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Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

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Page 1: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

in-Effective Grammarfor workplace writing

Engl 2311

Page 2: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

What are themost common mistakes you make?

Some detailed explanation for how to spot and fix some of the most common grammar errors that y’all make.

This slideshow will help you if:You make a lot of grammar or clarity mistakes and therefore need to edit more effectively to get the results you want.

Page 3: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

let’s talk GRAMMAR

Here are common grammar mistakes:

Unclear undefined pronouns

Shifting verb tenses

Subject / verb disagreement in number or kind

Incorrect spelling in context

Incorrect possessives and contractions

Run-ons, splices, and other comma punctuation problems

Page 4: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

UNCELAR pronouns

Using simple sentences and avoiding pronouns makes clarity VERY EASY

His father is a HR director, and he helped him write his.

My friend’s father is a HR director.My friend’s father helped my friend write the resume.

Remember the goal is overall clarity and efficiency. More sentences are therefore just

fine if they help readers skim faster.

Page 5: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

SHIFTING verb tenses

Ex: This memo will summarize the project. This memo also describes some project problems.

The “narrator” can have ONLY ONE position in time.

You can (and must) use different tenses to describe different things that are happening at DIFFERENT

times, but you cannot randomly time travel.

Page 6: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

SHIFTING verb tenses

Also be CAREFUL with should & would statements: These are “conditional” verb tenses Actions dependent upon them must also be clearly conditional If a thing is DEPENDENT on something else that MIGHT

happen, then that thing has to use a CONDITIONAL MODIFIER Conditional modifiers are “should, would, could, might”, etc

Ex: We should practice, because then we will be great.

We should practice, because then we WOULD be great.

Page 7: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

SUBJECT / VERB disagreement

Ex: The instructions is confusing. (plural = are, singular = is)

The instructions are confusing.

Ex: One of these geese fly at night. (“It fly at night”?)

One of these geese flies at night.

The number of subjects must match the form of the verb.

Page 8: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

a FIX TIP for disagreement

You can catch most all of these mistakes if you take time to READ YOUR MEMO OUT LOUD TO YOURSELF.

Even better, test by replacing the subject with a pronoun (it or they) and read the sentence out loud.

Ex: The group of teachers are wearing sandals.

The group -------------- are wearing sandals.

IT [a group] -------------- are wearing sandals. [?]

IT [the group of teachers] IS wearing sandals.

Page 9: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

SPELLING in context

Do not be over-reliant on an automatic spell check as your soul editing tool. Computers are to unreliable when it comes two checking for spelling in context. Many words have too or more meanings.

“Their our know miss steaks inn this sent ants!”

READ WHAT YOU HAVE WRITTENbefore hitting “print” !

Page 10: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

POSESSIVES and CONTRACTIONS

its = it belongs to someone or somethingit’s = contraction for “it is”

singular possessive = the student’s bookplural possessive = the students’ book

Ex: The company does not feel that the problem is it’s responsibility.

The company does not feel that the problem is it is responsibility? The company does not feel that the problem is its responsibility.

If contractions confuse you, then SIMPLY DO NOT USE THEM

it is then harder to make mistakes AND easier to edit

Page 11: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

POSESSIVES

Just know FOUR rules:

If it is a plural noun that does not end in “S”, then use “ ’s ”

EX: The people’s government was overthrown.

If it is a plural noun that does end in “S”, then use “ ’ ”

EX: The employees’ stock options went down.

If it is a singular noun that does not end in “S”, then use “ ’s ”

EX: London’s weather is bad.

If it is a singular noun that does end in “S”, then use “ ’s ”

EX: Charles’s computer was stolen.

Page 12: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

RUN-ON sentences and SPLICES

Ex: Poetry is not dead it is alive and well and it is good.(independent clauses jammed together = run-on sentence)

Poetry is not dead. It is alive and well. It is good.

Ex: My friend is a genius, he is really good at math. (two independent clauses with only a comma in the middle = splice)

My friend is a genius. He is really good at math. My friend is a genius, and he is really good at math.

Sticking to a “one thought, one sentence” rule of thumb will prevent most of your comma errors.

Following the three rules in the “comma basics” slideshow will also prevent most of your comma errors.

Page 13: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

Recap – EDIT for these things !

Your most common GRAMMAR mistakes: Shifting verb tenses for no reason Subject / verb disagreement in number or kind Incorrect spelling in context Incorrect possessives and contractions Run-on sentences, comma splices, comma probs

for DETAILED info, examples, tips, advice:Use the textbook!

It is assigned for a reason!

Page 14: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

Work on FOUR thingswhen you edit for style:

1. Eliminate wordiness (use the fewest words necessary)

2. Eliminate unclear grammar and undefined pronouns

3. Put important info first in a sentence

4. SIMPLIFY sentences (cut complex compound statements up into simple sentences)

Page 15: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

#1: eliminate WORDINESS

Ex: The purpose of this memo is to describe how I went about making edits to the resume part of the assignment which is due five days from today.

This memo describes how I edited my resume.

Unnecessary “filler” words:the purpose is to / how I went about making

Information your audience already knows:part of the assignment / which is due five days from today

Page 16: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

WORDINESS cont’d

Ex: I think that, for the most part, Jack in a sense felt pretty much betrayed by the President.Jack felt betrayed by the President.

“Filler” words that communicate nothing:I think that / for the most part / pretty much / in a sense

Use the FEWEST WORDS NECESSARY by cutting out filler words, unnecessary words, and things the audience

already knows.Use straightforward declarative statements.

Page 17: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

#2: eliminate UNCLEAR GRAMMAR

Make it EASY to understand what you’re saying

Ex: I decided to type the entire thing instead of a bit at a time.

I decided to type the entire thing all at one time instead of working a bit at a time.

CLEARLY define pronouns (her, them, his . . .)

Ex: I used a friend’s resume. His father is a HR director, and he helped him write his.

I used a friend’s resume. My friend’s father, who is a HR director, helped to write my friend’s resume.

Page 18: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

#3: put IMPORTANT INFO FIRST

Think about what the reader MOST wants to know

Put this IMPORTANT info FIRST in the sentence

EX: My advisor helped me to make a resume last semester, so I’m going to use my current resume.

I’m going to use my current resume, because my advisor helped me make the resume last semester.

Page 19: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

IMPORTANT INFO FIRST cont’d

Putting important info first simplifies grammar by eliminating “introductory clauses”

Because technical writing should be clear, you should state the main thought of a sentence first.

You should state the main thought of a sentence first, because technical writing should be clear.

Putting the MAIN thought first helps readers to skim really quickly. Burying the main thought at the end is really

annoying.

Page 20: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

#4: SIMPLIFY SENTENCES

Ex: I found lots of different examples and I wasn’t sure what format to follow, therefore I just brainstormed details and put everything into a list that I will format later.

I found lots of different examples.I was not sure which format to follow.I therefore just brainstormed details.I then put everything into a list. I will format this list later.

The goal is OVERALL efficiencyDon’t make your audience deal with a complex sentence jammed full of FIVE complete thoughts. Readers can skim FIVE SIMPLE SENTENCES more quickly, clearly, and easily (about 20% more quickly, in fact).

Page 21: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

Recap – edit FOUR things for style:

1. Eliminate WORDINESS

2. Use CLEAR GRAMMAR

3. Put IMPORTANT INFO first

4. Use SHORT AND SIMPLE statements

Stick to SUBJECT / ACTION / OBJECTExample: The students are editing their memos.

Page 22: Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke in-Effective Grammar for workplace writing Engl 2311

Copyright 2012 by Arthur Fricke

editingTIPS and TRICKS

USE ME (I’ll help you edit if you bring me a copy)

Use the Writing Center (1st floor of this building) ATTACH the edited draft to your final submission!

Read what you’ve written OUT LOUD

Use the Microsoft Word grammar check It WILL NOT fix grammar automatically It can help you to focus your editing work It can help to identify potential problem sentences