Submit a final draft of Project One to “P1 Analysis of Writing Concepts Final Draft” in USF Writes (Links to an external site.) by the deadline. This draft should represent thoughtful consideration of the feedback you’ve received and should demonstrate significant development beyond the rough draft.
Considerations for Analysis
In your analysis, go beyond summarizing to analyze and make connections between the writing concepts and your knowledge as a writer. Use the sources or readings from our class to support your ideas with evidence – examples that illustrate your points about these key writing concepts and why it’s important for a writer to understand them.
First, you should define the concepts in your own way – what do they mean to you? Then explain the connections between concepts. How do they work together in a piece of writing, and what concepts are most often connected or which depend on the situation for writing? You might explore a concept in one of the sources/readings – like how genre connects to another concept in the commencement addresses we reviewed. Or discuss how a concept in one of the sources is different or similar to the way it is in another source. You might compare how audience is different across examples, or how the purpose of pieces of writing might be similar even if the contexts are different. You decide what connections to discuss. Make sure you thoroughly analyze the evidence you choose to support your points – make sure you use details or direct quotes from the texts to illustrate your points.
Some ideas for writing about the concepts:
You might structure your essay around ideas about the writing concepts you find most important. Discuss all the concepts but focus more on some than others, depending on what you think is more important for a writer to know.