Allyn & Bacon Guide to Writing, The, 8th edition

Published by Pearson (January 20, 2017) © 2018

  • John D. Ramage Arizona State University
  • John C. Bean Seattle University
  • June Johnson Seattle University

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For courses in Writing.

Grounded in current theory and research, yet practical and teachable

The Allyn & Bacon Guide to Writing helps students learn compositional and rhetorical skills that will serve them well in any discipline or professional field. The text's clear and coherent explanations, engaging classroom activities, and flexible sequence of aims-based writing assignments coach writers to produce effective, idea-rich essays in academic and civic genres. Numerous examples of student and professional writing accompany this thorough guide to the concepts and skills needed for writing, researching and editing in college and beyond.

The 8th Edition offers streamlined coverage of rhetoric for writers and writing projects, along with new student model essays, updated images and new examples.

Hallmark features of this title

  • Develops skills to pose and summarize problems, produce a thesis with a fresh POV and support it with reason and evidence.
  • Classroom-tested reading and writing assignments help students think critically, learn actively, collaborate, and recognize the value of inquiry across disciplines.
  • Numbered concepts and skills organized as flexible mini-lessons, give students and instructors the tools to make the text work for them.
  • Helps students create closed and open form prose, using different forms to impact readers across a wide range of genres and aims.
  • Teaches research as a learning activity requiring rhetorical reading and careful evaluation of sources.
  • Council of Writing Program Administrator goals are fully covered and clearly outlined for instructors.
  • Free download: The Pearson Guide to the 2021 MLA Handbook.

New and updated features of this title

  • NEW: All-new Ch. 1 coverage will help students embrace problem-posing, knowledge-making, and rhetorical reading as skills that will both allow them to learn more fully and succeed across disciplines and professions.
  • REVISED: Improving students' analysis skills is fostered by “Playing the Analysis Game,” introduced as a tool to help students describe artifacts, objects or phenomena in detail, asking why they are the way they are.
  • UPDATED: Coverage is current with today's digital landscape, including the rhetoric of online environments, the persuasive power of non-verbal rhetoric, and a new reading on Internet trolling with student examples and a model essay.
  • NEW: Learning is enhanced by new student model essays, along with new visual and written examples that serve varied purposes and diverse audiences, and present news-worthy topics (from misconceptions about Islam and violence, to banned books, to social media, racism and climate change).
  • UPDATED: Coverage reflects updated MLA guidelines based on the 8th edition of the MLA Handbook.
  • REVISED: Coverage has been expanded to enrich students' understanding of summary writing; the links that tie purpose, audience and genre to closed- and open-form prose; and the importance of reflection as a tool to deepen learning and transfer knowledge.

PART 1: A Rhetoric for Writers

  1. Posing Problems: The Demands of College Writing, Reading, and Critical Thinking
  2. Exploring Problems: Making Claims
  3. Thinking Critically About Rhetorical Problems
  4. How Messages Persuade
  5. Thinking Critically About Document Design, Visual Rhetoric, and Multimodal Messages

PART 2: Writing Projects

  1. Reading Rhetorically: The Writer as Strong Reader
  2. Writing an Autobiographical Narrative
  3. Writing an Exploratory Essay or Annotated Bibliography
  4. Writing an Informative (and Surprising) Essay or Report
  5. Analyzing Images
  6. Writing a Literary Analysis Essay
  7. Writing a Scientific Research Report
  8. Analyzing and Synthesizing Ideas
  9. Writing a Classical Argument
  10. Making an Evaluation
  11. Proposing a Solution

PART 3: A Guide to Composing and Revising

  1. Writing as a Problem-Solving Process
  2. Strategies for Writing Closed-Form Prose
  3. Strategies for Writing Open-Form Prose
  4. Strategies for Composing Multimodal Texts

PART 4: A Rhetorical Guide to Research

  1. Asking Questions, Finding Sources
  2. Evaluating Sources
  3. Incorporating Sources into Your Own Writing
  4. Citing and Documenting Sources

PART 5: Writing for Assessment

  1. Essay Examinations
  2. Using Reflective Writing to Promote and Assess Learning

PART 6: A Guide to Editing

  1. Improving Your Editing Skills
  2. Understanding Sentence Structure
  3. Punctuating Boundaries of Sentences, Clauses, and Phrases
  4. Editing for Standard English Usage
  5. Editing for Style
  6. Editing for Punctuation and Mechanics

About our authors

John Ramage received his BA in philosophy from Whitman College and his Ph.D. in English from Washington State University. He served for over thirty years on the faculties of Montana State University and Arizona State University. In addition to his teaching duties, which included both graduate and undergraduate courses in writing and rhetoric, literary theory and modern literature, Dr. Ramage served as a writing program administrator overseeing writing across the curriculum and composition programs and writing centers. At Arizona State university, he was the founding executive director of the university's Division of Undergraduate Academic Services, responsible for academic support services campus-wide.

In addition to The Allyn & Bacon Guide to Writing, Dr. Ramage was the co-author of the textbooks Form and Surprise in Composition, and Writing Arguments, currently in its 9th edition. He was also the lead author for Argument in Composition, and the sole author of Rhetoric: A User's Guide, and Twentieth Century American Success Rhetoric: How to Construct a Suitable Self. He is currently writing a book about political rhetoric.

John C. Bean is an emeritus professor of English at Seattle University, where he held the title of “Consulting Professor of Writing and Assessment.” He has an undergraduate degree from Stanford (1965) and a Ph.D. from the University of Washington (1972). He is the author of an internationally used book on writing across the curriculum--Engaging Ideas: The Professor's Guide to Writing, Critical Thinking, and Active Learning in the Classroom, 2nd edition (Jossey-Bass, 2011). He is also the co-author of The Allyn and Bacon Guide to Writing as well as two other influential composition textbooks–Writing Arguments and Reading Rhetorically. He has published numerous articles on writing and writing-across-the-curriculum as well as on literary subjects including Shakespeare and Spenser. His current research interests focus on pedagogical strategies for teaching undergraduate research including quantitative literacy, disciplinary methods of inquiry and argument, and the problem of “transfer of learning” as students move through and across a curriculum. A concomitant research interest is the development of institutional assessment strategies that promote productive faculty conversations about teaching and learning. In 2001, he presented a keynote address at the first annual conference of the European Association of Teachers of Academic Writing at the University of Groningen. He has delivered lectures and conducted workshops on writing-across-the-curriculum throughout the United States and Canada as well as for universities in Germany, Bangladesh, Ghana, and Zambia. In 2010 his article “Messy Problems and Lay Audiences:  Teaching Critical Thinking within the Finance Curriculum” (co-authored with colleagues from finance and economics) won the 2009 McGraw-Hill — Magna Publications Award for the year's best “scholarly work on teaching and learning.”

June Johnson is an associate professor of English, Director of Writing Studies, and Writing Consultant to the University Core at Seattle University. She has a B.A. in English and an M.A. in Education from Stanford and an M.A. in English from Mills College. After chairing the English department of a preparatory school in Los Angeles and working as a development editor in educational publishing, she earned her Ph.D. from the University of Washington. At Seattle University, she supervises the teaching of first-year academic writing seminars as well as teaches these courses and advanced argument and composition theory in the Writing Studies minor. Her research areas include global studies, reflective writing, first-year composition, writing transfer, argumentation, and Rogerian communication–subjects on which she conducts workshops at Seattle University and at institutions around the country. She has published articles in American Studies on women's writing about the West in the nineteenth century. She is the co-author (with John Bean) of The Allyn and Bacon Guide to Writing, a text known for its foundation in writing-across-the-curriculum pedagogy and its useful introduction to academic writing and co-author (also with John Bean) of Writing Arguments, and she authored Global Issues, Local Arguments, 3rd edition (Pearson, 2014), an argument reader and rhetoric with a civic literacy focus that provides a cross-curricular introduction to global problems.

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