Synopses & Reviews
A Writer's Reference, the most widely adopted handbook in the United States, continues to be groundbreaking in its simplicity, offering the right content in an accessible format. New coauthor Nancy Sommers's own research, campus travel, and classroom experience keep the handbook in tune with the needs of academic writers. In a trusted quick-reference format, the seventh edition delivers advice on all the right topics: working with sources, revising with comments, preparing a portfolio, and more. A Writer's Reference offers unprecedented flexibility with several versions to choose from — a handbook that's truly at your service. Read the preface.
Synopsis
A Writer's Reference with Writing about Literature includes an entire tabbed section on interpreting and writing about works of literature, with two annotated student essays.
Synopsis
A Writer's Reference with Exercises includes 98 exercise sets integrated throughout so that the practice for each topic follows the explanations and examples. A helpful mix of exercise formats includes both sentence-length items and paragraph-length items.
Synopsis
To help your students write in composition and in other college courses, A Writer's Reference with Writing in the Disciplines includes a tabbed section with advice and model papers in nine academic disciplines: biology, business, criminology, education, engineering, history, music, nursing, and psychology.
Synopsis
Focused on the needs of online students, A Writer's Reference with Strategies for Online Learners offers advice on how to be an active participant in the course, how to navigate the learning space, how to communicate appropriately with peers and instructors, and how to seek help and use resources.
About the Author
DIANA HACKER personally class-tested her handbooks with nearly four thousand students over 35 years at Prince George's Community College in Maryland, where she was a member of the English faculty. Hacker handbooks, built on innovation and on a keen understanding of the challenges facing student writers, are the most widely adopted in America. Other Hacker handbooks, all published by Bedford/St. Martin's, include
The Bedford Handbook, Eighth Edition (2010);
Rules for Writers, Sixth Edition (2008); and A
Pocket Style Manual, Fifth Edition (2008).
NANCY SOMMERS, who has taught composition and directed composition programs for thirty years, now teaches writing in the Graduate School of Education at Harvard University. A two-time Braddock Award winner, Sommers is well-known for her research and publications on student writing. Her recent work involves a longitudinal study of undergraduate writing. Nancy Sommers is co-author of
Fields of Reading, Ninth Edition (2010), and is lead author on Hacker handbooks, all published by Bedford/St. Martin's.
Table of Contents
C Composing and revising C1 Planning
C2 Drafting
C3 Revising
*new section on portfolio keeping
C4 Writing paragraphs
C5 Designing documents
C6 Writing with technology (*new chapter)
A Academic writing
A1 Writing about texts
*new annotated advertisement
A2 Constructing reasonable arguments
*new argument paper
A3 Evaluating arguments
A4 Writing in the disciplines
S Sentence style
S1 Parallelism
S2 Needed words
S3 Problems with modifiers
S4 Shifts
S5 Mixed constructions
S6 Sentence emphasis
S7 Sentence variety
W Word choice
W1 Glossary of usage
W2 Wordy sentences
W3 Active verbs
W4 Appropriate language
W5 Exact language
W6 The dictionary and thesaurus
G Grammatical sentences
G1 Subject-verb agreement
G2 Verb forms, tenses, and moods
G3 Pronouns
G4 Adjectives and adverbs
G5 Sentence fragments
G6 Run-on sentences
M Multilingual writers and ESL challenges
M1 Verbs
M2 Articles
M3 Sentence structure
M4 Using adjectives
M5 Prepositions and idiomatic expressions
P Punctuation and mechanics
P1 The comma
P2 Unnecessary commas
P3 The semicolon and the colon
P4 The apostrophe
P5 Quotation marks
P6 Other punctuation marks
P7 Spelling and hyphenation
P8 Capitalization
P9 Abbreviations and numbers
P10 Italics B Basic grammar
B1 Parts of speech
B2 Parts of sentences
B3 Subordinate word groups
B4 Sentence types R Researching
R1 Conducting research
R2 Evaluating sources
*new feature on scholarly vs. popular sources
*new feature on evaluating Web sites
R3 Managing information; avoiding plagiarism
*new sample annotated bibliography
*new box on avoiding plagiarism
R4 Choosing a documentation style
MLA papers
MLA-1 Supporting a thesis
MLA-2 Citing sources; avoiding plagiarism
MLA-3 Integrating sources
*new coverage of synthesis
MLA-4 Documenting sources
*new annotated documentation models
MLA-5 Manuscript format; sample paper
*new research case study
SAMPLE PAPER
APA and CMS papers
APA-1 Supporting a thesis
APA-2 Citing sources; avoiding plagiarism
APA-3 Integrating sources
*new coverage of synthesis
APA-4 Documenting sources
*new annotated documentation models
APA-5 Manuscript format; sample paper
SAMPLE PAPER CMS-1 Supporting a thesis
CMS-2 Citing sources; avoiding plagiarism
CMS-3 Integrating sources
CMS-4 Documenting sources
*new Citations at a glance
CMS-5 Manuscript format; sample pages
SAMPLE PAGES *new to this edition