Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Causal Techniques
Commas
Causal Techniques
First
What is a cause?
Probes the reasons why actions, events,
attitudes, and conditions exist
What is an effect?
Examines consequences of causes
Purpose
2 purpose possibilities for a causal essay
Explain historical events, natural
happenings, actions and attitudes of
individuals and groups
Help readers anticipate the
consequences of personal actions,
natural phenomena, or government
policies
Patterns
Single cause with several effects
Several causes with a single effect
Causal chain
Multiple Causes and multiple effects
Patterns
Patterns
Patterns
Causal Chain
II. Body
A. sleep late
B. miss breakfast
C. become hungry and distracted
D. perform poorly on exam
https://youtu.be/Gyk55GYnGl0
Patterns
Topic: accident
II. Body
A. causes of the accident
1. driver ran stop sign
2. Bushes and unlit headlights impaired
vision
3. Wet pavement caused skidding
B. Effects of the accident
1. missed the movie
2. Unnerved so missed classes next day
3. Other driver lost license
Reasoning Errors
Ignoring multiple causes
An effect rarely stems from a single
cause
Mistaking chronology for causation
Dont assume that just because one
event followed another that the first
necessarily caused the other
(chronology)
Confusing causes and effects
Pam and Paul married because they fell
in love; in reality it was an economic
necessity, and love came later.
Ethics
Forcing a particular outcome by uncovering only
certain causes
Report blaming poor instruction for high
student failure rate neglects oversized classes,
socioeconomics
Carefully weighed importance of chosen causes
If a few, but not most, of the classes in the
problem school system are oversized, then
report shouldnt stress their significance
Discuss every important effect (even one that
damages point)
Report emphasizing the beneficial effects of
jogging must discuss potential for energy
Consequences of people acting upon essay
Call to action
Commas
Commas
Separate items in lists of 3+
Please buy eggs milk bread and cereal at the
store.
Please buy eggs, milk, bread, and cereal at the
store.
1.
Commas
2. Before a coordinating conjunction
My sisters name is Lily and my brothers name is
Lucus.
My sisters name is Lily, and my brothers name is
Lucus.
I rushed home and I finished my homework
before soccer practice.
I rushed home, and I finished my homework
before soccer practice.
I am very good in Spanish, and in French.
I am very good in Spanish and in French.
Commas
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
After conjunctive adverbs
After introductory phrases & clauses
Before and/or after an interjection
Before and/or after Latin abbreviations (e.g.)
Before and after parenthetical expressions
When adjectives come after a noun
With titles when they come after persons name
Before and after appositives
Around a direct address
Commas
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
I didnt study very much; nevertheless I made a good
grade.
I didnt study very much; nevertheless, I made a good
grade.
Since my mother forgot to pack me a dessert I ate
your cookie.
Since my mother forgot to pack me a dessert, I ate
your cookie.
Commas
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
Laney ran fast and got home before her mother.
Laney ran, fast, and got home before her mother.
My English teacher kind of heart and generous of
spirit will surely give me an A if I learn all these
comma rules.
My English teacher, kind of heart and generous of
spirit, will surely give me an A if I learn all these
comma rules.
Commas
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
Ive told you twice boys and girls to do your
homework.
Ive told you twice, boys and girls, to do your
homework.
Wow what a beautiful dress.
Wow, what a beautiful dress.
Commas
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
I love sports e.g. baseball basketball and football.
I love sports, e.g. baseball, basketball, and football.
They usually cost if you get a good deal about $200.
They usually cost, if you get a good deal, about
$200.
Commas
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
Arith Metic Ph.D. is my math teacher.
Arith Metic, Ph.D., is my math teacher.
Katie Stevens the best ballerina in the performance
shone as the star of the evening.
Katie Stevens, the best ballerina in the performance,
shone as the star of the evening.
Commas
4. Between consecutive adjectives
It was a dark cold dreary night.
*the and test
It was a dark and cold and dreary and night.
It was a dark and cold and dreary night.
It was a dark, cold, dreary night.
Commas
5. Omissions
I ordered chicken; Amanda fish.
I ordered chicken; Amanda ordered fish.
I ordered chicken; Amanda, fish.
Commas
6. Conventions
Between cities and states
In numbers over 999 (not in addresses)
Direct quotations (he/she said)
Dates
After greetings and before closings in friendly
letters
Commas
When do you use a comma?
6 basic rules
1. Separate items in lists of 3+
2. Before a coordinating conjunction
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
4. Between consecutive adjectives
5. Omissions
6. Conventions
Commas
Directions: Write one sentence for each comma
rule.
6 basic rules
1. Separate items in lists of 3+
2. Before a coordinating conjunction
3. Around information that is not essential to the
meaning of the sentence (this covers 9 rules)
4. Between consecutive adjectives
5. Omissions
6. Conventions
Purpose
Jeremy, Bobby, Brandon, Jason, Lauren
Patterns
Austin K., Candace, Jennica, Austin D., Jacqueline
Reasoning Errors
Houda, Brendon, Charles, Vernon, Marcus
Ethics
Brianna, Izaak, Nicole S., Nicole B., Jake
Thesis & Details
Jess, Levi, Abi, Scott, Kylie