Common questions

What is the closest cliche syndrome?

Contents

What is the closest cliche syndrome?

A really useful term that Graff and Berkenstein share with us is called the “closest cliche syndrome.” This syndrome occurs when a writer summarizes impecisely, recounting a “familiar cliché that the writers mistakes for the author’s view” (TSIS 31).

Who wrote Say I Say?

Cathy Birkenstein
Gerald Graff
They Say / I Say: The Moves That Matter in Academic Writing/Authors
They Say / I Say: The Moves That Matter in Academic Writing / Edition 4 by Gerald Graff, Cathy Birkenstein | 9780393631678 | Paperback | Barnes & Noble®

How many chapters are in the Say I Say?

Help for Writing across Disciplines—with NEW student writing Complementing the book’s three chapters on writing in the disciplines are five new student essays, several of which are by students who used “They Say / I Say” and whose essays were nominated for The Norton Writer’s Prize.

What is the purpose of the templates in they say I say?

Graff and Birkenstein’s templates may help you to have this conversation in a reader-‐friendly fashion, so that your thesis, supporting evidence, opposing evidence, and conclusion are clear. They Say / I Say discusses these templates more fully, and includes useful lists of them, especially in the end of the book.

What is duh move?

The “duh” move: When you disagree not with the position itself but with the assumption that it is a new or stunning revelation.

What are the three ways to respond?

There are a great many ways to respond to others’ ideas, but this chapter concentrates on the three most common and recognizable ways: agreeing, disagreeing, or some combination of both.

What are the three ways you can respond to a text?

What is the metacommentary in they say, I say?

In Chapter Ten of They Say, I Say. the idea of metacommentary is introduced . Metacommentary is a type of writing that explains what has already been stated. It is used to summarize and put together the purpose and meaning of the previous passage to readers.

When to use metacommentary in a book title?

Phrases like “In other words” or “My point is” emphasize your main point and conclude what you’ve said. Not only can your text include metacommentary, but your title can also include metacommentary. Titles can “stand apart from the text itself and tells readers the book’s main point” (127).

When to use metacommentary to specify your contribution?

It positions the work in the scholarly field, but also often in the wider policy and practice fields. The writer uses metacommentary to carefully delineate what they will and wont do, define key terms, and thus indicate very clearly the contribution that they intend to make.

Who are the authors of they say I say?

“They say / I say” : the Moves that Matter in Academic Writing / Gerald Graff, Cathy Birkenstein, Both of the University of Illinois at Chicago.—Third Edition. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-393-93584-4 (paperback)