REVIEWER FOR ENGLISH q2-1
REVIEWER FOR ENGLISH q2-1
REVIEWER FOR ENGLISH q2-1
Terminologies on research
ADVOCACY
CAMPAIGN
- Organize actions which are done for a purpose
- Often the main way that you interact with the public and get your organizations
message out to people
- Used to mobilize and involve people in your work, pressurize decision makers,
educate the public and change behavior
LOBBYING
- communicating with any official in the legislative or executive branch for the purpose
of attempting to influence legislative or administrative action or a ballot issue
EXPOSITION
- Forms of writing or discourse that explains describes, provides information
- The author of of an expository text cannot presume that the reader or listener has
any prior knowledge or understanding of the subject under discussion
Purpose
- To present one side of an argument and persuade the reader or listener to agree or
take action to solve the problem
Structure of an Exposition
Exposition text generally begins with an introductory statement of position giving
the author's opinion or point of view. This previews the argument that will follow. The next
section has a series of logical arguments that convince the audience why this position has
been taken. A conclusion ties it all together by reinforcing or summarizing the author's point
of view.
Language features of an exposition
features examples
Conjunctions (or joining words) join one so, and so, because, therefore, if, and, but
part of a sentence to another. They link the
flow of the argument
Modal verbs express the writer's attitude to can, could, should, must, might
the topic
Evaluative language suggests the degree important, best, most, truth, largest, more
of approval or helps compare ideas popular
Connective words link ideas in an firstly, for that reason, for example, as a
argument consequence, because of this, in particular,
therefore, finally