Writing for Rights is a basic writing workbook ideal for undergraduate instruction, featuring lessons about writing that are presented in a context of social justice to engage even reluctant writers through a sensibility for equity and community action.
Writing is a necessary skill that allows people to communicate their ideas. For this reason, writing evokes change, and our words persist long after we are gone. We celebrate heroes of the past by the words they leave behind. Writing for Rights is a basic writing workbook ideal for undergraduate instruction. Lessons about writing are presented in a context of social justice to engage even reluctant writers through a sensibility for equity and community action. The workbook is a timely and relevant instructional document perfect for students at minority serving institutions like the nations 100 historically Black colleges and universities.
Chapter
1. Focus on Learning
Chapter
2. Fighting to be Heard
Chapter
3. Your Voice in Communication
Chapter
4. Writing for Your Audience
Chapter
5. Getting Organized
Chapter
6. Taking Note of Information Around You
Chapter
7. Study Methods for Growth
Chapter
8. Critical Thinking in Pursuit of Social Justice
Chapter
9. The Writing We Know Best
Chapter
10. Transitioning to College-Level Writing: Embracing Diversity and
Social Justice
Chapter
11. Elements of Rhetoric: Crafting Language for Social Justice
Chapter
12. Types of Writing
Chapter
13. The Journey of Advocacy Through Writing
Chapter
14. The Crucible of Justice: Writing to Advocate Through Facts,
Emotion, Ethics, and Logic
Chapter
15. The Power of Prewriting
Chapter
16. Harnessing the Power of Outlining
Chapter
17. Empowering Voices Through the Draft
Chapter
18. Benefits of a Break
Chapter
19. Ready to Revise
Chapter
20. Empowering Through Precise Proofreading
Chapter
21. Parts of Speech
Chapter
22. Nouns
Chapter
23. Common and Proper Nouns
Chapter
24. Verbs
Chapter
25. Sentence Basics
Chapter
26. Making Subjects and Verbs Agree
Chapter
27. Punctuating Sentences
Chapter
28. Adjectives and Adverbs
Chapter
29. Pronoun and Antecedent Agreement
Chapter
30. Commonly Confused Words
Chapter
31. Transitions
Chapter
32. Double Negatives
Chapter
33. Sentence Variety
Chapter
34. Quality Content
Chapter
35. Using Numbers
Chapter
36. The Profound Process of Publishing
Chapter
37. A Change in Our Writing
Patrice W. Glenn Jones is the Executive Director of Online Education and Programs at Alabama State University, USA, and a visiting scholar at Rutgers University Graduate School of Education, USA.