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81. Homework Helps
homework Spot Reference links and lists of homework help sites. _The Chicago Manual of style_ FAQ frequently asked questions about style.
http://hackleylibrary.org/homework.htm
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Homework Helps on the Web
Tips Sites Homework may seem like busy work, but it actually helps you : 1. understand what your teacher has taught during the day and helps you remember what you learned; 2. get ready for the next day: if you know what you learned on Monday learning new stuff on Tuesday that depends on Monday’s work will be easier; 3. learn about other resources, like the Library! 4. learn about things that aren’t covered in school (you’d rather go to school during the summer to learn this stuff, right!) So.....what is the best way to do homework?

82. Resource Central - Writing Resources
Improve your writing skills, library skills, writing style, grammar. stories, lyrics), plus creative writing, homework help and lesson plans.
http://www.kalama.com/~mariner/qserwrit.htm

83. ENGLISH 101 FRESHMAN COMPOSITION
composition of Final Grade. Quizzes and homework (the lowest grade will be The writing may be characterized by errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics.
http://www.msjc.edu/sjcenglish/flournoy_205fall2004syl.htm

84. Summer Undergraduate Courses [french.rutgers.edu]
Conversation, composition, and grammar review using short literary texts and short literary texts serve as a basis for discussion of style and usage.
http://french.rutgers.edu/undergrad/ugsummercourses.htm
Undergraduate Courses, Summer 2005
(Tentative schedule. Subject to change.) Registrar's Office French Courses Undergraduate Catalog Fall Courses ... Summer in Paris French Language
Students are placed in French courses according to performance on the placement test taken on entering the university as first-year or transfer students. 101 Elementary French
May 31 - July 7, MTWTh, 6:15 p.m. - 8:45 4 Credits Staff Functional use of the language in speaking, writing, and reading modern French. Laboratory exercises. Not open for credit to students who have had two or more years of secondary school French. Course content and textbooks are the same as those used during the academic year except the schedule will be condensed to accommodate the summer session.
Link to Fall/Spring synopsis

102 Elementary French July 11 - August 17, MTWTh, 6:15 p.m. - 8:45 4 Credits Staff Continuation of Elementary French 101.
Prerequisite: Elementary French 101. Course content and textbooks are the same as those used during the academic year except the schedule will be condensed to accommodate the summer session. Link to Fall/Spring synopsis
121 French Fundamentals July 11- Aug. 17, MTWTh, 6:15 p.m. - 8:45

85. Php-X-Links / Reference, General / English Usage And Writing
the principal requirements of plain English style and concentrates attention on the rules of usage and principles of composition most commonly violated.
http://www.hickorygov.com/library/ref/links/view.php?cid=303

86. Success Center
help With Memorizing handout; help With Reading Textbooks - handout; help With Taking APA style CAI English Classes - handout; Comma usage - handout
http://www.swic.edu/successcenter/info.jsp

87. Rockford, Illinois Homework Helper With 1000's Of Links To Homework Help For Kid
Plus interesting information that can also help with your homework. Psychology with style a hypertext guide to writing research reports for students
http://www.rockfordlink.com/homework.htm
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Acronyms and Abbreviations Almanacs
  • Information Please - from the print reference database, offering millions of useful and interesting facts on a wide range of topics online. Also includes a dictionary and encyclopedia.

88. Reservoir Middle School, Newport News, VA
whether you re interested in homework help, technology, or an encyclopedic Lynch, Guide to Grammar and style This is an alphabeticallyarranged
http://reservoir.nn.k12.va.us/ILAwebsites.shtml
Web Resources The Internet has the information you're looking for, whether you're interested in homework help, technology, or an encyclopedic range of topics. Check out some of these sites! Curriculum Correlations ILA-6th Grade
ILA-7th Grade
ILA-8th Grade
Reading and Language Arts
Poetry terms

89. A Tour Of Online Tutors
vTutor offers homework help and tutoring to K12 students whose school Extensive communication options; attendance and usage reports for parents and
http://www.techlearning.com/shared/printableArticle.jhtml?articleID=18311584

90. Asc Math Page
ENG 111 Freshman English composition A study of English usage, current prose, B. A working knowledge of their own writing style and process, including
http://www.midmich.cc.mi.us/Student Services/ASC/asc math page.htm
The Math Lab is a part of Mid Michigan Community College’s Academic Support Center, along with the Writing Center , the Reading Center, and Support Services. The Math Lab has three primary purposes:
  • Offer students taking any class at MMCC drop–in assistance with math questions. Provide an alternative learning environment for students who want to take introductory mathematics courses (MAT 101, MAT 104, or MAT 105) at a slower pace with more hands-on help. Allow higher level mathematics classes with traditionally low enrollment to be offered in an alternative environment.
Additional math assistance, such as tutoring and supplemental instruction, is available through Support Services.
Drop-In Assistance
In much the same way that the Writing Center allows student to “drop-in” and get assistance with any class writing assignment, the Math Lab provides drop-in assistance with math problems from any course. Will go to Math Services Page The Math Lab staff can give you one-on-one assistance, or work with a group of students from the same course, if desired. We expect you to have spent some time working on the problem before you come to the Math Lab- most students find they learn better when they try to solve something on their own first and then ask for assistance when they are “stuck”. Drop-in math assistance is available during normal Academic Support Center hours on both campuses.

91. Information Services Web Links
on the rules of usage and principles of composition most commonly violated Tax news, help, and forms Connecticut Department of Public Health
http://www.woodbridge.lioninc.org/infoweb.html
Information Services Web Links

92. English 1301: Composition And Rhetoric
Such concern for style will lead students naturally into the process of The B paper s relatively few syntactic, usage, and mechanical errors do not
http://www.blinn.edu/humanities/1301master03A.htm
English 1301: Composition and Rhetoric Departmental Master Course Syllabus This course is a Blinn College Core Curriculum Course. Revised Spring Overview: Purpose and Process in the Teaching of Writing The basic objective of any first-semester writing course is to teach students to express their thoughts in clear, effective, logical prose. Because of the complementary relationship between clear writing and clear thinking, the more purely rhetorical skills are taught along with and in the context of analytical skills in order to prepare students for success in a second-semester freshman composition course, all sophomore English courses, and any other writing-intensive course. At the end of the course, students should understand how to approach a writing assignment in terms of formulating a purpose and ascertaining an audience, and they should know how to develop a writing persona and a focus appropriate to that purpose and audience. These decisions establish a writer's rhetorical stance. In addition to understanding the rhetorical situation, students should also have enough training in logical skills to determine the validity of inductive generalizations, both those they make and those they read in others' writings, and to be able to analyze and argue from deductive premises.

93. Resources: David Clay August 17, 03
This short guide to style and usage is a mustread for serious writers and readers. “Common Errors in English” in “My homework Helper” in refdesk.com.
http://canadacollege.net/academics/english/hours by arrangement guide.html
(Back to English Deptartment Page) Suggestions and Resources Instructors are not obligated to meet with students during this time; however, to ensure that students take the requirement seriously, we need to set up clear expectations and a means of measuring their work. The Learning Center has a computer system set up to track student hours (see Rita Sabbadini), or you may create your own system (see below). Devise grammar or writing review exercises tailored to individual student needs Have students meet in study groups, either physically or virtually (online) Give an additional reading assignment Have students complete a contract that stipulates what they will accomplish with their time Offer advanced students the opportunity to tutor others in the Learning Center Have students keep a journal of their hours and accomplishments Use Academic.com, an online grammar and essay-level program that tracks student hours. Check out the website, or speak with Rita in the Learning Center for an orientation. Volunteer to lead a writing workshop on a topic of your choice Have students attend tutoring sessions in the Learning Center Assign activities the companion websites for your textbook(s) o 1. study skills

94. RHE 306ca-41940 Rhetoric And Composition
to produce a clean, efficient style and adapt it to various rhetorical situations The consultants at these centers are trained to help you resolve your
http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~williams/rhe306_04/policies.htm

95. Tools For Teaching - Chapter
witty guides that answer common questions about grammar, style, and usage. Use computers to help students write better. Faculty are beginning to use
http://teaching.berkeley.edu/bgd/writebetter.html
Helping Students Write Better
in All Courses

[From the hard copy book Tools for Teaching by Barbara Gross Davis; Jossey-Bass Publishers: San Francisco, 1993. Linking to this book chapter from other websites is permissible. However, the contents of this chapter may not be copied, printed, or distributed in hard copy form without permission.] Few faculty would deny the importance of writing in their academic discipline or the role writing plays in mastering material, shaping ideas, and developing critical thinking skills. Writing helps students learn the subject matter: they understand and retain course material much better when they write about it. You don't have to be a writing specialist - or even an accomplished writer - to improve your students' writing skills, and you don't have to sacrifice hours of class time or grading time. The ideas that follow are designed to make writing more integral to your courses and less onerous to you and your students. General Strategies View the improvement of students' writing as your responsibility.

96. Composition Requirements
Each student must also complete all classwork / homework assignments. Instruction in grammar and usage, while not emphasized in class, is available in
http://www.msstate.edu/dept/english/FRequire.html
English Departmental Requirements for
the Freshman Composition Courses
Specific requirements for 1163, 1173, and Honors courses are set by the individual instructors. While instructors may set their specific requirements for 0103, 1103 and 1113, all sections comply with the standard requirements and procedures of the Freshman Composition Program, as found below. Standard Requirements EN 0103 : Each student must write at least six short themes totaling 3,000 words. The final is to be the seventh theme. Each student must also complete all classwork / homework assignments. Instructions in and the use of The American Heritage College Dictionary . 4th ed. 2002, is a standard part of the course. EN 1103 : Each student must write at least six (including the final) original compositions totaling approximately 3,500 words, exclusive of the final examination, a theme of at least 500 words. Instructions in and the use of The American Heritage College Dictionary . 4th ed. 2002, is a standard part of the course.

97. Burgauer
They see punctuation as an afterthought in their composition processes. style the usage level is General English or Informal English. 4.
http://ateg.org/conferences/c5/burgauer.htm
Punctuation and Grammar:
Driving Forces in Composition
Debra Laaker Burgauer Bradley University Two of my favorite cartoons illustrate student attitudes about punctuation rules. In the first cartoon, two graduate students stroll past a fraternity house. One students asks the other, " I've finished my master's thesis. What's the deal on punctuation?" ( Parade Magazine 12 March 1989: 16). In the second comic strip, Charlie Brown is reading his sister Sally's homework. "You probably should start a new paragraph here, and then maybe capitalize this word. What else would you like to know?" he asks. Sally answers, "Show me where you sprinkle in the little curvy marks." "Commas," Charlie states. "Whatever," Sally responds with a look of quiet desperation. (Charles Schulz Peanuts). Both the graduate student and Sally, the quintessential frustrated first-grader, know that punctuation is important, but they are baffled by all of the rules. They see punctuation as an afterthought in their composition processes. I have had success with an instructional analogy that compares grammar, punctuation, composition and reading to driving, one subject that always interests students of all ages and writing abilities. Basically, in this analogy, grammar is the roadbed and various punctuation marks represent different types of traffic signs. When used in effective ways, proper grammar and punctuation drive the reader through the writer's meaning. This analogy demystifies the complicated web-like relationship between grammar, punctuation, and meaning. To make these relationships easier to comprehend and to employ, I have developed a series of equations or formulas that are based on students' inherent linguistic knowledge and are easily applied to their own writing situations.

98. Great Grammar
A practical guide to grammar and usage, covering such topics as parts of speech, A guide to grammar, punctuation, spelling, and style for kids,
http://www.kidspoint.org/columns2.asp?column_id=1167&column_type=homework

99. Grammar Resources
Excellent basic rules of grammar and style with examples (from Junket Studies) This is a free site dedicated to answering specific grammar, composition
http://teachers.henrico.k12.va.us/Specialist/franceslively/grammar.htm
Grammar and Usage Resources
11 Rules of Writing
Excellent basic rules of grammar and style with examples (from Junket Studies) 40 Tips to Proper English
This is a humorous list of grammar rules that are broken with each stated rule. This is a great grammar icebreaker. Aardvark's English Forum.com
Resources for students and teachers of EnglishEnglish at your fingertips Beyond BooksBuilding Language
Beyond Books provides an advertising-free, content rich, course-relevant resource for teachers and students. User name and password required. Big Dog's Grammar
"Here you have a list of the bare essentials. These are the things that English teachers love to comment on in your papers. They really are important, and, no, those profs don't just mark them so they can keep you from ever getting anything higher than a C on a paper." The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation
Jane Straus' easy-to-use reference guide and workbook is now available as an online resource. This popular book is an indispensable and entertaining guide for writers, proofreaders, editors, managers, clerical staff, teachers, and students. Daily Grammar Archive
Daily Grammar is a free service of Word Place, Inc. Much like A.Word.A.Day (no affiliation), which teaches you a new word each day, Daily Grammar sends you e-mail messages with a grammar lesson five days of the week and a quiz on the sixth day. This site is the archive site. You can sign up for the

100. Language Internet Subject Guide - Newark Public Library
Includes examples of correct and incorrect usage, practice exercises, and a test for each section. EasyBib.com homework Helper Writing Skills
http://www.npl.org/Pages/InternetResources/SubjectGuides/language.html
Language Abbreviations and Acronyms
English Grammar and Writing

English Language Dictionaries

Foreign Language Dictionaries
...
Translators and Translations

Abbreviations and Acronyms:
Acronym and Abbreviation Server

http://www.ucc.ie/acronyms/acro.html

General dictionary of acronyms and abbreviations. Acronym Finder
http://www.acronymfinder.com

Dictionary of 298,000 acronyms with focus on computers, technology, telecommunications, and the military. Acronym Search http://www.acronymsearch.com/ A database of over 40,000 acronyms in a variety of areas such as chat, sports, accounting, classified ads, and finance. English Language Dictionaries: ARTFL Project: ROGET'S Thesaurus Search Form http://humanities.uchicago.edu/forms_unrest/ROGET.html An electronic version of the 1911 edition of Roget’s Thesaurus. ARTFL Project: Webster Search Form http://humanities.uchicago.edu/forms_unrest/webster.form.html Search Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, 1913 Edition. This old-fashioned dictionary tells you the "right way" to use a word. Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable http://www.bartleby.com/81/

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