| Operating
Definitions and Guidelines for Writing - Methods
of Development 1. What is description? The method of development in which the writer uses facts and senses to support the point. Description exhibits these essential features.
2. Why do writers use description? a. To please 3. How can readers and writers recognize description when they see it? a. Look for a dominant impression. If these items dominate, it is probably description. 4. How does one write description? a. Figure out a purpose for writing. b. Determine who the audience is.
c. Observe the subject firsthand and record all observations answering both factual questions and sensory questions. d. Discern the dominant impression that the observations lead to and state it in the thesis. e. Organize the information using transitions that indicate space and follow a logical progression: go from left to right, top to bottom, interior to exterior, smallest to largest, front to the back. f. Use specific nouns and strong verbs. 5. Thesis pattern: A look at {SUBJECT} shows that it is {DOMINANT IMPRESSION}. 6. How can one practice recognizing description?
An Example and Outline for Description Writing I. Introduction which contains a thesis which states the main impression and lists the major factors that lead to it. It also uses a college level strategy, tells how the subject came up, and names the audience who can benefit from knowing the information. II. Body A. First logical focus B. Second logical focus … III. Conclusion |
| Exemplification (Illustration) | Narration | Description | Process Classification | Definition | Comparison | Cause and effect | MOD Intro Page maintained by Maria Garcia - hyperclass@hotmail.com | English Department | SAC |