English Lesson Plans

I am a recovering teacher. I taught all secondary grades for several years, had three children, and was recruited to be a "senior editor" at a university. As part of my "therapy" as a recovering teacher, I am writing again. Here some...most, possibly all of the things that I used in the classroom will be posted. I hope that other teachers can use them well.

Friday, March 28, 2008

The 10 Commandments of Writing

1. To join two independent clauses, use a comma followed by a conjunction, a semicolon alone, or a semicolon followed by a sentence modifier.

2. Use commas to bracket nonrestrictive phrases, which are not essential to the sentence's meaning.

3. Do not use commas to bracket phrases that are essential to a sentence's meaning.

4. When beginning a sentence with an introductory phrase or an introductory (dependent) clause, include a comma.

5. To indicate possession, end a singular noun with an apostrophe followed by an "s". Otherwise, the noun's form seems plural.

6. Use proper punctuation to integrate a quotation into a sentence. If the introductory material is an independent clause, add the quotation after a colon. If the introductory material ends in "thinks," "saying," or some other verb indicating expression, use a comma.

7. Make the subject and verb agree with each other, not with a word that comes between them.

8. Be sure that a pronoun, a participial phrase, or an appositive refers clearly to the proper subject.

9. Use parallel construction to make a strong point and create a smooth flow.

10. Use the active voice unless you specifically need to use the passive.

11. Omit unnecessary words. http://www.junketstudies.com/rulesofw/
Posted by Unknown at 7:01 AM
Labels: grammar, writing

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