30.00$ - Pay Now
Category : Higher Education
The benefits of having the Test bank Files :
- save valuable Time while studying.
- improve your knowledge and grades.
- Avoid stress and frustration
- Get answers for your textbook end chapters.
1. Discovering Ourselves in Writing and Reading A Process View of Writing and Reading The Writing Process and Self-Discovery Stages of the Writing Process Strategies for Prewriting Your Computer: Developing an Important Writing Partnership The Reading Process Personal and Interpretive Response Critical and Evaluative Response “Reading” Electronic Media Thematic Introduction Readings: Denise Levertov, “The Secret” (poem) Stephen King, “The Symbolic Language of Dreams” (essay) Ursula K. Le Guin, “A Matter of Trust” (essay) Virginia Woolf, “Professions for Women” (essay) Amy Tan, “Mother Tongue” (essay) Frederick Douglass, “Learning to Read and Write” (essay) Steven Holtzman, “Don’t Look Back” (essay) John G. Ramsay, “Hell’s Bibliophiles: The Fifth Way of Looking at an Aliterate” (essay) Student Writing: Joyce Chang, “Drive Becarefully” Molly Thomas, “Response to ‘Don’t Look Back’” Topics for Research and Writing 2. Places in Nature Observing Nature and Writing Descriptions Observing Words and Images Revising Initial Descriptions Establishing Vantage Point and Tone Thinking About Your Purpose and Audience Thematic Introduction Readings: Naomi S. Nye, “Fireflies” (poem) Diane Ackerman, “Deep Play” (essay) Mary Mackey, “The Distant Cataract About Which We Do Not Speak” (essay) Donovan Webster, “Inside the Volcano” (essay) Jon Krakauer, “The Khumbu Icefall” (essay) Terry Tempest Williams, “Ground Truthing” (essay) Theodore Roszak, “The Nature of Sanity: Mental Health and the Outdoors” (essay) Student Writing: David Kerr, “Strawberry Creek: A Search for Origins” Sheila Walsh, “Visualizing Our Environment: Communication of Environmental Issues Through Visual Arts” Topics for Research and Writing 3. Journeys in Memory Narration, Memory, and Self-Awareness Making Associations Focusing and Concentration: The Inner Screen Dialogue and Characters Main Idea or Dominant Impression Drafting and Shaping the Narrative Revising the Narrative: Point of View and Style Thematic Introduction Readings: Mark Strand, “Where Are the Waters of Childhood?” (poem) Patricia Hampl, “Memory and Imagination” (essay) Saira Shah, “The Storyteller’s Daughter” (essay) Maya Angelou, “The Angel of the Candy Counter” (essay) Judith Ortiz Cofer, “Silent Dancing” (essay) Rachel Naomi Remen, “Remembering” (essay) Stephen Jay Gould, “Muller Bros. Moving & Storage” (essay) Susan L. Engel, “The Past: Audiences and Perspectives” (essay) Student Writing: Melissa Burns, “The Best Seat in the House” (essay) Topics for Research and Writing 4. Dreams, Myths, and Fairy Tales Comparing and Contrasting: Strategies for Thinking and Writing Prewriting for Comparison Outlining and Transition Evaluation Logical Fallacies of Comparison and Contrast Thematic Introduction Readings: Nikki Giovanni, “ego-tripping (there may be a reason why)” (poem) Linda Seger, “Universal Stories”(essay) Gabriel García Márquez, “The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World: A Tale for Children” (fiction) Marcelo Gleiser, “The Myths of Science–Creation” (essay) Portfolio of Creation Myths: Genesis 2:4—23 (Old Testament of the Hebrew Bible) “How the Sun Was Made: Dawn, Noontide and Night” (Australian Aboriginal) “The Pelasgian Creation Myth” (Ancient Greek) “The Chameleon Finds” (Yao-Bantu, African) “Spider Woman Creates the Humans” (Hopi, Native American) “The Beginning of the World” (Japanese) Bruno Bettelheim, “Fairy Tales and the Existential Predicament” (essay) Jane Yolen, “American Cinderella” (essay) Four Versions of Cinderella: The Brothers Grimm, “Aschenputtel” Charles Perrault, “Cendrillon” (adapted by Andrew Lang) “The Algonquin Cinderella” “Tam and Cam” (Vietnam) Student Writing: Joshua Groban, “Two Myths” (essay) Topics for Research and Writing 5. Obsessions and Transformation Definition: Word Boundaries of the Self Public Meanings and Formal Definition Stipulative and Personal Definitions Contradiction Thematic Introduction Readings: W. S. Merwin, “Fog-Horn” (poem) Maressa Hecht Orzack, “Computer Addiction: What Is It?” (essay) Andrew Solomon, “Depression” (essay) Charlotte Perkins Gilman, “The Yellow Wallpaper” (fiction) Diane Ackerman, “A Slender Thread” (essay) Anne Lamott, “Hunger” (essay) Carrie Demers, “Chaos or Calm: Rewiring the Stress Response” (essay) Marc Ian Barasch, “What Is a Healing Dream?” (essay) Student Writing: Sharon Slayton, “The Good Girl” (essay) Topics for Research and Writing 6. Journeys in Sexuality and Gender Causality and the Inward Journey Observing and Collecting Information Causal Logical Fallacies Thematic Introduction Readings: Pablo Neruda, “The Dream” (poem) Sigmund Freud, “Erotic Wishes and Dreams” (essay) Maxine Hong Kingston, “No Name Woman” (essay) Mary Pipher, “Saplings in the Storm” (essay) Tajamika Paxton, “Loving a One-armed Man” (essay) Rachel Lehmann-Haupt, “Multi-Tasking Man” (essay) Kevin Canty, “The Dog in Me” (essay) David Sedaris, “I Like Guys” (essay) Student Writing: Rosa Contreras, “On Not Being a Girl” (essay) Julie Bordner Apodaca, “Gay Marriage: Why the Resistance?” (essay) Topics for Research and Writing 7. The Double/The Other Argument and Dialogue Traditional Argument Dialogic Argument Dialogue and Prewriting Prewriting and the Audience Defining Key Terms Evaluating Facts Feelings in Argument Thematic Introduction Readings: Judith Ortiz Cofer, “The Other” (poem) Danny Fingeroth, “The Dual Identity: Of Pimpernels and Immigrants from the Stars” (essay) Robert Johnson, “Owning Your Own Shadow” Robert Louis Stevenson, “Henry Jekyll’s Full Statement of the Case” from The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (fiction) Kate Sullivan, “J. Lo vs. K. Sul” (essay) Fran Peavey (with Myrna Levy and Charles Varon), “Us and Them” (essay) Desmond Mpilo Tutu, “No Future Without Forgiveness” (essay) Student Writing: Susan Voyticky, “Mixed-Up” (essay) Jill Ho, “Affirmative Action: Perspectives from a Model Minority” (essay) Topics for Research and Writing 8. Pop Dreams Research Writing Finding a Topic Timetable and Process Your Voice and the Voices of Your Sources Purpose and Structure Language and Style The Computer as a Research Partner Thematic Introduction Readings: Louise Erdrich, “Dear John Wayne” (poem) Anthony Pratkanis and Elliot Aronson, “Pictures in Our Heads” (essay) Alissa Quart, “Branded” (essay) Carlin Flora, “Seeing by Starlight” (essay) Sissela Bok, “Aggression: The Impact of Media Violence” (essay) Jonathan L. Freedman, “Evaluating the Research on Violent Video Games” (essay) Mark Cochrane, “Moral Abdication?” (essay) Student Writing: Anne Ritchie, “Creativity, Drugs, and Rock ’n’ Roll” Topics for Research and Writing 9. Voyages in Spirituality Creativity, Problem Solving, and Synthesis Habit Versus Risk Reason Versus Intuition Developing Self-Confidence: Learning to Trust Your Own Processes Evaluation and Application Synthesis Thematic Introduction Readings: Emily Dickinson, “#501, This World Is Not Conclusion” (poem) Annie Dillard, “A Field of Silence” (essay) Jane Goodall, “In the Forests of Gombe” (essay) Martin Luther King Jr., “I Have a Dream” (essay) Jim Wallis, “Taking Back the Faith” (essay) Noah Levine, “Death Is Not the End My Friend” (essay) Linda Hogan, “The Voyagers” (essay) Student Writing: Norman Yeung Bik Chung, “A Faithful Taoist” Karen Methot-Chun, “Living Spirituality” Topics for Research and Writing Table of Contents
***THIS IS NOT THE ACTUAL BOOK. YOU ARE BUYING the Test Bank in e-version of the following book***
- Digital File Direct & Fast Download ( Bank Exam ZIP & PDF) only for 30.00$
- All chapters are included in the test Bank Exam
- Free samples included once needed (ZIP & PDF)
- Multiple payment options (Paypal , Credit Card) - NO account Required
- Dedicatedsupport / instant chat – Email - Whatsapp
0 commentaires:
Enregistrer un commentaire