UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

34
U NIT 5: DIVISION- CLASSIFICATION KA REN FRENCH ENGLISH 1301

Transcript of UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

Page 1: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

UNIT 5

:

DIVIS

ION-

CLASSIFI

CATIO

N

KAREN

FR

E NC

H

ENG

L I SH

13 0 1

Page 2: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

WHAT IS DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION?

The basic definition is that division-classification is a method of organization that uses systems, categories, or other sorting mechanisms to make chaotic and complex daily life more manageable.

Page 3: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

IF YOU HAVE READ OR VIEWED THE WORLD OF HARRY POTTER, THEN…

You already have some familiarity with division-classification!

It works like this:

*Witches and wizards mill about the campus of Hogwarts.

*They are divided into their respective houses by the magical sorting hat.

*They are divided into their “year” of study.

*They are classified according to their fields of study.

*They are classified according to their scores on their exams.

Page 4: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

IN OUR WORLD…

If you have been to the grocery store or even to the hospital, you have lived in a world that uses division-classification!

Page 5: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

CLASSIFICATION

Think of classification as a way of categorizing.

What you are doing is finding common denominators among ideas or objects that are different.

Make sure the areas do not overlap.Don’t omit an obvious and important category.

Make sure that the categories remain logical.

Page 6: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

EXAMPLE…

What’s wrong with this plan?

The classification is of houses: brick, frame, ranch, and big.

Which one above doesn’t fit?_________

Stucco fits. Adobe fits.

Big belongs to a different basis of classification -- size rather than style.

Page 7: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

DIVISION

Think of division as analysis, a breaking down of a thing into parts that are more easily understood.

You are breaking the topic down into its constituent parts.

Divisions are explicit parts of a single whole.

Make sure your parts are logical and accurate.

Page 8: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

EXAMPLE…What is wrong with this plan?

The division of the house for the real estate ad includesnumber of bedrooms, number of bathrooms,number of garages, and carpeting.

Which one above doesn’t fit?___________________

Number of closets fits. Number of dining rooms fits.

Carpeting is not a division of the house. It is an amenityof the house.

Page 9: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

BASIC STRUCTURE:

Classification

I. Introduction*State thesis in last sentence

II. Body*In order of least to most important, identify in

separate paragraphs the various categories with examples.III.Conclusion

*Restates the categories of the thesis and, as a significance – or answer to the question, “So what?” implied in any composition – stresses the value of the classification system expressed in the essay.

Page 10: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

BASIC STRUCTURE

Division

I. Introduction*States thesis in last sentence (idea or object to

be analyzed and to what end)II. Body

*Renders the parts, in separate paragraphs, with examples and with transitional materials to provide a sense of their inter-relatedness.III.Conclusion

*Restates the parts of the thesis (and the significance) and attempts to convey a new understanding of the constituent parts.

Page 11: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

ASSIGNMENTS FOR NEXT TIME:

1.Final draft of the comparison-contrast essay ALONG WITH ROUGH DRAFT AND PEER EVALUATIONS! **Already stapled with final draft on top of rough draft and peer evals.

2.Reading of the essay “Doublespeak” on pp. 288-291 in your textbook.

Page 12: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

STRATEGIES FOR DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION1.Select a principle of division-classification

consistent with your purpose. Make sure that you stay with that one principle and that it contributes to the development of the essay.

*A single principle of division-classification provides the foundation for each major section of the paper.

Page 13: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

2.Apply the principle of division-classification logically.

*Decide on the organizing principle after careful thought.

*Be sure that the principle is as complete as possible. It should include – within reason – all the parts into which you can divide your subject, or all the types into which you can categorize your subject.

* Be sure that the principle is applied consistently: the parts of the essay should be mutually exclusive; they should not overlap.

Page 14: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

3.Prepare an effective thesis geared toward your method, either division or classification.

• The thesis should state the paper’s subject and attitude.

• The thesis should state the organizing principle being used in the paper.

• The thesis should reveal the part or category you regard as most important.

Page 15: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

SAMPLE CLASSIFICATION THESIS

As the observant beachcomber moves from the tidal area to the upper beach to the sandy dunes, rich variations in marine life become apparent.

*What is the organizing principle? (location)

*Purpose is to inform

*No category seems to be viewed as most important; however, the third mentioned should be in the “saving the best for last” position.

Page 16: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

SAMPLE DIVISION THESIS

Although most people focus on the dangers associated with the disposal of toxic waste in the land and ocean, the incineration of toxic matter may pose an even more serious threat to human life.

*What is the organizing principle? (method of disposal)

• Purpose is to take a stand

• The thesis makes known the author’s position that the last method of disposal is most detrimental.

Page 17: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

4.Organize the paper logically.

*Introduction (with thesis last in the paragraph)

*First Category

*Second Category

*Third Category (most important or interesting)

*Conclusion

(use signal devices: another, next, final…)

Page 18: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

5.State any conclusions or recommendations in the paper’s final section.

* Since the body portion of the paper is for the analytical discussion of the essay’s main points, be sure to provide the insight in the conclusion as a discovery. This will help to give a feeling of significance and closure to your essay!

Page 19: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

OVERALL PA

TTERN

FOR S

UCCESS

Page 20: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

PREWRITE

1. Select a subject to be simplified or analyzed, or one that has diverse parts to be ordered. (see below for your topic choices)

2. Use brainstorming and mapping to determine the parts of your subject and/or to group like parts together.

DivisionA video or stereo systemA particular kind of teamA television show or movie

ClassificationParentsCommercialsStudents in a class

Page 21: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

IDENTIFY A THESIS

1. Consider a plan of development in your thesis statement.

2. Preview the body’s main points, saving the best or most important for last!

Page 22: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

FIND EVIDENCE

1. Choose a single principle for each major section.

2. Check that each principle serves your purpose and audience.

3. Select evidence from your prewriting that supports the principle.

Page 23: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

Division Method

1. Identify a single concept or unit

2. Break the unit or concept into its parts

Classification Method

1. Identify a list of items

2. Group items by type or similarities

ORGANIZE THE EVIDENCE

Page 24: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

WRITE A FIRST ROUGH DRAFT

1. Make your analysis as complete and consistent as possible.

2. Try to discuss comparable points in each section.

3. Supply clear transitions to clarify connections.

4. State your conclusions or recommendations in the final section.

Page 25: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

REVISE AND EDIT

1.Pay attention to helpful comments made on the peer evaluation.

2.Check that the analysis is logically developed, consistent, and complete.

Page 26: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

ANALYSIS

OF

“DOUBLE

SPEAK”

PP.

28

8- 2

91

(3

06

- 31

0)

Page 27: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPHS AND THESIS (PARAGRAPHS 1-3)

Examples of doublespeak

Thesis: Doublespeak is language that pretends to communicate but really conceals thought.

Page 28: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

BACKGROUND: ITEM TO BE DIVIDED

Paragraph 3:

Questions to ask to identify doublespeak

Page 29: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

DETAILS OF DIVISION (PARAGRAPHS 4-18)First kind of doublespeak: euphemism

*definition (find it)

*positive and negative examples (find some)

Page 30: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

Second kind of doublespeak: jargon

*definition (find it)

*positive and negative examples (find some)

Page 31: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

Third kind of doublespeak: gobbledygook/bureaucratese

*definition (find it)

*Mostly negative examples (find some)

Page 32: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

Fourth kind of doublespeak: inflated language

*definition (find it)

*Mostly negative examples (find some)

Page 33: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

CONCLUDING PARAGRAPH ( 19)

Author’s negative view of the goal and the effect of doublespeak (find it)

Page 34: UNIT 5: DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION KAREN FRENCHENGLISH 1301.

ASSIGNMENT

See your calendar for your topics.

Decide whether you understand or like one pattern more than the other; then,

Choose one topic that you feel you can be most successful writing about.

Rough draft is due next time for peer evaluation.