Seven Types of Paragraph Development
Seven Types of Paragraph Development
Seven Types of sometimes develop the habit of writing everything in short, choppy
paragraphs that are unrelated to one another. Reviewing any good high
Paragraph school writing handbook will remind you that considerable thought has
been given to how longer paragraphs can be developed into well
Development focused presentations of single units of thought.
Narration Around 2 a.m. something woke Charles Hanson up. He lay in the dark
listening. Something felt wrong. Outside, crickets sang, tree-frogs
chirruped. Across the distant forest floated two muffled hoots from a barred
owl. It was too quiet. At home in New Jersey, the nights are filled with the
busy, comforting sounds of traffic. You always have the comforting
knowledge that other people are all around you. And light: At home he can
read in bed by the glow of the streetlight. It was too quiet. And much too
dark. Even starlight failed to penetrate the 80-foot canopy of trees the
camper was parked beneath. It was the darkest dark he had ever seen. He
felt for the flashlight beside his bunk. It was gone. He found where his
pants were hanging and, as he felt the pockets for a box of matches,
something rustled in the leaves right outside the window, inches from his
face. He heard his wife, Wanda, hold her breath; she was awake, too. Then,
whatever, was outside in the darkness also breathed, and the huge silence of
the night seemed to come inside the camper, stifling them. It was then he
decided to pack up and move to a motel.
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Exposition This family was a victim of a problem they could have avoided-a problem
that, according to Florida park rangers, hundreds of visitors suffer each
year. "Several times a month," ranger Rod Torres of O'Leno State Park
said, "people get scared and leave the park in the middle of the night."
Those people picked the wrong kind of park to visit. Not that there was
anything wrong with the park: The hikers camped next to them loved the
wild isolation of it. But it just wasn't the kind of place the couple from New
Jersey had in mind when they decided to camp out on this trip through
Florida. If they had known about the different kinds of parks in Florida,
they might have stayed in a place they loved.
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Definition "Park" is difficult to define in Florida, because there are so many kinds of
parks. Basically, a park is a place to go for outdoor recreation-to swim,
picnic, hike, camp, walk the dog, play tennis, paddle your canoe, and, in
some places take rides in miniature trains or swish down a waterslide.
Florida has a rich variety of parks, ranging from acres of RVs ringed
around recreation halls, to impenetrable mangrove wilderness. To make
things more complicated, not all of them are called "parks," and even the
ones called "parks" come in several varieties.
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Description O'Leno is a good example of a state park in Florida. Surrounded by the tall,
shaded woods of a beautiful hardwood forest, the Santa Fe River disappears
in a large, slowly swirling, tree-lined pool. After appearing intermittently in
scattered sinkholes, the river rises three miles downstream in a big boil,
then continues on to meet the Suwannee and the sea. Nearby, stands of
cypress mirror themselves in the still waters, walls of dense river swamp
rise before you, sudden sinkholes open in the woodlands-rich with cool
ferns and mosses. Farther from the river, expanses of longleaf pinelands
stretch across rolling hills. In the midst of this lovely setting, you find 65
campsites, 18 rustic cabins, and a pavilion for group meetings. A diving
platform marks a good place to swim in the soft, cool waters of the Santa
Fe, and canoeing up this dark river is like traveling backwards in time in the
direction of original Florida.
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Comparison Forest and river dominate O'Leno State Park. By contrast, Lloyd Beach
State Recreation Area, near Fort Lauderdale, is dominated by the oily
bodies of sun-worshippers who crowd into it every summer weekend.
Where O'Leno gives you so much quiet you can hear the leaves whispering,
Lloyd Beach is a place of boisterous activity. You can walk a few yards in
O'Leno and pass beyond every sign of human civilization. When you walk
at Lloyd Beach, you have to be careful to step over the picnic baskets,
umbrellas, jam boxes, and browning bodies. At night, O'Leno wraps itself
with the silence of crickets and owls. Lloyd Beach is busy with fishermen
till well past midnight. If you want to fish near town, or dive into the busy
bustle of an urban beach, Lloyd Beach is the place to go. But if you want to
stand at the edge of civilization and look across time into an older natural
world, O'Leno is the park to visit.
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Process Analysis [Note: I couldn't think of a way to write the following paragraphs that
followed naturally from the previous material. For the next paragraph,
pretend you are reading an article on how to put up a particular brand of
tent.]
When you find the park you are looking for, you will need to make camp.
One person can set up the FamilyProof Tent, though it is easier with two,
yet almost impossible with three or more. Here's how:
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Persuasion Before you go camping in Florida, plan ahead. Don't wind up in the wilds
when you want to be near Disney World, and don't wind up on a concrete
RV pad when you really want the forest primeval. Find out what parks are
available, and what they are like. Get good information on what to expect,
and what your options are. This can make all the difference in the quality of
your vacation.
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