January 30, 2003.


What about Your Name?

The next writing assignment is a formal paragraph about your own name. In Kaleidoscope, you read about naming customs. A couple of you have already told me what your name means. (Ask Sanja.) The first step in preparing for this composition is to collect some ideas. After that, you will write the rough draft.


Why Did Daddy
Give Me a Boy's Name?

I wrote the following essay about my name a few semesters ago while my students were writing in their journals. Notice that it is in paragraph form and that I write about one thing only — how I got the name "Freddie."

Why Did Daddy Give Her a Boy's Name?

My name is Freddie. It's an ordinary enough name for a male, but I'm not a boy, so why did Daddy give me a boy's name?

Well, my parents, Fred and DeLean, had been married for eleven years and still had no children. They had almost given up on having any children, but they promised each other that if they were blessed with a child, the first one would be named Fred after my father.

Guess what? The baby was a girl. Me! So as a symbol of their love for each other and their gratitude to God for blessing them with a baby girl, they named me Freddie (little Fred) and Elizabeth, the middle name of my mother, grandmother, and great grandmother. That's why Daddy gave me a boy's name.


Bonus Point Challenge Week Three
Present Continuous.

Send your answers to freddieb@mail.uca.edu by Monday, February 3, noon.

1. What is a nonaction verb?

2. True False: The verb have can be both an action and nonaction verb.

3. True False: A frequency adverb goes between will and the main verb.

January 30, 2003

Reading Text and Class Activities Homework
Thursday,
January 30.

Peer editing: Composition One; Rough draft about name.

Grammar: Lesson Two, pages 38-44, Exs. 2, 5, 6.

Friday,
January 31.

Worksheet: Capitalization.
Grammar Bookwork: Read pages 45-49, Exs. 9-10.

Written work: Grammar Ex. 8, pages 46-47.

Written work for Monday, February 3: First revision, Composition One.

Target Vocabulary
For Level Two Academic Writing and Grammar

Business communication:
heading
date
inside address
salutation
body
closing statement
closing phrase
signature
printed name

Sentence:
independent
simple
clause
dependent
statement
question
command
exclamation
connecting words (coordinating and subordinating conjunctions)
compound
complex

Paragraph:
heading
title
margin
indent
topic
topic sentence
controlling idea
supporting sentence
concluding sentence
unity
coherence
transitions

Essay:
introduction
hook
thesis statement
topic
controlling idea
body
conclusion
unity
coherence
transitions


| ©2003 by Freddie A. Bowles |
| Send e-mail to freddieb@mail.uca.edu | | 501.450.5097 |