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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. The writer shows the relationship between events and their results
creative writing
stages of the writing process
cause and effect
purpose
2. A pictorial way of constructing knowledge and organizing information; they help the student convert and compress a lot of seemingly disjointed information into a structured - simple-to-read - graphic display; the resulting visual display conveys comp
graphic organizer (Also known as concept maps - entity relationship charts - and mind maps)
climax
MLA
chronological order
3. To express yourself - to inform a reader - to persuade a reader - to create a literary work
purpose
purposes of writing
common transitional expressions and the relationships they signal
steps of revision
4. Creative - expository - persuasive - argumentative
coherence
types of discourse
purposes of writing
RENNS
5. A student's personal dictionary of words to know or spell - note cards - graphic organizers - oral histories - and journals
student-created sources
argument
major activities of revision
chronological order
6. A book - article - videotape - or any other form of communication
source
types of discourse
common transitional expressions and the relationships they signal
scholarly writing
7. 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
revising
unity
student-created sources
types of presentation strategies
8. Listing all the ideas that come to mind associated with the topic
persuasive / argumentative writing
types of source material
brainstorming
personal writing
9. Provides students with the opportunity to play with language - to express emotions - to articulate stories - or to develop a drama for others to enjoy
creative writing
guidelines for reasoning effectively in written arguement
other sources
source
10. Use of positive messages to recognize or influence others
techniques for coherence
chronological order
praise
subject
11. A sentence stating your topic and the point you want to make about it
drafting
peer review
internet
assertion
12. Essays - research papers - biographies--these types of writing are most prevalent in middle or secondary level classrooms
topic sentence
scholarly writing
source
purposes of writing
13. Your assertion that conveys your point of view
focus
publishing
counterpoints
direct quotation
14. Calls for you to consider ways to organize your material
evidence
creative writing
revising
shaping
15. Style - tone - point of view - sarcasm - counterpoints - praise
plagerizing
focus
formal outline guidelines
rhetorical features
16. Salinger - J.D. 'The Catcher in the Rye.' New York: Little - Brown - and Company - 1945.
RENNS
MLA
tone
types of discourse
17. Use of contrasting ideas to communicate a message
tone
generalizations
counterpoints
location
18. Analogies - extended metaphor - appeal to authority - appeal to emotion
rhetorical strategies
analogies
chronological order
the claim - the support - the warrant
19. Speech or written form in which one expresses thoughts and feelings with imagination and creativity
techniques for coherence
prewriting
cause and effect
creative
20. Is a metaphor (a comparison of two unlike things) used throughout a work or over a series of lines in prose or poetry
extended metaphor
classification
peer review
major activities of revision
21. A condensed statement of main points of someone else's passage expressed in your own words and sentence structure
cause and effect
scoring rubics
self-assessment
summar
22. Speech or written form that debates or argues a topic in a logical way
generalizations
argument
rhetorical features
appeal to emotion
23. Shifting mentally from judgment; read your draft to critically evaluate it; decide whether to rewrite or revise current draft; be systematic
subject writing
creative
steps of revision
focus
24. This is the stage of writing that involves rewriting or 're-seeing;' emphasis is place on examining sentence structure - word choice - voice - and organization of the piece
revising
compare and contrast
sarcasm
introductory paragraph
25. Reports another's words without quotation marks except around words repeated exactly from the source
revising
point of view
indirect quotations
techniques for coherence
26. When the essay supplies guideposts that communicate the relations among ideas
typical elements in informative essay
coherence
free writing
graphic organizer (Also known as concept maps - entity relationship charts - and mind maps)
27. The writer shows order of time or the steps in a process
chronological order
focused free writing
formal outline guidelines
classification
28. Is it sufficient? is it representative? is it relevant? is it accurate? are claims qualified?
appeal to authority
evaluating
guidelines for evaluating evidence
creative writing
29. Add (insert needed words - sentences - paragraphs) - cut (get rid of whatever goes off topic) - replace (as needed - substitute words - sentences - paragraphs) - move material around (changing sequence of paragraphs)
persuasive / argumentative writing
classification
shaping
major activities of revision
30. Age - gender - ethic backgrounds - political philosophies - religious beliefs - roles (student - parent - voter - wage earner - property owner - veteran) - interests hobbies - level of education - amount of general or specialized knowledge about the
argument
audience characteristics
types of discourse
cause and effect
31. 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
developmen
mapping
scoring rubics
types of presentation strategies
32. The particular group of readers or viewers that the writer is addressing
drafting
subject writing
shaping
audience
33. Online: dictionaries - encyclopedias - writers' reference handbooks - books of lists - almanacs - thesauruses - books of quotations - and so on; various search engines and portals to gather ideas and information
internet
point of view
other sources
guidelines for evaluating evidence
34. Be logical - enlist the emotions of the reader - establish credibility
holistic scoring
guidelines for reasoning effectively in written arguement
workplace writing
appeal to authority
35. Salinger - J. D. (1945) 'The Catcher in the Rye.' New York: Little - Brown and Company.
APA
sarcasm
ways to organize a passage
developmen
36. Subject - purpose - focus - specific language - briefly state subdivisions
comparison
basic requirements for a thesis statement
tone
classification
37. Writing nonstop by starting with a set topic
purposes of writing
focused free writing
techniques for coherence
MLA
38. Leads into the topic of the essay - trying to capture the reader's interest
introductory paragraph
formal outline guidelines
types of source material
workplace writing
39. The writer demonstrates similarities and differences between two or more subjects
comparison
compare and contrast
revising
appeal to authority
40. Who? what? when? where? why? how?
major activities of revision
cause and effect
chronological order
journalistic questions
41. Gathering ideas onto paper in sentences and paragraphs
audience characteristics
drafting
basic requirements for a thesis statement
elements in an argument
42. 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;
revising
formal outline guidelines
illustration
the claim - the support - the warrant
43. The first sentence of the paragraph; it gives the reader an idea of what the paragraph is going to be about
topic sentence
scholarly writing
basic requirements for a thesis statement
source
44. Dictionaries - encyclopedias - writers' reference handbooks - books of lists - almanacs - thesauruses - books of quotations - and so on
general reading public
reference works
revising
extended metaphor
45. Chronological order - classification - illustration - climax - location - comparison - cause and effect
spatial sequence
scholarly writing
evidence
ways to organize a passage
46. Composed of educated - experienced readers - people who read newspapers - magazines - and books
general reading public
subject
summar
appeal to emotion
47. Part of your writing that is established by what you say and how you say it
tone
elements in an argument
assertion
graphic organizer (Also known as concept maps - entity relationship charts - and mind maps)
48. Flm - art - media - and so on
holistic scoring
other sources
stages of the writing process
spatial sequence
49. The 'going public' stage of writing
general reading public
drafting
revising
publishing
50. The exact words of a source set off in quotation marks
guidelines for reasoning effectively in written arguement
quotations
typical elements in informative essay
graphic organizer (Also known as concept maps - entity relationship charts - and mind maps)