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Guide to Electronic Research
Internet Guide
Career Considerations
Summary and Paraphrasing
Avoiding Plagiarism
Study Skills Primer
Diagnostic A
Diagnostic B
Diagnostic C
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Interactive Exercises
Writing On- and Offline
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Sentence Skills, Form A book cover
Sentence Skills, Form A, 7/e
John Langan, Atlantic Cape Community College

A Brief Guide to Effective Writing

Writing On and Offline

These writing prompts are followed by text boxes for your input. If you are working online and your instructor has given you the go-ahead, you can send your work to him or her by clicking the "Submit Answers" button. If you are working offline, you will have to copy your answers (CTRL-C on most systems) and paste them (CTRL-V) into a text document to retain a record of your work.





1

Activity 1:

Directions: Pick an article from one of the following websites:

The New York Times Magazine

The Atlantic Monthly

Time Magazine

People Magazine

After you've chosen your article, don't read it! Instead, prepare to read it by employing the prereading techniques discussed in this chapter. Then read your article. Did prereading help your reading experience? Did it make the article easier to understand? Did some prewriting techniques help more than others?
2

Activity 2:

Directions: Find an article on the internet that is of interest to you. It might be an article about sports, about fashion, or about movies. Just pick something you would enjoy reading. Here are some sites at which you might begin your search:

ESPN.com

Cosmopolitan Magazine

Internet Movie Database

After you've read your article, think about the way it was written. What about the writing appealed to you? What didn't appeal to you? How would you have written it differently?