reader
by Greene, Stuart; Lidinsky, AprilBuy Used
Rent Textbook
New Textbook
We're Sorry
Sold Out
eTextbook
We're Sorry
Not Available
How Marketplace Works:
- This item is offered by an independent seller and not shipped from our warehouse
- Item details like edition and cover design may differ from our description; see seller's comments before ordering.
- Sellers much confirm and ship within two business days; otherwise, the order will be cancelled and refunded.
- Marketplace purchases cannot be returned to eCampus.com. Contact the seller directly for inquiries; if no response within two days, contact customer service.
- Additional shipping costs apply to Marketplace purchases. Review shipping costs at checkout.
Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
What Is Academic Writing?
Academic Writers Make Inquiries
Academic Writers Seek and Value Complexity
Academic Writers See Writing as a Conversation
Academic Writers Understand That Writing Is a Process
Becoming Academic: Two Narratives
*Richard Rodriguez, “Scholarship Boy”
*Gerald Graff, “Disliking Books”
Reading as an Act of Composing: Annotating
Reading as a Writer: Analyzing a Text Rhetorically
E.D. Hirsch, Jr., “Preface to Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know”
*Eugene F. Provenzo, Jr., “Hirsch's Desire for a National Curriculum”
Writing as a Reader: Composing a Rhetorical Analysis
*Sidonie Smith and Julia Watson, “Agency” from Reading Autobiography
Barbara Ehrenreich, Cultural Baggage
Identifying Types of Claims
Myra and David Sadker, “Hidden Lessons”
Analyzing Arguments
Analyze the Reasons Used to Support a Claim
Annotated Student Argument
*Marques Camp, The End of the World May Be Nigh, and It's the Kindle's Fault
*Analyzing and Comparing Arguments
*Stuart Rojstczer, Grade Inflation Gone Wild
*Phil Primack, Doesn't Anyone Get a C Anymore?
Identifying Issues
*Anna Quindlen, Doing Nothing Is Something
Formulating Issue-Based Questions
An Academic Essay for Analysis
*William Derieswicz, The End of Solitude
Developing a Working Thesis: Three Models
Providing a Context for Stating a Thesis
Annotated Student Introduction: Providing a Context for a Thesis
Jenny Eck “From Nuestra Clase: Making the Classroom a Welcoming Place for English Language Learners”
Shirley Brice Heath, from “Protean Shapes in Literacy Events: Ever-Shifting Oral and Literate Traditions”
Annotated Student Essay: Stating and Supporting a Thesis
*Veronia Stafford, “Texting and Literacy” (annotated student paper)
6. From Finding to Evaluating Sources
Identifying Sources
Developing Search Strategies
Evaluating Library Sources
Evaluating Internet Sources
Summaries, Paraphrases, and Quotations
Writing a Paraphrase
Writing a Summary
*Clive Thompson, The New Literacy
Writing a Synthesis
*Cynthia Haven, The New Literacy: Stanford Study Finds Richness and Complexity in Student Writing
*Josh Keller, Studies Explore Whether Internet Makes Students Better Writers
*Dan Kennedy, Political Blogs: Teaching Us Lessons about Community
*John Dickerson, Don't Fear Twitter
*Steve Grove, You Tube: The Flattening of Politics
Integrating Quotations into Your Writing
Avoiding Plagiarism
Annotated Student Researched Argument: Synthesizing Sources
*Nancy Paul, A Greener Approach to Groceries: Community Based Agriculture in LaSalle Square
Connecting with Readers: A Sample Argument
James Loewen, “The Land of Opportunity”
Appealing to Ethos
Appealing to Pathos
Appealing to Logos: Using Reason and Evidence to Fit the Situation
Recognizing Logical Fallacies
* Meredith Minkler, Community-Based Research Partnerships: Challenges and Opportunities
*Appealing to the Eye: Visual Rhetoric
*“1 in 8” (advertisement)
*Analyzing the Rhetoric of Advertisements
*“You Have Your Best Ideas in the Shower”
*Further Advertisements for Analysis
Drafting Introductions
Developing Paragraphs
Elizabeth Martinez, “Reinventing 'America': Call for a New National Identity
Drafting Conclusions
Revising versus Editing
The Peer Editing Process
Peer Groups in Action: A Sample Session
Annotated Student Draft
Brett Preacher, Representing Poverty in Million Dollar Baby
Working with Early Drafts
Tasha Taylor (student writer), Memory through Photography
Working with Later Drafts
Tasha Taylor, Memory through Photography
Working with Final Drafts
Tasha Taylor, Memory through Photography
Further Suggestions for Peer Editing Groups
Why Do Original Research?
Getting Started: Writing a Proposal
Annotated Student Proposal
Mary Ronan: Research Paper Proposal: A Case Study of One Homeless Child's Education and Lifestyle
Interviewing
Using Focus Groups
Part Two: Entering the Conversation of Ideas
Mark Edmundson, “On the Uses of a Liberal Education”
*Gerald Graff, “Other Voices, Other Rooms”
*Deborah Tannen, “How Male and Female Students Use Language Differently”
Peggy McIntosh, White Privilege: The Invisible Knapsack
* Beverly Daniel Tatum, “Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?”
*Gloria Anzaldua, How to Tame a Wild Tongue
James W. Loewen, From 'Lies my Teacher Told Me'
Jonathan Kozol, from Still Separate, Still Unequal: America's Educational Apartheid
*Neil Postman, Television as Teacher
*bell hooks, Seeing and Making Culture: Representing the Poor
*Carmen D. Siering, Taking a Bite Out of Twilight
*Julie D. O'Reilly, The Wonder Woman Precedent: Female (Super) Heroism on Trial.
Jean Kilbourne, “Two Ways a Woman Can Get Hurt” Advertising and Violence
Steven Johnson,”Why Games Are Good for You:”
*Katherine Bessiere, A. Fleming Seay, & Sara Kiesler, The Ideal Elf: Identity
Exploration in World of Warcraft
*S. Craig Watkins, Digital Gates (from The Young and the Digital)
*Eric Schlosser, Kid Kustomers
Ann duCille, from Multicultural Barbie and the Merchandising of Difference
*Katha Pollitt, The Smurfette Principle
Elizabeth Teare, Harry Potter and the Technology of Magic
*Daniel Hade, Lies My Children's Books Taught Me: History Meets Popular Culture in the American Girls Books
*Noel Sturgeon, 'The Power is Yours, Planeteers!': Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Children's Environmentalist Popular Culture
*David Buckingham, Childhood in the Age of Global Media
*Barbara Ehrenreich, Your Local News-Dateline Dehli
*Fareed Zakaria, The Rise of the Rest
Thomas L. Friedman, While I Was Sleeping
Franklin Foer, from How Soccer Explains the World: An Unlikely Theory of Globalization
Michael S. Kimmel, Gender, Class, and Terrorism
Kwame Anthony Appiah, Moral Disagreement
*Martha Nussbaum, Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism
*Cynthia Scott, Education and Cosmopolitanism
*Marjane Satrapi, Selection from Persepolis
*Margaret Talbot, from Brain Gain: The Underground World of 'Neuroenhancing' Drugs
*Toinee Pieters and Stephen Snelders , Psychotropic drug use: Between healing and enhancing the mind
*Judith Lorber, from Believing Is Seeing; Biology as Ideology
Shari L. Dworkin and Michael A. Messner, Just Do…What? Sport, Bodies, Gender
*Matthew Petrocelli, Trish Oberweis and Joseph Petrocelli, Getting Huge, Getting Ripped: A Qualitative Exploration of Recreational Steroid Use
*Sharlene Nagy Hesse-Biber, The Spread of the Cult of Thinness: Straight Men, Gays, Lesbians, and Ethnic Women
*Virginia Blum, Love My Neighbors, Hate Myself: The Vicissitudes of Affect in Cosmetic Surgery
*Nancy N. Chen, Dead Bodies, Violence, and Living On through Plastination
*Pamela Paul, Green, If Not Clean
*GOOD, Little Green Lies [Visual]
*Jim Tarter, Some Live More Downstream than Others: Cancer, Gender, and
Environmental Justice
*Curtis White, A Good without Light: The Seamy Side of Sustainability
*Gary Steiner, Animal Vegetable Miserable
*The Ethical Choices in What We Eat: Letters in Response to Gary Steiner
*Anna Lappe, The Climate Crisis at the End of our Fork
*Phil Howard, Buying Organic (visual)
*The Nation, Ten Things You Can Do to Fight World Hunger
*Michael Pollan, Why Bother?
The Basics of MLA Style
The Basics of APA Style
An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.
This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.
By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.
A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.
Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.
Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.