Course Description
Do you want to impress employers, editors, or online readers with your writing? Do you want to get A grades on term papers and essays? Do you want to become a good writer – in creative non-fiction, journalism, fiction, or academic writing – as quickly as possible?
The secret to this writing success is not
studying 200 grammar and style points in the comprehensive writing
textbooks. Instead, this course – designed by an experienced university
professor and published author with Oxford University Press – shows you
the only sentence-level lessons you need to know to write well. These are the 7 most common problems found in people’s writing. These problems most likely lurk – like weeds – in your writing right now.
If you complete the lessons, exercises, and assignments
honestly and fully as outlined in this course, then your writing will
improve in just a few weeks of intensive study. If you do not find this
course helpful, you may request a refund within 30 days, no questions
asked.
These lessons, exercises, and assignments were designed and tested at
the University of Toronto and York University with thousands of
undergraduate students. Many undergraduate students improved their
grades by a whole grade category after
completing these lessons, finding that this short list of key lessons
provides clarity. Students have applied these lessons in the workplace
to great success.
Enrol now and complete this course to produce writing that gets you
the job, earns you an A grade, lands you a writing contract, or
impresses that magazine or newspaper editor
Course Details
Why Do People Use Clichés?
Active Voice
Active Voice Introduction
Adjective Series
Adverb Series
Answers to Some Questions
Assignment #1
Assignment #2
Assignment #3
Assignment #4
Assignment #5
Assignment #6
Assignment #7
Being Original
Clichés
Concrete Verbs
Dead Verbs
Economy Introduction
Exercise #1
Exercise #10
Exercise #11
Exercise #2
Exercise #3
Exercise #4
Exercise #5
Exercise #6
Exercise #7
Exercise #8
Exercise #9
Long Sentences
Multiple Element Series
Noun Series
Nouns
Nouns Introduction
Original Writing Introduction
Parallelism Conclusion
Parallelism Introduction
Passive Voice
Passive Voice Exceptions
Phoney Intensifiers
Preposition Series
Pronouns
Redundancy
Section 1: Writing Clearly for Publications, Work, and School
Section 2: How Dead Verbs Are Killing Your Writing
Section 3: Become an Active Writer
Section 4: Create Pictures in Your Writing with Strong Nouns
Section 5: How to be an Original Writer and Avoid Clichés
Section 6: Prevent Train Wreck Sentences with Parallelism
Section 7: Freshen your Sentences with Patterns and Length Variation
Sentence Patterns
Sentence Variation Principles
Short Sentences
Stretchers
Surface and Under the Surface Parallelism
The Consequences of Dead Verbs
The Morality of Passive Voice
The Variation of Long and Short for Effect
Thickeners
Verb Series
Verbs Introduction
Weak Nouns
Weak Verbs
When It's Okay to Use a Cliché
When Pronouns Go Wrong
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