Quarter 3 - Module 1 Writing and Composition: Department of Education Republic of The Philippines
Quarter 3 - Module 1 Writing and Composition: Department of Education Republic of The Philippines
Quarter 3 - Module 1 Writing and Composition: Department of Education Republic of The Philippines
In this lesson, you will be acquainted with the commonly used graphic organizers in
writing. You will also explore how to format topic and sentence outlines. Most importantly, you
will learn to transcode information from a graphic organizer to a topic or sentence outline.
What Is It
Graphic organizers
Outlines
Graphic summaries are summaries that reorganize the text. Two examples of graphic
summaries are outlines and graphic organizers.
In an outline, topics are listed with their subtopics in a linear format, like this:
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III. Judicial Branch
A. Represented by: Supreme Court and other federal courts
B. Powers: Can declare legislation unconstitutional
C. Length of term: lifetime
Graphic organizers show the same sort of information, but in a more visual format, like this:
http://www.mempowered.com/study/outlines-and-graphic-organizers
This is a tree diagram. Although graphic organizers can come in many forms, most
commonly they are either tree diagrams or matrices. Here is a matrix of the same information:
Basically, graphic organizers are visual outlines showing relationships. Both outlines
and graphic organizers are useful strategies for hierarchical information. However, while an
outline does pick out the most important information and does show hierarchical relations (and,
as you may have noticed, can include more detail more easily), it is not as effective in showing
the relationships between concepts.
Likewise the outline, the clusters within a topic are clear, but the relations between
topics — between the clusters — are not. The graphic organizer, on the other hand, allows
connections between clusters to be more readily seen. Notice how much easier it is to grasp
the similarities and differences between the different branches of the U.S. Government when
looking at the tree diagram or the matrix, compared
2 to looking at the outline.
Types of Graphic Organizers which you can use in writing:
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/A-concept-map-organized-hierarchically_fig2_26444585
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2. Webs – shows how different categories of information relate to one another
https://www.lucidchart.com/pages/templates/mind-map/web-mind-map-template
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https://www.mindmapart.com/health-mind-map-jane-genovese/
4. Flow Diagram or Flow Chart – shows a series of steps or events in order in which they
will take place. They can be used in outlining the events in the story, or showing a
procedure in a scientific process
https://de.slideshare.net/SwatiSharma164/qcl-14v3flowchart-of-admission-processbanasthali-vidyapithswati-
sharma?nomobile=true
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5. Venn Diagram – is used to identify similarities and differences between two or more
concepts
https://studywell.com/maths/statistics/probability/venn-diagram/
6. Pie Chart – a type of circular graph, which is divided into slices to illustrate a numeral
proportion
https://sites.google.com/a/brightoncps.wa.edu.au/bcpsyr62015/mathematics/data-representation/pie-charts
7. Graph – a collection of all points whose coordinates satisfy a given relation. The most
commonly used graphs are the line and bar graph.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZVna90H188
8. Table – a systematic arrangement of data usually in rows and in columns for ready
reference
https://sites.google.com/a/hdsb.ca/ms-parker-s-class-website/data-management
What’s More
Talk about yourself, your hobbies, your likes and dislikes, your favorites, and your
dreams. Fill them in in the graphic organizer below.
https://images.app.goo.gl/CxUZf5eD3MDBWzZ9A
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What Is It
A formal outline is a kind of graphic scheme of the logic of your paper. Two main types
of outlines are used: 1) The topic outline, and 2) the sentence outline. The advantage of
the topic outline, besides its brevity, is that its parallel structure reveals the logic you will follow
in your paper. The advantage of a sentence outline is that it helps you make sure you become
sufficiently specific about your subject, rather than simply generalizing. Regardless of what
type of outline you choose, you will need to have enough major headings to develop your topic
fully within the boundaries established by your thesis statement. Note the following examples
of topic and sentence outlines using the same thesis and subject matter. Thesis: The abuse
of alcohol and drugs can affect a person economically, psychologically, and physically.
1. Number-Letter Format
It is the use of the number, then a letter in an outline. You use the Roman numerals
for the main heading. You start with Roman “I” for the heading, under are the
subheadings or supporting details which are indented and are marked by capital
letters. If there subheadings under letter “A”, indent further and use Arabic numbers 1
and so on. If the information is not as important as the subheadings, indent and mark
it with a small letter instead.
I. Main Heading
A. Subheading
1. Supporting Details
2. Supporting Details
II. Main Heading
A. Subheading
1. Supporting Details
a. Example
1. Main Heading
1.1 Subheading
1.1.1 Supporting Details
1.1.2 Supporting Details
2. Main Heading
2.1 Subheading
2.1.1 Supporting Details
2.1.1.1 Example
EXAMPLES
Topic Outline (Number-Letter Format):
I. Economical effects
A. Alcohol
1. Cost of alcohol purchases
2. Cost of DUIs
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B. Drugs
1. Cost of drug purchases
2. Cost of drug arrest
II. Psychological effects
A. Alcohol
1. Mental impairment
2. Mental addiction
B. Drugs
1. Mental impairment
2. Mental addiction
III. Physical effects
A. Alcohol
1. Liver disease
2. Alcohol poisoning
B. Drugs
1. Brain damage
2. Drug overdose
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What’s More
Refer to the graphic organizer you have accomplished in Activity 3 which is all about
yourself. This time, transfer the information found in that graphic organizer to a sentence
outline.
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Lesson Expanding the Content of an Outline Using
In the previous lesson, you learned the difference and format of sentence and topic
outlines. In this lesson, you will further expand the content of the outline using notes from
primary and secondary sources.
What Is It
Date published June 20, 2018 by Raimo Streefkerk. Date updated: September 23, 2019
When you do research, you have to gather information and evidence from a variety of
sources.
Primary sources provide raw information and first-hand evidence. Examples include
interview transcripts, statistical data, and works of art. A primary source gives you direct
access to the subject of your research.
Primary sources are more credible as evidence, but good research uses both primary
and secondary sources.
A primary source is anything that gives you direct evidence about the people, events,
or phenomena that you are researching. Primary sources will usually be the main objects of
your analysis.
If you are researching the past, you cannot directly access it yourself, so you need
primary sources that were produced at the time by participants or witnesses (e.g. letters,
photographs, newspapers).
If you are researching something current, your primary sources can either be
qualitative or quantitative data that you collect yourself (e.g. through interviews, surveys,
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experiments) or sources produced by people directly involved in the topic (e.g. official
documents or media texts).
Primary sources
Research field Primary source
• Letters and diaries
• Photographs and video footage
History • Official documents and records
• Physical objects
• Interview transcripts
• Recordings of speeches
Communication and social studies • Newspapers and magazines
• Social media posts
• Court records
• Legal texts
Law and politics
• Government documents
• Empirical studies
Sciences • Statistical data
When you cite a secondary source, it’s usually not to analyze it directly. Instead, you’ll probably
test its arguments against new evidence or use its ideas to help formulate your own.
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Examples of sources that can be primary or secondary
Documentaries
If you are researching the causes of World War II, a recent documentary about the war
is a secondary source. But if you are researching the filmmaking techniques used in historical
documentaries, the documentary is a primary source.
If your paper is about the novels of Toni Morrison, a magazine review of one of her
novels is a secondary source. But if your paper is about the critical reception of Toni Morrison’s
work, the review is a primary source.
Newspaper articles
If your aim is to analyze the government’s economic policy, a newspaper article about
a new policy is a secondary source. But if your aim is to analyze media coverage of economic
issues, the newspaper article is a primary source.
• Does this source come from someone directly involved in the events I’m studying
(primary) or from another researcher (secondary)?
• Am I interested in analyzing the source itself (primary) or only using it for background
information (secondary)?
• Does the source provide original information (primary) or does it comment upon
information from other sources (secondary)?
If you’re still not sure, the video gives more examples to help you understand the difference
between primary and secondary sources.
Most research uses both primary and secondary sources. They complement each
other to help you build a convincing argument. Primary sources are more credible as evidence,
but secondary sources show how your work relates to existing research.
Primary sources are the foundation of original research. They allow you to:
If you don’t use any primary sources, your research may be considered unoriginal or
unreliable.
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What do you use secondary sources for?
Secondary sources are good for gaining a full overview of your topic and understanding
how other researchers have approached it. They often synthesize a large number of primary
sources that would be difficult and time-consuming to gather by yourself. They allow you to:
When you conduct a literature review, you can consult secondary sources to gain a
thorough overview of your topic. If you want to mention a paper or study that you find cited in
a secondary source, seek out the original source and cite it directly.
Remember that all primary and secondary sources must be correctly cited to avoid
plagiarism.
What’s More
Activity 1: Is It P or S?
______1) A play showing how Benjamin Franklin flew a kite during a lightning storm.
______2) A short story describing Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla's 'electrical' battle.
______3) Anne Frank's diary describing her life during World War 2.
______4) A cartoon showing how Pocahontas met John Smith.
______5) A text book describing the civil rights movement.
______6) A news report about the opening of a power plant.
______7) A scientist explaining what it was like for Buzz Aldrin to walk on the moon.
______8) A YouTube video describing how the pyramids were built.
______9) An interview with Alexander Graham Bell about how he invented the telephone.
_____10) A radio broadcast from the day the Soviet Union launched Sputnik.
What I Can Do
Directions: In a paragraph form, discuss and expand the content of this outline on the
ill-effects of illegal drugs from primary or secondary sources. Write the content of the said
sources. Do not forget to cite the sources to avoid plagiarism.
I. Economical effects
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A. Alcohol
1. Cost of alcohol purchases
2. Cost of DUIs
B. Drugs
1. Cost of drug purchases
2. Cost of drug arrest
II. Psychological effects
A. Alcohol
1. Mental impairment
2. Mental addiction
B. Drugs
1. Mental impairment
2. Mental addiction
III. Physical effects
A. Alcohol
1. Liver disease
2. Alcohol poisoning
B. Drugs
1. Brain damage
2. Drug overdose
________________________
Title
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RUBRICS FOR PARAGRAPH
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Lesson
Acknowledging Sources by Creating a
3 Bibliography
In the previous lesson, you have learned and crafted your own informative essay and
showed respect for intellectual property rights by acknowledging citations made. In this lesson,
you will further learn to acknowledge and use convention in citing sources.
What Is It
Bibliography
At the end of all pieces of academic writing, you need a list of materials that you have
used or referred to. This usually has a heading: references but may be bibliography or works
cited depending on the conventions of the system you use.
The object of your writing is for you to say something for yourself using the ideas of
the subject, for you to present ideas you have learned in your own way. The emphasis should
be on working with other people’s ideas, rather than reproducing their words. The ideas and
people that you refer to need to be made explicit by a system of referencing. This consists of
a list of materials that you have used at the end of the piece of writing and references to this
list at various points throughout the essay. It is to give justice on their works that you refer in
your writing or any research works. Therefore, at the end of your assignment you need a list
of the materials you have used - a bibliography or a reference list. This lesson will give you
ways on how to write bibliography.
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• The date of the publication
• The place of publication and publishing company
• The volume or edition of the publication
MLA and APA Works Cited and References Page Citation Formats
5. Journal Article
O’Connell, J. F., & Perkins, G. M. (2003). The economics of private liberal arts colleges.
Journal of Business, 76(3), 499-514.
6. Magazine Article
Serrill, M. S. (1990, April 2). Soviet Union war of nerves. Time, 135, 26-30.
7. Newspaper Article
Rood, L. (2005, December 31). The steep costs of driving drunk. Des Moines Register, p.
A12-A13.
Electronic Sources:
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Association (JAMA), 291(17), 2107-2113. Retrieved May 22, 2007, from
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/291/17/2107
II. MLA (Modern Language Association) format is generally used for disciplines in
the literature, arts, and humanities, such as English, languages, film, and cultural
studies or other theoretical studies.
4. Journal Article
O’Connell, John F. and George M. Perkins. “The Economics of Private Liberal Arts
Colleges.” Journal of Business, 76.3 (2003): 499-514.
5. Magazine Article
Serrill, Michael S. “Soviet Union War of Nerves.” Time 2 Apr. 1990: 26-30.
6. Newspaper Article
Rood, Lee. “The Steep Costs of Driving Drunk.” Des Moines Register 31 Dec. 2005: A12-
A13.
Electronic Sources
2. Journal Article
O’Connell, J. F., & Perkins, G. M. (2003). The economics of private liberal arts colleges.
Journal of Business, 76(3), 499-514.
3. Magazine Article
Serrill, M. S. (1990, April 2). Soviet Union war of nerves. Time, 135, 26-30.
4. Newspaper Article
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Rood, L. (2005, December 31). The steep costs of driving drunk. Des Moines Register, p.
A12-A13.
Electronic Sources
1. Online Encyclopedia Article
Hart, J. (2006). Water pollution. Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2006. Retrieved April
19, 2006, from http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761572857/Water_Pollution.html
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What I Have Learned
Directions: Identify the appropriate documentation for the APA or MLA format. Write
APA or MLA on the space provided before each number.
_____1. Friedman, Alice T. Women and the Making of the Modern House. New Haven: Yale
UP, 2007. Print.
_____2. Ball, E. (2000). Slaves in the family. Urbana, IL: Southern Illinois Press.
Periodical
_____7. Gowdy, John. "Avoiding Self-organized Extinction: Toward a Co-evolutionary
Economics of Sustainability." International Journal of Sustainable Development and
World Ecology 14.1 (2007): 27-36. Print.
_____8. Kellogg, R. T. (2001). Competition for working memory among writing processes.
International Journal of Higher Education, 55(11), 212-223.
Online Publication
_____9. “Avibase Bird Checklists of the World: Alberta.” Avibase World Bird Database. Bird
Studies Canada, 2009. Web. 26 Oct. 2009.
_____10. Bjork, O. (2004, May 5). MOO bots. Retrieved from CWRL White Papers website:
http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/professional/whitepapers/2004/040512-1.pdf
Magazine Articles
_____11. Hubert, Ann. “Inside Autism.” Slate. Washington Post. Newsweek Interactive, 28
Mar. 2007. Web. 23 Nov. 2007.
_____12. Hubert, A. (2007, March 28). Inside Autism. Slate. Retrieved from
http://www.slate.com
Online Newspaper
_____13. Young, M. (2006, April 6). Council rejects boutique rezoning. Kamloops Daily
News. Retrieved from http://www.kamlopsnews.ca
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Key to Answers
Lesson 1
Activity 1: Talk About It
(Answers may vary)
Activity 2: Talk About It 2.0
(Answers may vary)
Lesson 2
Activity 1: Is It P or S?
1. S
2. S
3. P
4. S
5. S
6. P
7. S
8. S
9. P
10. P
Activity 2: I Can Expand It
(Answers may vary)
Lesson 3
Activity 1: Am I APA or MLA?
1. MLA
2. APA
3. MLA
4. APA
5. MLA
6. APA
7. MLA
8. APA
9. MLA
10. APA
11. MLA
12. APA
13. APA