Cover: Real Reading and Writing, 2nd Edition by Susan Anker; Miriam Moore

Real Reading and Writing

Second Edition  ©2018 Susan Anker; Miriam Moore Formats: Achieve, E-book, Print

Authors

  • Headshot of Susan Anker

    Susan Anker

    Susan Anker (BA, MEd, Boston University) brings a unique perspective to the teaching of the developmental writing course. She taught English and developmental writing before entering college publishing, where she worked for eighteen years: as a sales representative and English/ESL editor at Macmillan Publishing Company; as developmental English/ESL editor, executive editor, and editor in chief at St. Martin’s Press; and as vice president and editor in chief for humanities at Houghton Mifflin Company. In each of these positions, she worked with developmental writing instructors and students, maintaining her early interest in the field.  Since the publication of the first edition of Real Writing in 1998, Anker has traveled extensively to campuses across the country, continuing her conversations with instructors and students and giving workshops and presentations. She believes that the writing course is, for many students, their first, best opportunity to learn the skills they will need to succeed in college and achieve their goals.


  • Headshot of Miriam Moore

    Miriam Moore

    Miriam Moore is Assistant Professor of English at the University of North Georgia. She teaches undergraduate linguistics and grammar courses, developmental English courses (integrated reading and writing), ESL composition and pedagogy, and the first-year composition sequence. She is the co-author with Susan Anker of Real Essays, Real Writing, Real Reading and Writing, and Writing Essentials Online. She has over 20 years’ experience in community college teaching as well. Her interests include applied linguistics, writing about writing approaches to composition, professionalism for two-year college English faculty, and threshold concepts for composition, reading, and grammar.

Table of Contents

Contents

Brief Contents

A Note to Students

Preface

Part 1 The Processes of Reading, Writing, and Critical Thinking

1 Understand Reading, Writing, and Critical Thinking

FOUR BASICS OF READING AND WRITING

First Basic: Follow a Thoughtful Process

Reading and Writing: Closely Linked Processes

Four Habits of Critical Thinkers

Second Basic: Pay Attention to Context— the Audience, Purpose, and Topic

Third Basic: Writers Make and Support a Point, and Readers Identify the Point and Supporting Details

Fourth Basic: Organize Support Effectively and Identify Organizational Patterns

Grammar, Spelling, and Vocabulary

The Four Basics: Put It All Together

Chapter Reading: Rachel Carter, "I write Young Adult Essays, and I Refuse to Apologize for It"

Chapter Review

2 Begin Well: Focus on Context and Audience

Make Connections: Find the Context

Preview to Identify Ideas

FOUR BASICS OF PREVIEWING

First Basic: Finding Audience, Purpose, and Topic

Second Basic: Finding a Personal Context

Third Basic: Asking Guiding Questions

Fourth Basic: Predicting Patterns of Organization

Prewrite to Find Ideas

FOUR BASICS OF PREWRITING

First Basic: Finding Audience, Purpose, and Topic

Second Basic: Narrowing Topics

Third Basic: Practicing Invention Strategies

Fourth Basic: Asking Guiding Questions

Chapter Reading: Barbara DeMarco-Barrett, "Set Your Writing Free: Use This Technique to Spark Creativity and Loosen Your Inhibitions"

Chapter Review

3 Read Well: Annotate to Understand Text

Practice Close Reading

The Four Basics of Annotation

FOUR BASICS OF ANNOTATION

First Basic: Pay Attention to Vocabulary

Second Basic: Find the Main Point

Third Basic: Identify Support and Method of Organization

Fourth Basic: Ask Questions and Make Connections

Reading: Taylor Mali, "Making Kids Work Hard" from What Teachers Make 0

Chapter Reading: Carl Honoré, "In Praise of Slow Thinking"

Chapter Review

4 Write Well: Develop Your Topic, Thesis, and Support

Drafting

FOUR BASICS OF THE DRAFTING PROCESS

First Basic: Identify a Preliminary Main Point

Consider the Size of the Assignment

State a Single Main Point or Position about a Topic

Be Specific

Choose a Point You Can illustrate, Explain, or Prove

Second Basic: Generate Support for Your Main Point

Select the Best Primary Support

Third Basic: Arrange Support for Your Main Point

Planning Paragraphs

Planning Support in an Essay: Mapping and Outlining

Fourth Basic: Write an Introduction and a Conclusion

Writing an Introduction

Writing a Conclusion

Relationship between Paragraphs and Essays

A Complete Draft

Chapter Reading: Gail Godwin, "The Watcher at the Gates"

Chapter Review

5 Finish Well: Review, Reflect, Respond, Revise, and Edit

Finish Well When Reading: Review, Reflect, and Respond

Reviewing

Reflecting and Responding

Finish Well When Writing: Revise and Edit

Revise Your Writing

FOUR BASICS OF REVISION

First Basic: Ensure Your Writing is Unified

Second Basic: Make Sure Your Writing is Well-Developed

Third Basic: Make Sure Your Writing is Coherent Checklist: Revising Your Writing

Fourth Basic: Use Peer Review to Obtain A Readers Perspective Checklist: Questions for Peer Reviewers

Final Tips for Revising Your Writing Checklist: Evaluating Your Revised Essay

Editing Your Writing

FOUR BASICS OF EDITING

Chapter Reading: Donald M. Murray, "The Maker’s Eye"

Chapter Review

6 Practice Critical Reading, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing

Recognize Assumptions

Make Inferences

Inferring an Implied Main Idea

Identify the Writer’s Tone

Writing in Your Own Words: Paraphrasing

Reading and Writing Together: Summaries

FOUR BASICS OF A GOOD SUMMARY

Reading to Write a Summary: The Process

Drafting a Summary

Revising a Summary

Chapter Review

Part 2 Patterns for Reading and Writing Paragraphs and Essays

7 Narration and Description: Texts That Tell a Story

Understand What Narration Is

FOUR BASICS OF A GOOD NARRATION

Narration in the Classroom: Timelines

First Basic: Main Point in Narration

Second Basic: Major Events

Third Basic: Descriptive Details

Dialogue in Narration

Using Graphic Organizers to Identify Support

Fourth Basic: Organization in Narration

Paragraphs vs. Essays in Narration

Readand WritE Narration: Analyze and Respond

Student Narratives Dora Garcia, "Beowulf and Me" Lauren Mack, "Gel Pens"

Read and Analyze Professional Narratives Amy Tan, "Fish Cheeks"

Paraphrase

Writing Strategies in Action: Descriptive Details

Explore Grammar: Simple Sentences Pat Conroy, "Chili Cheese Dogs, My Father, and Me"

Summarize

Writing Strategies in Action: Dialogue

Build Vocabulary: Descriptive Words

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Narration Checklist: Writing a Narration

8 Illustration: Texts That Give Examples

Understand What Illustration Is

FOUR BASICS OF GOOD ILLUSTRATION

Illustration in the Classroom: Résumés

First Basic: Main Point in Illustration

Second Basic: Choosing Appropriate Examples

Third Basic: Adding Specific Details

Using Proper Nouns

Incorporating Quotes

Devising Hypothetical Examples

Using a Graphic Organizer

Fourth Basic: Organization in Illustration

Paragraphs vs. Essays in Illustration

Read and Write Illustration: Analyze and Respond

Student Illustration Inez King, "Empathy" James Carnill, "You"

Read and Analyze Professional Illustration Susan Adams, "The Weirdest Job Interview Questions and How to Handle Them"

Summarize

Writing Strategies in Action: Hypothetical Examples

Build Vocabulary: The Language of Specificity Dianne Hales, "Why Are We So Angry?"

Paraphrase

Writing Strategies in Action: Provide Credentials and Quote Experts

Explore Grammar: Commas after Introductory Dependent Clauses

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Illustration Checklist: Writing an Illustration

9 Process Analysis: Texts That Present a Sequence of Steps

Understand What Process Analysis Is

FOUR BASICS OF GOOD PROCESS ANALYSIS

Process Analysis in the Classroom: Diagramming a Sequence of Steps

First Basic: Main Point in Process Analysis

Second Basic: Identifying or Introducing Steps

Third Basic: Explaining and Supporting Steps

Using a Graphic Organizer to Identify Support

Fourth Basic: Organization in Process Analysis

Paragraphs vs. Essays in Process Analysis

Read and Write Process Analysis: Analyze and Respond

Student Process Analysis Ibrahim Alfaqeeh, "Weddings in Saudi Arabia" Jasen Beverly, "My Pilgrimage"

Professional Process Analysis Tara Parker-Pope, "How to Boost Your Willpower"

Paraphrase

Writing Strategies in Action: Introducs Steps Clearly

Explore Grammar: Active and Passive Verbs Samantha Levine-Finley, "Isn’t It Time You Hit the Books?"

Summarize

Writing Strategies in Action: Audience Awareness

Explore Grammar: Commas and Appositives

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Process AnalysisChecklist: Writing a Process Analysis

10 Classification: Texts That Analyze Through Grouping

Understand What Classification Is

FOUR BASICS OF GOOD CLASSIFICATION

Classification in the Classroom: Learning Specialized Words by Using Categories

First Basic: Main Point, Purpose, and Organizing Principles in Classification

Using a Colon in a Classification Thesis Statement

Second Basic: Major Support in Classification

Third Basic: Details in Classification

Consistent Structure

Using a Graphic Organizer

Fourth Basic: Organization in Classification

Paragraphs vs. Essays in Classification

Read and Write Classification: Analyze and Respond

Student Classification Lorenza Mattazi, All My MusicBeth Trimmer, Birth Order

Professional Classification

Stephanie Ericsson, "The Ways We Lie"

Paraphrase

Writing Strategies in Action: Use Consistent Structure

Explore Grammar: Parallel Structure Carolyn Foster Segal, "The Dog Ate My Flash Drive, and Other Tales of Woe"

Summarize

Build Vocabulary: Tone

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Classification Checklist: Writing a Classification

11 Comparison and Contrast: Texts That Show Similarity and Difference

Understand What Comparison and Contrast Are

FOUR BASICS OF GOOD COMPARISON AND CONTRAST

Comparison and Contrast in the Classroom: Reviewing for a Test

Reading Comparison and Contrast

Comparison and Contrast in the Classroom: Reviewing for a Test

First Basic: Main Point in Comparison and Contrast

Second Basic: Major Support in Comparison and Contrast

Third Basic: Develop Points of Comparisoon or Contrast wiuth Details

Using a Graphic Organizer

Fourth Basic: Organization in Comparison and Contrast

Paragraphs vs. Essays in Comparison and Contrast

Read and Write Comparison and Contrast: Analyze and Respond

Student Comparison and Contrast Said Ibrahim, "Eyeglasses vs. Laser Surgery: Benefits and Drawbacks"

Rui Dai, "A Whiff of Memory"

Professional Comparison and Contrast Dave Barry, "The Ugly Truth about Beauty"

Summarize

Writing Strategies in Action: A Tone of Comic Exaggeration

Explore Grammar: Using Quotes Within Quotes Judith Ortiz Cofer, "The Myth of the Latin Woman: I Just Met a Girl Named Maria"

Paraphrase

Writing Strategies in Action: Use Demonstrative Words to Create Cohesion

Build Vocabulary: Recognize Borrowed Words and Proper Names

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Comparison and Contrast Checklist: Writing a Comparison and Contrast

12 Cause and Effect: Texts That Explain Reasons and Results

Understand What Cause and Effect Are

FOUR BASICS OF GOOD CAUSE AND EFFECT

Cause and Effect in the Classroom: Using Diagrams to Show a Chain of Events

Reading Cause and Effect

First Basic: Main Point in Cause and Effect

Second Basic: Identifying Causes and Effects

Avoid Logical Fallacies: Post Hoc and Slippery Slope

Third Basic: Supporting Details in Cause and Effect

Fourth Basic: Organization in Cause and Effect

Paragraphs vs. Essays in Cause and Effect

Read and Write Cause and Effect: Analyze and Respond

Student Cause and Effect

Caitlyn Prokop, "A Difficult Decision with a Positive Outcome"

Tyler Dashner, "A Look at Academic Dishonesty"

Professional Cause and Effect

John Tierney, "Yes, Money Can Buy Happiness"

Summarize

Writing Strategies in Action: Vary Use of Quotes

Explore Grammar: Use By-Modifiers Correctly

Steven Pinker, "Are Your Genes to Blame?"

Writing Strategies in Action: Vary Use of Quotes

Paraphrase

Build Vocabulary: Prefixes

Build Vocabulary: Affect and Effect

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Cause and Effect EssayChecklist: Writing a Cause and Effect Essay

13 Argument: Texts That Persuade

Understand What Argument Is

FOUR BASICS OF GOOD ARGUMENT

Argument in the Classroom: Online Discussions

First Basic: Main Point in Argument

Second Basic: Identifying and Writing Support in Argument

Identifying Reasons and Questioning Assumptions

Recognizing Different Types of Evidence

Evaluating the Evidence

Third Basic: Consider and Respond to Different Points of View

Fourth Basic: Organization in Argument

Paragraphs vs. Essays in Argument

Read and Write Argument: Analyze and Respond

Student Arguments Jason Yilmaz, "A Learning Tool Whose Time Has Come"Shari Beck, "’No’ to Social Media in Education"

Professional Arguments Joanne Orlando, "Is Two Hours of Screen Time Really Too Much for Kids?"

Summarize

Writing Strategies in Action: Consider Opposing Points of View and Offer Alternatives

Explore Grammar: Brigitte Vittrup, "Why It’s Wrong for Pediatricians to Eliminate Daily Screen Time Recommendations"

Summarize

Writing Strategies in Action: Using Qualifiers to Avoid Overgeneralizations

Build Vocabulary: Compound Adjectives

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Argument Checklist: Writing an Argument

14 Research: Texts That Explore a Question and Synthesize Information

Understand What Research Is

FOUR BASICS OF GOOD RESEARCH

Steps in the Research Process

First Basic: Begin with a Question

Second Basic: Find Appropriate Sources

Consult a Reference Librarian

Use the Online Catalog

Look at Your Library’s Web Site

Use the Internet

Interview People

Third Basic: Evaluate and Synthesize Sources

Synthesize Information to Support a Thesis Statement

Fourth Basic: Cite and Document Sources to Avoid Plagiarism

Take Accurate Notes

Use MLA Format to Cite and Document Sources

Use In-Text Citations within Your Essay

Use a Works Cited List at the End of Your Essay

Read and Write Research: Analyze and Respond

Student Research Essay

Dara Riesler, "Service Dogs Help Heal the Mental Wounds of War"

Professional Research Essay

Rodrigo Villagomez, "The Designer Player"

Summarize

Writing Skills in Action: Paraphrase and Quotation in a Research Essay

Writing Skills in Action: Consider Audience and Source Selection

Extend and Connect: Write Your Own Research Paper Checklist: Writing a Research Essay

Part 3 The Four Most Serious Errors

15 The Basic Sentence: An Overview

The Parts of Speech

The Basic Sentence

Verbs

Subjects

Completeness

Six Basic English Sentence Patterns

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

16 Fragments: Incomplete Sentences

Understand What Fragments Are

Language and Writing

Find and Correct Fragments

1. Fragments That Start with Prepositions

2. Fragments That Start with Dependent Words

3. Fragments That Start with -ing Verb Forms

4. Fragments That Start with To and a Verb

5. Fragments That Are Examples or Explanations

Edit for Fragments

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Finding and Fixing Fragments

17 Run-Ons: Two Sentences Joined Incorrectly

Understand What Run-Ons Are

In the Real World, Why Is It Important to Correct Run-Ons?

Find and Correct Run-Ons

Add a Period

Add a Semicolon

Add a Semicolon, a Conjunctive Adverbial, and a Comma

Add a Comma and a Coordinating Conjunction

Add a Dependent Word

Special Considerations: Two Situations That Cause Run-Ons

The Word Then

Introducing a Quotation

Edit for Run-Ons

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Finding and Fixing Run-Ons

18 Problems with Subject-Verb Agreement: When Subjects and Verbs Don’t Match

Understand What Subject-Verb Agreement Is

In the Real World, Why Is It Important to Correct Errors in Subject-Verb Agreement?

Find and Correct Errors in Subject-Verb Agreement

1. The Verb Is a Form of Be, Have, or Do

2. Words Come between the Subject and the Verb

3. The Sentence Has a Compound Subject

4. The Subject Is an Indefinite Pronoun

5. The Verb Comes before the Subject

Subject-Verb Agreement in Partial Quotations

Edit for Subject-Verb Agreement

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Finding and Fixing Problems with Subject-Verb Agreement

19 Verb Tense: Using Verbs to Express Different Times

Understand What Verb Tense Is

In the Real World, Why Is It Important to Use the Correct Verb Tense?

Use Verbs Correctly

Regular Verbs

Irregular Verbs

Perfect Tenses and Past Participles

Passive Voice and Past Participles

Consistency of Verb Tense

Edit for Verb Problems

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Finding and Fixing Verb-Tense Errors

Part 4 Other Grammar Concerns

20 Pronouns: Using Substitutes for Nouns

Understand What Pronouns Are

Use Pronouns Correctly

Identify Pronouns

Check for Pronoun Agreement

Make Pronoun Reference Clear

Use the Right Type of Pronoun

Make Pronouns Consistent in Person

Edit for Pronoun Problems

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Finding and Fixing Pronoun Problems

21 Adjectives and Adverbs: Using Descriptive Words

Understand What Adjectives and Adverbs Are

Use Adjectives and Adverbs Correctly

Choosing between Adjectives and Adverbs

Using Adjectives and Adverbs in Comparisons

Using Good, Well, Bad, and Badly Edit for Adjective and Adverb Problems

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Editing for Correct Usage of Adjectives and Adverbs

22 Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers: Avoiding Confusing Descriptions

Understand What Misplaced Modifiers Are

Find and Correct Misplaced Modifiers

Understand What Dangling Modifiers Are

Find Correct Dangling Modifiers

Edit for Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Editing for Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers

23 Parallelism: Balancing Ideas

Understand What Parallelism Is

Write Parallel Sentences

Parallelism in Pairs and Lists

Parallelism in Comparisons

Parallelism with Certain Paired Words

Edit for Parallelism Problems

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Editing for Parallelism

24 Sentence Variety: Finding a Rhythm for Your Writing

Understand What Sentence Variety Is

Create Sentence Variety

Join Ideas Together to Lengthen Sentences: Coordination

Join Ideas Together: Subordination

Other Ways to Join Ideas

Join Ideas Using an -ing Verb

Join Ideas Using a Past Participle

Join Ideas Using an Appositive

Join Ideas Using an Adjective Clause

Strategies for Changing Sentence Opener

Start Some Sentences with Adverbs

Start Some Sentences with Prepositions or Infinitives

Edit for Sentence Variety

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Editing for Sentence Variety

25 ESL Concerns: Trouble Spots for Multilingual Students

Basic Sentence Patterns

Statements

Negatives

Questions There Is and There Are Pronouns

Confusing Subject and Object Pronouns

Confusing Gender

Leaving Out a Pronoun

Using a Pronoun to Repeat a Subject

Using Relative Pronouns

Verbs

The Simple Tenses

The Perfect Tenses

The Progressive Tenses

Modal (Helping) Verbs

Gerunds and Infinitives

Articles

Definite and Indefinite Articles

Count and Noncount Nouns

Prepositions

Prepositions after Adjectives

Prepositions after Verbs

Separable vs. Inseparable Phrasal Verbs

Edit for Preposition Problems

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Part 5 Word Use

26 Vocabulary and Word Choice: Finding the Right Word

Understand the Importance of Building Vocabulary and Choosing Words Carefully

Recognize Context Clues

Understand Word Parts

Use Dictionaries

Use Thesauruses

Avoiding Four Common Word-Choice Problems

Vague and Abstract Words

Slang

Wordy Language

Clichés

Edit for Word Choice

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Editing for Word Choice

27 Spelling and Commonly Confused Words

Understand and Correct Spelling Mistakes

Use a Dictionary

Use a Spell Checker—with Caution

Use Proofreading Techniques

Make a Personal Spelling List

Strategies for Becoming a Better Speller

Master Commonly Confused Words

Learn Six Spelling Rules

Exceptions When Forming Plurals

Consult a List of Commonly Misspelled Words

Use Commonly Confused Words Correctly

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Part 6 Punctuation and Capitalization

28 Commas

Understand What Commas Do

Use Commas Correctly

Commas between Items in a Series

Commas between Coordinate and Cumlative Adjectives

Commas in Compound Sentences

Commas after Introductory Words

Commas around Appositives and Interrupters

Commas around Adjective Clauses

Other Uses for Commas

Edit for Commas

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

29 Apostrophes

Understand What Apostrophes Do

Use Apostrophes Correctly

Apostrophes to Show Ownership

Apostrophes in Contractions

Apostrophes with Letters, Numbers, and Time

Edit for Apostrophes

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

30 Quotation Marks

Understand What Quotation Marks Do

Use Quotation Marks Correctly

Quotation Marks for Direct Quotations

No Quotation Marks for Indirect Quotations

Quotation Marks for Certain Titles

Edit for Quotation Marks

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

31 Other Punctuation

Understand What Punctuation Does

Use Other Punctuation Correctly

Semicolon ( ; )

Colon ( : )

Parentheses ( ( ) )

Dash ( -- )

Hyphen ( - )

Edit for Other Punctuation Marks

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

32 Capitalization: Using Capital Letters

Understand Capitalization

Use the Three Rules of Capitalization

Capitalization of Sentences

Capitalization of Names of Specific People, Places, Dates, and Things

Capitalization of Titles 000

Chapter Review

Chapter Test

Editing Review Tests

Index

Product Updates

  • Expanded reading coverage throughout the text. Reading strategies are more d, illustrating the interconnectedness and reciprocity of the reading and writing processes. The assignment chapters (7-13) include new strategies for recognizing and reading patterns, along with critical reading questions in the Paragraph vs. Essay two-page spreads.
  • Revised Four Basics boxes are more closely tied to chapter content to better highlight and explain key concepts; material relevant to each box has been reorganized and/or expanded to provide logical, easy-to-follow instruction.
  • New and expanded advice about critical reading skills that support writing in Chapter 6, "Critical Reading, Paraphrasing, and Summarizing." significantly revised to address critical thinking skills (recognizing assumptions, making inferences, identifying implied main ideas, identifying tone), with new coverage of paraphrasing and summarizing.
  • Stronger emphasis on argument in Chapter 13, "Argument: Texts that Persuade." Additional examples illustrate the foundational concepts of critical thinking, evaluation, and counterclaims and counterarguments.
  • Seven new professional and student readings include a pair in Chapter 13 on the pros and cons of screen time for children and three student essays modelling narrative, illustration, and process.
  • Updated MLA coverage: in addition to updated in-text citation and works cited entries, a new section explains how the MLA guidelines work.
  • Revisions to grammar coverage: new Finding and Fixing boxes address pronoun and modifier issues (Chapters 22 and 23), and a new section on unnecessary commas has been added to Chapter 28.

Prepare your students for academic success with thoroughly integrated reading and writing instruction

Real Reading and Writing, Second Edition, teaches the foundational reading and writing skills students need to enter freshman composition classes. Widely adopted at both two- and four-year schools, Real Reading and Writing employs the language of composition and addresses higher level topics, where appropriate, to help make the transition from supported to traditional coursework seamless for students. With a stronger emphasis on reading strategies throughout the text, the second edition does even more to show students how reading and writing are interconnected and integral to academic success.

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