Homeschool-books.com
Store Front Heart of Wisdom Home HOW Approach Is HOW for you? HOW Books Student Gallery Scrapbooking to Learn Biblical Holidays Message Board HOW Egroup Refer a Friend
 
  Search: 
Advanced search
Orders Only: 407-246-4560  
 
 
     Categories
SALE!!!
Heart of Wisdom Publications
Art
BEST SELLERS!
Bible Games
Bibles
Bible Holidays
Bible Stories
Bible Study Tools
Character Building
Child Training
Classics
Clip Art on CD
College Prep
Creating Books
Current Issues
Discount Packages
Draw Write Now
Dinah Zikes Materials
Ebooks
Evanmoor Pockets
Family
FREEBIES!
Games
Geography
Great Science Adventures
Health
Hebrew Roots
History-American
History-World
Homemaking
HOMESCHOOL HELP
HOW Year 1
Language Arts
Life Skills
Math
Men's Issues
Miscellaneous
Music
Science
Science Unit Studies
Scrapbook Books
Scrapbook Kits
Scrapbook Software
Spiritual Abuse
Time Travelers History
Timelines
Treasure Box Press
Unit Studies
Usborne Books
Videos
Wisdom Unit Study
Woman's Issues
Worldviews
Year One Packages


     Bestsellers
1. Nurturing the Write Relationship: Developing a Family Writing Lifestyle Ebook
2. Writers Inc: A Student Handbook for Writing and Learning
3. Writers Express: A Handbook for Young Writers, Thinkers, and Learners
4. Nurturing the Write Relationship: Developing a Family Writing Lifestyle
5. Write Source 2000: A Guide to Writing, Thinking, and Learning


     Publishers
Common Sense Press
Evan-Moor
En-Gedi Publishing
First Fruit of Zion
Heart of Wisdom
Usborne
Dwight A. Pryor’s Teachings
Marvin Wilson's Teachings
John Garr's Teachings
Sounds of the Trumpet


     Special
Gift certificates


     Contact
Contact us
Privacy statement
Terms & Conditions
QUESTIONS
Books by Catagory
Why Purchase Here?
Customer Reward Points!!
Home
Refund Policy
Back Order Policy
Reasons People Like & Don't Like HOW

  Heart of Wisdom Store  ::  Language Arts  ::  Writing  ::  Writing to Learn

  Writing to Learn #17169
Writing to Learn 

Writing to Learn by William Zinsser

Using numerous examples of clear, stylish writing from a broad range of disciplines, and adding the warmth of his personal experiences, Zinsser makes a strong case for his claim that writing about a field of knowledge is the best way to immerse oneself in it and to make it one's own. Three guiding principles emergeaccuracy, brevity, and clarityand, Zinsser argues, writers who keep them in mind will avoid much of the misunderstanding that results from bad writing. Zinnser has particularly harsh words for what he calls "corporation-speak," the incomprehensible nonsense that invades many professional publications. His reference, whose title so accurately sums up its philosophy, should become a standard for those who care about good writing.

This is an essential book for everyone who wants to write clearly about any subject and use writing as a means of learning.

Excerpt

Chapter Onel . Hermes and the Periodic Table

As a boy I spent four years at a boarding school in Massachusetts called Deerfield Academy that had two legends attached to it. The first was its headmaster, Frank L. Boyden. When he was a young man just out of college, in 1902, he accepted a position that only a teacher desperate for a first job might have taken: running a moribund academy in the tiny village of Deerfield. The school had so few boys that the new headmaster had to play on the football and baseball teams himself. By the time I got there, in the mid-1930s, Frank Boyden had built Deerfield into one of the best secondary schools in the country, and when he retired, in 1968, his place in American education secure, he had been headmaster for sixty-six years. During all those years he also coached the football, basketball and baseball teams, continuing as an octogenarian to rap out sharp grounders for infield practice before every game. His favorite baseball strategy was the squeeze play--a mark, perhaps, of his Yankee practicality. He was an unusually small man with a plain New England face, slicked-down black hair, and metal-rimmed glasses; nobody would have noticed him in a crowd or picked him out as a leader. But three generations of boys were shaped for life by his values, and I was one of them.

The second legend was his wife, Helen Childs Boyden. A tall, bony woman with a face even plainer than her husband's, she wore her black hair tied in a bun and she peered out at the world through thick glasses, triumphing over eyesight so bad that it would have immobilized a person of weaker will. Helen Childs had also come to Deerfield as a young teacher, fresh out of SmithCollege with a science degree. She married Frank Boyden in 1907 and for more than sixty years was a strengthening presence in his life and in the life of the school. She was best known, however, for her senior course in chemistry. The legend was that she could teach chemistry to anybody. As it turned out, she couldn't teach it to me.

The fault was undoubtedly mine. I'm sure I didn't want to learn chemistry. Probably I had also persuaded myself that I couldn't learn chemistry, or any of the hard sciences. Those subjects were for all those people who had an aptitude for them--the ones who carried a slide rule and could take a radio apart. I was a liberal arts snob, illiterate about the physical world I lived in, incurious about how things worked. The courses I felt most comfortable with were English and languages, and in my extracurricular hours I indulged my other two loves--playing baseball and writing for the school newspaper. I did what came easiest and avoided what I might not be able to do well.

My favorite language was Latin. It transported me back to the classical world, and yet it was anything but dead-thousands of its roots were alive and well in English; in fact, no subject has been more useful to me as a writer and an editor. I took Latin for three years at Deerfield until there were no more courses left to take, finally getting beyond Caesar's dreary wars and Cicero's prim orations to Virgil's "Aeneid "and Horace's odes, finally discovering that the wonderful language also had a wonderful literature.

My teacher in that liberating third year was a man so venerable that he seemed to be a schoolmaster from the nineteenth century. Recalling him now, I think of pictures ofDarwin as an old man. Charles Huntington Smith had silky white hair, a white mustache and a white goatee, and he wore the black suit and high collar befitting his age and dignity. But his eyes were young, and so were his passions for what he taught. He had turned his classroom into a small corner of ancient Rome. Large framed photographs of the Forum and the Colosseum hung on the walls, and he had also sent away for plaster reproductions of some of the great statues of antiquity. Hermes on tiptoe, beckoning the gods, was on his desk, and the Winged Victory was nearby, still sending her message about beauty and line across the centuries. Mr. Smith was obviously aware of the power exerted by the icons that inhabit the classrooms of our childhood; when I was in Italy during World War II, the first time I got a few days off I hitchhiked to Rome to see the Forum, though the distance was great and the hours I could spend there were short.

In my senior year reality caught up with me: I had to take Mrs. Boyden 's chemistry. I remember her classroom almost as vividly as Mr. Smith's. I can still smell its acrid smells, alien to my humanist nose. I can still see the retorts and beakers and other strangely shaped vessels designed for measuring whatever they were designed to measure. But the icon that dominates my memory is the huge chart of the periodic table of the elements that hung at the front of the room. Those cryptic letters and numbers, so neatly arranged in their boxes and columns, were the Hermes and Venus of the chemistry class--the gods whose laws and whims would rule our lives. Each box contained its own tremendous story of natural forces working out an ordained pattern. What couldthat story possibly be? I never found out. The periodic table continues to rebuke me for my indolence.

Mrs. Boyden had devised a teaching method that I remember as slightly cute but that obviously worked for three generations of boys. It had something to do with one molecule joining hands with another and going off to form a different combination. I must have resisted these little romances, for by about April someone in authority began to think the unthinkable: I would flunk the college entrance exam in chemistry. This would not only ruin my chances of getting into Princeton; it would besmirch Deerfield's proud record of placing its seniors in America's best colleges.

Review Quotes:

"An elegant exposition of the thesis that to write is to learn...in the tradition of Strunk and White, a model in its own right."Kirkus Reviews

Details
 
Weight1.00 lbs
Author William Zinsser
ISBN 0062720406
Format Paperback
Pages 272 pages
Availability Ships Same Day!
Why purchase here? Proceeds help develop HOW Unit Studies!
Price: $11.75
Customer Points:11

Options
 
Quantity

 Add to cart 
        


  16%
 

  Send to friend
Your name: *
Your e-mail: *
Recipient's e-mail: *

 Send to friend 
 

  Related products
#16500 The Heart of Wisdom Teaching Approach
 


  Customers who bought this also bought...
Living Emblems: Ancient Symbols of Faith Living Emblems: Ancient Symbols of Faith
Daily Life at the Time of Jesus Daily Life at the Time of Jesus
Adam and His Kin: The Lost History of Their Lives and Times Adam and His Kin: The Lost History of Their Lives and Times
Castle of Wisdom Castle of Wisdom
Light Package Light Package
 

  Customers rating
Customers rating

Customer voting

 


Customer Reviews

Author: Unknown
I read this book for both its subject matter and the bibliography. Zinsser leads the reader to good writing in the literature of mathematics physics and chemistry and more from disciplines thought of as other than suitable for writerfs. Zinsser shows by example that writing is not the sole domain of the humanities but across the spectrum of disciplines. He builds the case for writing across the curriculum, providing good models from fields as diverse as chemistry to music. Here is an engaging way to learn for all of us. There is an exciting literature to be written of mathematics, physics, chemistry and biochemistry. In the words of William Zinsser, gIf writing is learned by imitation, I want every learner to imitate the best.h Writing to Learn names some of the giants from a variety of disciplines and shows the way by referencing their work.
As more than a million copies of this book have been sold and its being issued on its 25th anniversary, Washington would do well to mandate purchase of Writing to Learn by politicians, teachers and other agitators claiming more tax dollars for education, and send them away with the missive: READ AND APPLY NO FUNDING SUPPLIED. William Zinsser has given us a brilliant and practical; low-tech and real learning philosophy for the classroom and beyond.



 
 

 
     Users online
50  unregistered customer(s)
1  registered
customer(s)



     Message Board
Homeschool Board
Holidays Board
Newsletter Archive


     Unit Study Links
Find a Resource
Find a Internet Source


     Your cart
Cart is empty

View cart
Checkout


     LOG IN AREA
Secure login
Register
Recover password

If you have disabled Javascript in your browser click here




 

  Powered by X-Cart: shopping cart software Copyright © 2000-2008 Heart of Wisdom Store