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Writing with a Thesis

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Based on the principle that the ability to develop and support a thesis persuasively is of utmost importance for beginning writers, WRITING WITH A THESIS: A RHETORIC AND READER, 11th Edition, dispenses clear and practical writing advice. Sarah Skwire skillfully weaves humor into her advice and in the text's examples of good professional writing--for a uniquely useful text that remains enjoyable to read and to teach from. Best of all, the text's short, easy-to-read essays ensure that your class time will focus not on what the readings mean, but on what they mean for your students' writing.

368 pages, Paperback

First published June 18, 2004

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Sarah E. Skwire

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Rosie Gearhart.
542 reviews22 followers
December 17, 2017
I use this as a resource for my homeschooled kids when they are about 12/13 years old. In order to write a good essay, you have to have read good essays. This is an easy way to accomplish that. We don't use it as a primary writing curriculum, just a supplement, but I wouldn't hesitate to do so if I didn't have something else to use. It is meant to be a college text but is certainly accessible enough for the average high schooler.
Profile Image for Mark.
536 reviews17 followers
January 17, 2015
The authors write that this book is a rather traditional approach to looking at modes of discourse in writing. I see nothing wrong with such an approach. With that in mind, I still can only give the book an average review.

First of all, there is not much substance. The authors spend about two or three pages touching on some very superficial basics for modes of discourse such as narration, argumentation, comparison/contrast and others. If the writers had given more analysis, more suggestions, and more details to this segment of each chapter, I would have rated the book with more stars.

What I did like, however, is that for each mode of discourse the authors provide several short examples. Each of them is no more than a page or two thus making it very easy to look at several examples in a short period of thime. This makes the book useful in a classroom.

In short,the book may be more useful in a high school composition course, or as a supplement in a community college or in a four-year college "English 100" course
Profile Image for Liriope.
105 reviews19 followers
May 18, 2010
Had to read this for an English class. The essays aren't too bad, some of them were very entertaining actually. For reading, it was pretty good.
Profile Image for Anissa.
22 reviews
July 15, 2014
As textbooks go, this one is engaging. The tone Skwire adopts is friendly but knowledgable.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews