mature writing
TRANSCRIPT
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BY: NURUL SHUHADA BINTI MAT NOH
NUR NASHA AMALINA BINTI NASIR
NUR INSYIRAH BINTI ZULKOFLI
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Writingis a medium of communication thatrepresents language through the inscription of signs
and symbols. In most languages, writing is acomplement to speech or spoken language
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Level 1 (Basic):
A student at Level 1 recognizes agreement among
basic elements (nouns, verbs, pronouns) in the sameclause or phrase. This student avoids gross errors inshort or simple structures and can logically selectand order main ideas or divisions in a sustained
paragraph using appropriate transition words. Students at this level demonstrate a basic
understanding of appropriate writing.
WRITING STANDARDS
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Level 2 (Intermediate):
In addition to performing successfully at Level 1, astudent who is proficient at level 2 recognizesappropriate agreement among basic elements whenthey are complicated by intervening words orphrases, avoids errors in relatively long andcomplicated constructions, and is able to recastseveral simple clauses using a single, more complexcombination.
Students performing at the intermediate level canrecognize and use the elements of good writing.
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Level 3 (Mature):
In addition to performing Level 1 and Level 2 skills
successfully, a student at Level 3 produces logicalstatements and comparisons and manages to solvedifficult or subtle writing problems, such asappropriate use of parallelism.
These students discern fine distinctions amongclosely-related root words and grammaticalstructures characteristic of a mature writing style.
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Specific vivid language. Avoid words like thing, it, nice,and using this without a qualifier.
Rich and varied vocabulary usage, which demonstrates anadult voice.
Active voice whenever possible. Avoid passive voice.
Varied and interesting sentence structure. Begin some
sentences with different introductory phrases, etc. Mature use of punctuation. Expand beyond the comma (,) and
the period (.) Use semi-colons (;), dashes (-), colons (:), and theellipsis (). correctly!
Style should increase clarityand decrease confusion.
Always use the present tensewhen writing about literature.The work lives on every time we read it.
Avoid using I in a persuasive / analytical piece. The readerknows it is yourpaper.
Strike a balanced tone: not too casuals, not too formal. Never
use slang in a style paper (or on the AP exam).
Writing style
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Demonstrate original thinking; construct an original,solid interpretation of the text.
Minimize summary and maximize interpretation.Avoid re-phrasing the question.
know the correct terminology for the parts of thework that are examining.
Presenting a range of ideas is impressive and revealsa scholarly approach to the work.
Content
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Concentrate thorough paper that addresses the
complex issues. Sort ideas into paragraphs, sequence ideas, introduce
each idea with a topic sentence, link ideas with
transitional phrases, support all claims withquotations from text,subordinate each paragraph
back to the thesis.
Format and Structure
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Underline the titles of long works:
Eg: novels, plays, movies, long poems, periodicals, and
pamphlets.
Place quotation marks around the titles of short works:
Eg: poems, short stories, a chapter or section from a larger
work, essays, articles, and songs.
Always provide an original, intelligent title for your
paper. Your own essay title needs nounderline, italics, or
quotation marks.
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Always type major papers, using standard font,
spacing, and margins. Double-space formal papers.
Provide a title page. Center your engaging title about
1/3 down the page; include title of work discussed.
Put your name, period, the instructors name, andthe date in the bottom right hand corner.
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Always type major papers, using standard font,
spacing, and margins. Double-space formal papers.
Provide a title page. Center your engaging title about
1/3 down the page; include title of work discussed.
Put your name, period, the instructors name, and
the date in the bottom right hand corner.
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Always type major papers, using standard font,
spacing, and margins. Double-space formal papers.
Provide a title page. Center your engaging title about
1/3 down the page; include title of work discussed.
Put your name, period, the instructors name, and
the date in the bottom right hand corner.