Tag Archives: summary

“Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment”

In the reading “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment” by Chris M. Anson’s main idea is how writers can become comfortable in a specific area of writing. Writers can repeat the same genres of writing if they are comfortable with … Continue reading

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Blog Post #5

In the article “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment” by Chris M Anson, she tells us that when you right something for so long it becomes a habit and can mess you up in the future. Having written the same … Continue reading

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Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment

In “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment ”, Chris M. Anson talked about how when you learn something, and it becomes a habit, it’s hard to break it and it can tend to make you fail later on. Something becomes … Continue reading

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Habituated practice can lead to entrenchment respond

In ‘Habituated practice can lead to entrenchment’, writer Chris Anton discusses how Habituated practices can lead to writers feeling stuck in a box. Not literally, but some writers write so much under the same format because of how natural it … Continue reading

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Writing adresses, invokes and/or creates audiences response

in ‘Writing Addresses, invokes, and/or creates audiences’, Andrea Lunsford discusses knowing an audience. With the addition of technology, digital writing has become a big thing. But when doing this, no one can actually be certain who the audience is. From … Continue reading

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Blog Post #4

Andrea A. Lunsford wrote “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences.”  The main summary of this paper is there is a triangle that has audience, writers, and readers. All of these topics have to work together. Moreover, audience is the biggest … Continue reading

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“Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences” – Blog Post 4

In “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences”, Andrea A. Lunsford talks about the rhetorical triangle. It’s an idea that there are three main points to writing; writers, audience, and text. The writer brings up a man named Walter Ong. He … Continue reading

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Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences

In Andrea Lunsford’s writing, “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences,” she goes over the concept of considering your readers when you write. Lunsford says that understanding your audience is a key factor in effective writing. She talks about how writers … Continue reading

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“Writing Expressed and Shares Meaning to Be Reconstructed by the Reader” – Blog Post 3

In “Writing Expressed and Shares Meaning to Be Reconstructed by the Reader”, Charles Bazerman talks about how writing is meant to show feelings, desires, emotions, and everything a person feels inside. Bazerman also talked about the idea that writers start … Continue reading

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Blog post #3

I found the article Writing Expressed and Shares Meaning to be Reconstructed by the Reader by Charles Bazerman very interesting and insightful. The article is about how writing helps us communicate who we are or how we feel, to ourselves … Continue reading

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