Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Master's Reading and Writing, Nate's Principles of Bad Writing

 

                                                Nate’s Principles of Bad Writing

Vocabulary:

1.      Counterproductive: (adj.) something that doesn’t help what you are trying to achieve

2.      Perspective (n.): a way of seeing things

3.      To bomb (v.): in this case to do very very poorly; I bombed my last exam

4.      Fail miserably (v/adv.): to do something so bad

5.      Blatantly (adv.): when you do something without any care of the consequences

6.      Ill-prepared (adj.): not ready for something

7.      Whatsoever: at all; completely; used with negative things; like I don’t eat any food from that place whatsoever

8.      Whatever comes to mind (expression): anything that you think about

9.      Get off track (v.): to lose focus of something

10.  To suit (someone/something)(v.): to be appropriate for someone or something

11.  To turn off (someone) (v.): to make someone not like you or something

12.  Legible (adj): something you can read; opposite is illegible

13.  Perceived (adj.): how something is viewed by another person

14.  Migraine (n.): a very large headache

 

Pre-Reading discussion:

1.      What is counterproductive to good writing?

2.      What makes someone bomb a writing assignment?

3.      What makes you fail miserably at a subject?

4.      When have you been ill-prepared for an assignment?

5.      How can you turn off a reader to your writing assignments?


Vocabulary:

 Arguing with people all of the time is counterproductive to forming good relationships with them.

People from different cultures have different perspectives on things depending on where they are from.

I didn’t study for the final, so I bombed it.

I wrote an essay for class.  I thought it was good, but actually I failed miserably.

You blatantly don’t care.

My teacher came to class without a lesson because he is blatantly lazy.  He was very ill-prepared

I can’t stand that class whatsoever.  I don’t understand anything you say whatsoever.

What will the final essay be about?

>Whatever comes to mind.

The teacher was supposed to teach us how to write an essay, but he got off track and began talking about soccer for 15 minutes.

When you pick a job, you need a career that suits your skills and talents.  I always loved animals, so working as a veterinarian suits me. 

People who talk when they are eating turn me off. 

I try to be nice to people, but some perceive me as rude.  I don’t know why.

I couldn’t concentrate in afternoon class because I had a migraine. 


1.We are obviously in this class to improve our writing skills, so it seems a bit foolish and counterproductive to be giving information that would encourage you in to write poorly in anyway.  However, the textbook has a passage on the principles of poor writing, and I felt this text was a bit too long, so I decided I would come up with my own perspective on poor writing. And, I won’t focus on the process of bad writing in general, but on the specific occasions that you must do a writing assignment in a classroom like setting.  One thing I can definitely promise you is if you want to completely bomb your next writing assignment, do these steps.

2. The first step you should take to fail miserably on your next writing assignment is to come blatantly ill-prepared.  Don’t practice your writing at home or do any kind of reading whatsoever.  Just come into class as if you know everything you need to write, and when it is time to write, just write whatever comes to mind.  In other words, if there is something specific the instructor or the test examiner wants you to write about, just blow it off and write anything you want with no purpose or aim. 

3.While you are writing with no goal or focus, allow yourself to get off track if that suits you.  In the first sentence you are kind of talking about some amazing vacation you took, and all of a sudden you shift the entire topic to the latest sales you saw online for some random product that only you and no one else cares about.  And while you are at it, go into all kinds of pointless opinions you have about things the reader certainly doesn’t care about.  That will turn off even the most patient person.

4.And since you clearly don’t care about your writing style, or how it is perceived, why bother to even try to make your writing legible?  Skip lines whenever you want, or don’t skip them when you don’t want to.  Or, perhaps you can write your words as if they are going up or down a mountain rather than in a straight line.  That will give the reader a migraine. 

5.So, basically, the process of becoming a bad writer is to be ill-prepared, write about random, unfocused nonsense, and to write in a really sloppy fashion.  If you do these things, your writing assignment will sink faster than the Titanic. 

Questions:

*What are the writer’s steps to poor writing according to this? 

1. 

 

Main ideas of paragraphs.  Match the sentence with the paragraph it’s the main idea of.

A.    Your style of writing on paper can affect how bad it appears

B.     Don’t study before any major writing assignment

C.     When you write, there is no need to keep on subject

D.    I am teaching about bad writing although I am ironically supposed to teach you how to be a good writer

 

1.      In paragraph 3, it says you go into all kinds of pointless opinions….When you go into something, you:

A.    Focus on a specific topic

B.     Avoid the topic you should talk about

C.     Challenge yourself with something difficult

D.    Pretend you know something you don’t

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I am an Alien. I am not Human.

By Nate Feldman