Instructors at hundreds of colleges and universities have turned to How to Write Anything for support that empowers every student with advice they need, when they need it. And students love it--holding onto the book for other classes --because the authors' tone makes writing in any genre approachable, with a flexible, rhetorical framework for the most commonly taught academic and public genres. The fourth edition offers students a new Part 1: Strategies for College Writing, even more support for understanding genres and purpose, and an expanded and thoroughly revised take on grammar, mechanics, and usage--all essential to academic success. The result is everything you need to teach composition in a flexible and highly visual guide, reference, handbook, and reader. Also available: LaunchPad, an online course space with pre-built units featuring the full e-book, book-specific reading comprehension quizzes, adaptive LearningCurve activities to help students hone their understanding of reading and writing, and additional support in A Student's Companion to How to Write Anything.
Walker Evans, “Burroughs Family Cabin, Hale County, Alabama” (1936) Gordon Parks, “American Gothic” (1942) assignments examining models 247 Walker Evans, Burroughs Family Cabin, Hale County, Alabama.
And students love itbecause John Ruszkiewiczs tone makes writing in any genre approachable, with a flexible, rhetorical framework for a range of common academic and real-world genres, and a reference with extra support for writing, research ...
Instructors at hundreds of colleges and universities have turned to How to Write Anything for clear, focused writing advice that gives students just what they need, when they need it.
The new edition is accompanied and enhanced by LaunchPad for How to Write Anything, an online course space of pre-built units featuring the full e-text, multimodal readings, and adaptive LearningCurve activities to help students hone their ...
The Guide, in Parts 1 and 2, lays out focused advice for writing common genres, while the Reference, in Parts 3 through 9, covers the range of writing and research skills that students need as they work across genres and disciplines.
The Guide, in Parts 1 and 2, lays out focused advice for writing common genres, while the Reference, in Parts 3 through 9, covers the range of writing and research skills that students need as they work across genres and disciplines.
"A guide and reference for any writing situation. How to Write Anything : A Guide and Reference is a clear, smart, and fun textbook.
And students love it—holding onto the book for other classes —because the authors’ tone makes writing in any genre approachable, with a flexible, rhetorical framework for the most commonly taught academic and public genres.
This series is the most comprehensive and accessible guide on using mental models to better understand our world, solve problems, and gain an advantage.
Offering practical support for students in corequisite composition courses (including ALP, support, labs, workshops, etc.), the Student’s Companion provides tips for student success, including advice about time management, academic ...