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Test your basic knowledge |
Writing Process
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
writing-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. A student's personal dictionary of words to know or spell - note cards - graphic organizers - oral histories - and journals
persuasive / argumentative writing
student-created sources
thesis statement end
publishing
2. The perspective from which a piece is written; first person - third person - omniscient - limited omniscient
steps of revision
point of view
specific language
persuasive
3. Can be used in a group work to assist writers in raising their awareness about the quality of their contributions to the group; part of any writing assignment to summarize strengths and weaknesses they see in their writing
shaping
elements in an argument
self-assessment
mapping
4. Facts - data - and opinions of others used to support assertions and conclusions
evidence
editing
rhetorical strategies
comparison
5. Performing speeches - plays - videos; making a speech - participating in debate; creating booklets - brochures - family scrapbooks - or personal web pages; publishing a school newspaper - magazine - or portfolio; submitting work for publication beyon
types of presentation strategies
tone
introductory paragraph
general reading public
6. The particular group of readers or viewers that the writer is addressing
audience
subject
guidelines for reasoning effectively in written arguement
scholarly writing
7. Taking a draft from its preliminary to its final version by evaluating - adding - cutting - moving material - editing - and proofreading
revising
student-created sources
free writing
formal outline guidelines
8. Listing all the ideas that come to mind associated with the topic
appeal to authority
subject writing
brainstorming
other sources
9. Reports another's words without quotation marks except around words repeated exactly from the source
formal outline guidelines
ways to organize a passage
generalizations
indirect quotations
10. Repeats another's words exactly and encloses them in quotation marks
developmen
proofreading
types of presentation strategies
direct quotation
11. Calls for you to read your final copy for typing errors or handwriting legibility
plagerizing
proofreading
shaping
workplace writing
12. A condensed statement of main points of someone else's passage expressed in your own words and sentence structure
classification
generalizations
common transitional expressions and the relationships they signal
summar
13. Addition (also - in addition - too - moveover); example (for example - for instance - on the otherhand - nevertheless); contrast (but - yet - however - on the other hand); comparison (similarly - likewise - in the same way); concession (of course - t
scoring rubics
editing
common transitional expressions and the relationships they signal
summar
14. Flm - art - media - and so on
other sources
praise
drafting
generalizations
15. Speech or written form in which one explains or describes
subject
evidence
thesis statement end
expository
16. In this stage - the writer looks back at his/her work and self-evaluates - and the audience evaluates the effectiveness of the writing
evaluating
guidelines for evaluating evidence
brainstorming
summar
17. Number - letters - indentations signaling groups and levels of importance; each level has more than one entry; all subdivisions are at the same level of generality; headings don't overlap; only first word (and proper nouns) of each entry capitalize;
graphic organizer (Also known as concept maps - entity relationship charts - and mind maps)
types of discourse
rhetorical features
formal outline guidelines
18. State the essay smoothly - not abruptly - flowing logically from the rest of the essay
self-assessment
thesis statement end
purpose
indirect quotations
19. The writer describes a person - place - or thing and organizes it in the description in a logical manner
peer review
creative writing
location
shaping
20. Chronological order - classification - illustration - climax - location - comparison - cause and effect
appeal to authority
scoring rubics
assertion
ways to organize a passage
21. Introductory paragraph - thesis statement - background information - reasons or evidence - anticipation of like objections and responses to them - concluding paragraph
the claim - the support - the warrant
typical elements in informative essay
elements in an argument
source
22. A sentence stating your topic and the point you want to make about it
free writing
topic sentence
scoring rubics
assertion
23. Writing interviews - accounts - profiles - or descriptions to capture the meaning of the subject being written about
subject writing
reference works
audience
scoring rubics
24. A detailed statement of someone else's statement expressed in your own words and your own sentence structure
paraphrase
unity
guidelines for evaluating evidence
introductory paragraph
25. Also called clustering and webbing; more visual and less linear
coherence
mapping
persuasive
plagerizing
26. Style - tone - point of view - sarcasm - counterpoints - praise
portfolios
revising
rhetorical features
tone
27. Type of argument in logic in which an expert or knowledgeable other is cited for the purpose of strengthening the argument
editing
audience
appeal to authority
revising
28. The first sentence of the paragraph; it gives the reader an idea of what the paragraph is going to be about
topic sentence
elements in an argument
ways to organize a passage
indirect quotations
29. Arrange a paragraph - and specific - concrete support for the main idea of the paragraph
process writing
creative writing
summar
developmen
30. Prewriting (also called planning or rehearsal) - shapping - drafting - revising - editing - proofreading and publishing
peer review
stages of the writing process
analogies
point of view
31. The 'going public' stage of writing
basic requirements for a thesis statement
publishing
drafting
MLA
32. Spatial - geometrical - or geographical arrangement of ideas according to their position in space (examples: left/right - top/bottom - circular - adjacent)
spatial sequence
general reading public
compare and contrast
summar
33. Personal writing - workplace writing - subject writing - creative writing - persuasive writing - and scholarly writing
counterpoints
writing activities
common transitional expressions and the relationships they signal
graphic organizer (Also known as concept maps - entity relationship charts - and mind maps)
34. The exact words of a source set off in quotation marks
quotations
other sources
brainstorming
creative
35. Leads into the topic of the essay - trying to capture the reader's interest
praise
portfolios
introductory paragraph
techniques for coherence
36. Impressionistic; method based on theory that a whole piece of writing is greater than the sum of its parts; essays are read for a total impression they create - rather than individual aspects; grammar - spelling - and organization should not be consi
holistic scoring
appeal to emotion
rhetorical features
brainstorming
37. Calls for you to consider ways to organize your material
persuasive
indirect quotations
shaping
types of presentation strategies
38. Salinger - J.D. 'The Catcher in the Rye.' New York: Little - Brown - and Company - 1945.
compare and contrast
drafting
MLA
praise
39. Creative - expository - persuasive - argumentative
analogies
revising
purposes of writing
types of discourse
40. The topic sentence is stated and then followed by the details
appeal to authority
revising
illustration
audience characteristics
41. The writer shows order of time or the steps in a process
chronological order
subject
shaping
scholarly writing
42. Subject - purpose - focus - specific language - briefly state subdivisions
basic requirements for a thesis statement
spatial sequence
focused free writing
formal outline guidelines
43. Descriptive scoring schemes that are developed by teachers and other evaluators to guide analysis of the products or process of a a students efforts; scoring requires certain criteria to be met; example: (3) meets expectation (2) adequate (1) needs i
scoring rubics
purposes of writing
comparison
coherence
44. Speech or written form in which one sets forth to convince
persuasive
purposes of writing
focus
writing activities
45. To express yourself - to inform a reader - to persuade a reader - to create a literary work
appeal to authority
purposes of writing
persuasive
the claim - the support - the warrant
46. The writer shows the relationship between events and their results
revising
shaping
expository
cause and effect
47. Who? what? when? where? why? how?
chronological order
purposes of writing
quotations
journalistic questions
48. Are comparison of two pairs that have the same relationship
purposes of writing
extended metaphor
sarcasm
analogies
49. The way the an author uses words - phrases - and sentences to formulate ideas
typical elements in informative essay
style
MLA
chronological order
50. Use of contrasting ideas to communicate a message
writing activities
counterpoints
sarcasm
graphic organizer (Also known as concept maps - entity relationship charts - and mind maps)