Offering a wealth of examples, tips, and tools, KEYS FOR WRITERS, 8e, is an easy-to-use resource for improving your writing for all of your coursework -- as well as your career. Color-coded tabs allow you to quickly find answers to your grammar and writing questions. The visual Critical Thinking Framework enables you to read, write, and research with better results, and Key Examples help you compare strong versus weak ways of applying critical thinking. Sample student papers provide excellent models of writing in different disciplines, while the new Assignment Guide provides steps for writing in 15 common genres you might encounter in your academic and professional career. Completely up to date with the latest MLA guidelines, the eighth edition also highlights the importance of writing in such careers as nursing, accounting, law, IT, and more.
Part I: THE WRITING PROCESS.
1. Critical Thinking, Reading, and Writing.
2. Drafting in Stages.
3. Revising, Editing, and Proofreading.
4. Writing and Analyzing Arguments.
5. Writing in Academic Disciplines.
ASSIGNMENT GUIDE: KEYS TO COMMON GENRES.
Part II: THE RESEARCH PROCESS.
6. Research: A Conversation with Sources.
7. Searching for Sources.
8. How to Evaluate Sources.
9. How to Avoid Plagiarizing.
10. How to Use, Integrate, and Document Sources.
Part III: MLA DOCUMENTATION.
11. Citing Sources in Your Paper, MLA Style.
12. MLA List of Works Cited.
13. A Student's Research Paper, MLA Style.
Part IV: APA, CSE, AND CHICAGO DOCUMENTATION.
14. Citing Sources in Your Paper, APA Style.
15. APA List of References.
16. A Student's Research Paper, APA Style.
17. CSE Style of Documentation.
18. Excerpt from a Student's Research Paper, CSE Style.
19. Chicago Manual of Style: Endnotes, Footnotes, and Bibliography.
20. Excerpt from a Student's Research Paper, Chicago Style.
Part V: DESIGN, MEDIA, AND PRESENTATION.
21. Document Design.
22. Visuals.
23. Online Communication Forums.
24. Oral and Multimedia Presentations.
25. Portfolios.
26. Resumes and Letters of Application.
27. Business Letters and Memos.
Part VI: STYLE: THE FIVE C'S.
28. First C: Cut.
29. Second C: Check for Action.
30. Third C: Connect.
31. Fourth C: Commit.
32. Fifth C: Choose the Best Words.
33. Revising for Style: A Student's Drafts.
34. Style Tips.
Part VII: COMMON SENTENCE PROBLEMS.
35. Trouble Spots and Terms.
36. Fixing a Sentence Fragment.
37. Run-ons and Comma Splices.
38. Sentence Snarls.
39. Verbs.
40. Passive Voice.
41. Subject-Verb Agreement.
42. Pronouns.
43. Adjectives and Adverbs.
44. Relative Clauses and Relative Pronouns.
Part VIII: PUNCTUATION, MECHANICS, AND SPELLING.
45. Commas.
46. Apostrophes.
47. Quotation Marks.
48. Semicolons and Colons.
49. Other Punctuation Marks.
50. Italics/Underlining.
51. Capitalization.
52. Abbreviations.
53. Numbers.
54. Hyphens.
55. Online Guidelines.
56. Spelling.
Part IX: WRITING ACROSS LANGUAGES AND CULTURES.
57. Language Diversity and Edited American English: Challenges for Multilingual Writers.
58. Nouns and Articles.
59. Verbs and Verb Forms.
60. Sentence Structure and Word Order.
61. Prepositions and Idioms.
62. Language Learners' FAQs.
Part X: GLOSSARIES.
63. Words to Watch For: Glossary of Usage.
64. Glossary of Grammatical Terms.
Index.
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Ann Raimes
Ann Raimes, a respected authority on writing, research, grammar, and ESL, created the KEYS FOR WRITERS family of handbooks (Cengage Learning) to be the most accessible, user-friendly handbooks available.
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Susan K. Miller-Cochran
Susan K. Miller-Cochran, now director of the Writing Program at The University of Arizona, helped shape the First-Year Writing Program at North Carolina State University while serving as director from 2007-2015. Prior to that, she was a faculty member at Mesa Community College in Arizona. Dr. Miller-Cochran serves as president of the Council of Writing Program Administrators (2015-2017). Her work focuses on the intersections of technology, second-language writing, and writing program administration. Widely published and a popular presenter, Dr. Miller-Cochran is also a co-author with Rochelle L. Rodrigo on the CENGAGE GUIDE TO RESEARCH (Cengage Learning). She received both her Master of Teaching English as a Second Language (MTESL) and her Ph.D. in English, with a concentration in Rhetoric/Composition and Linguistics, from Arizona State University.
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NEW! The Assignment Guide: Keys to Common Genres follows Part 1 and features two-page spreads that outline the key elements, organizational strategies, and steps for writing in each of fifteen academic genres. Additional examples of each genre -- which are included elsewhere in the book and in MindTap® -- are cross-referenced for quick access.
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NEW! Key Examples help students apply the handbook's Critical Thinking Framework in four essential areas. Topics include critical reading (with examples of active reading and more passive reading), source evaluation (featuring two sources a student has critically evaluated), source synthesis (with examples of a strong and weak synthesis of two sources), and revision (making use of a heuristics for working through the five C's for stylistic revision).
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NEW! Comprehensive updates of the MLA style sections reflect the 2016 MLA guidelines. In addition, chapter 12's newly designed Source Shots clearly label each of the necessary elements as students encounter them on the source and then demonstrate how to organize them into a citation. Placed at the beginning of the chapter, these Source Shots offer consistent templates for students to follow as they work with their own sources.
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NEW! The eighth edition includes a stronger emphasis on the importance of writing in a variety of careers. Part openers begin with a profile of a person in a particular career with a sample of the kind of writing important in that profession. Examples include a chef, an accountant, a nurse, a paralegal, an IT professional, and an industrial designer.
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NEW! Purple annotations in the student sample arguments in chapters 4 and 5 allow students to see more formative feedback instead of only description.
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NEW! More examples in Chapter 2, Drafting in Stages, help students develop paragraphs and use transitions. Section 2g now adds "Establishing cause and effect," complete with an example, to the other eight patterns of paragraph development. Two additional examples (in 2f) illustrate context links and transitional words and Expressions.
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NEW! Enhanced MindTap® annotations identify opportunities for integrating digital resources into your class.
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Writing for College, Community, and Career. KEYS FOR WRITERS thoroughly prepares students for a range of writing and communicating tasks they may encounter in college and well beyond as they make their way in the community and workplace. Part 1 and the Assignment Guides support students' writing efforts in different academic disciplines, while Part 5 provides model documents, Web pages, presentations, and other resources for writing, communicating, and document design in a variety of media for diverse audiences.
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Practical Key Points boxes. Providing quick-reference summaries of essential information, Key Points boxes include A Critical Thinking Framework (Part 1); What Every Librarian Wishes You Knew (Part 2); How to Cite and List Sources in MLA Style (Part 3); DOIs and URLs: Locating and Citing Electronic Sources (Part 4); Guidelines for College Essay Format (Part 5); Checklist for Word Choice (Part 6); Forms of Personal Pronouns (Part 7); Titles: Quotation Marks or Italics/Underlining? (Part 8); and Articles at a Glance: Four Basic Questions about a Noun (Part 9).
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Source Shots for Citation. Popular Source Shots appear in Parts 3-4 and show students where they are likely to find elements needed to cite common research sources in MLA, APA, CSE, and Chicago styles. Clearly labeled citation models illustrate at a glance what types of information students need to include and how to format, arrange, and punctuate that information when documenting sources.
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Thorough Coverage of Style. The entire Part 6, Style: The Five C's is devoted to the important area of style, covering sentence- and word-related style issues with a straightforward and easy-to-remember approach that teaches students to Cut, Check for Action, Connect, Commit, and Choose the Best Words.
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Consolidated Grammar Coverage. Thorough, streamlined, and clear coverage of grammar in Part 7, Common Sentence Problems, gives students one central place to turn to when they have grammar questions. While other handbooks often confuse students by dividing grammar coverage over several parts, the reader-friendly KEYS FOR WRITERS summarizes answers to students' frequently asked grammar questions in Part 7.
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Superior Coverage for Multilingual Writers. KEYS FOR WRITERS takes a distinctive approach to English as a new language, Englishes, and vernaculars. Its "difference, not deficit" emphasis is presented within Language and Culture boxes, an extensive "Editing guide to multilingual transfer patterns," an "Editing guide to vernacular Englishes,", and Notes for Multilingual Writers integrated throughout the text.
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Exercises on Writing, Research, and Grammar. Exercises at the ends of the writing, research, and grammar sections of the text (including Writing across Languages and Cultures) give students plenty of opportunities to put what they learn into practice. Answers to the exercises are found in the online Instructors Resource Manual.
Online Instructor's Manual for Raimes/Miller-Cochran's for Writers, 8th
9781305959118
Cengage eBook: Keys for Writers (w/ MLA9E & APA7E Updates) 12 Months
9788000041896
MindTap: Keys for Writers (w/ MLA9E & APA7E Updates) 12 Months
9781337363273