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Introduction
1. 8 Strategies for Critically Engaging Secondary Sources
2. Active Reading and Annotation
3. Anatomy of a Scene
4. Argumentation
5. Developing Strong Claims
6. Developing Strong Thesis Statements
7. Developing and Structuring Argument
8. Effective Paragraphing
9. Gordon Harvey’s “Elements of the Academic Essay”
10. Elements of an Annotated Bibliography
11. Functions of Sources: ExACT Source Use
12. Identifying Intellectual or Interpretive Problems
13. Introductions and Conclusions
14. Lens Analysis
15. Logical Fallacies
16. Revision: Re-Seeing Your Writing
17. Rhetorical Situation and Appeals
18. Section Titles and Signposts
19. Socratic Questioning Method
20. Strong Research Questions
21. Summarizing a Film Exhibit
22. Understanding Analysis
23. Visual Rhetoric and Communications
24. Working with Sources
25. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: “The danger of a single story”
26. Copyright, Fair Use, and Creative Commons Basics
27. CUNY Academic Integrity Policy
28. MLA Citation Resources
29. Library Guide for English 110
30. “How to Read Like a Writer” by Mike Bunn
31. “Motivating Your Argument” by Joseph M. Williams and Gregory G. Colomb
32. Writing Analytically by David Rossenwasser and Jill Stephen
33. How to Email Your Professor
34. Note-Taking Strategies
35. Professor Office Hours
36. Reading in College
37. Time Management Strategies for College Students
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College Writing I Copyright © by Rachael Benavidez is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.