AUTHOR’S PURPOSE
MODES OF WRITING
THREE REASONS FOR
WRITING
1. To Persuade (Persuasive)
2. To Inform (Expository)
3. Entertain (Narrative or Poetry)
Express (Thoughts or Feelings)
WRITING TO PERSUADE
Attempts to influence the reader.
Usually makes an argument.
Examples:
• Political speeches
• Advertisements
• A cover letter for your resume
• An essay urging readers to recycle
WRITING TO INFORM
Often called expository writing.
Expository writing shows or explains facts.
Examples:
• Biography of Barack Obama
• News report about a shooting
• Note to a friend
• Essay about “killer bees”
Remember: Expository = Expose
WRITING TO ENTERTAIN
Narratives: stories. Have a beginning, middle, and end
A story may have a lesson, but the author’s main
purpose is to entertain.
Examples of Writing to Entertain
• Harry Potter books
• Poems about love
• Narrative essay about the big game
• Script for a TV show
WRITING TO EXPRESS
Share thoughts or feelings:
A feature article in a magazine or newspaper.
Examples of Writing to Express
• Memoir sharing personal experience (Water Woman)
(King of the Road).
• True account of a personal incident.
Does the text make arguments? (P)
Does the text give facts? (I)
Is it a story, poem, or drama (script)? (E)
Is the story about a personal event? (E)
Persuade Entertain
Inform Express
REVIEW
• Persuasive writing expresses an opinion (may use facts to
support).
• Informative or expository writing provides factual
information about a topic.
• All narratives are written to entertain, but so is poetry.
• If a story is about a personal experience, such as a
memoir, the purpose is to express.
PRACTICE
You will be graded on participation and completion, not on
accuracy.
1. On a separate sheet of paper, number one through
ten.
2. I will describe a piece of writing.
3. You will write the author’s purpose: to persuade,
inform, entertain, or express.
1
A magazine article containing a true story
about a girl’s feelings about watching the
Yankees with her father.
2
A list of the 25 richest athletes in the world.
3
An article arguing why Michael Jordan is
the greatest basketball player ever.
4
An “X-men” comic book.
5
A true account of a Vietnamese child
whose village is terrorized by a horse
snake.
6
A National Geographic article about the
eating and breeding habits of the
endangered bald eagle.
7
A website saying that a new shopping mall
should not be built because it threatens an
endangered bald eagle’s home. The
website also lists other reasons why the
mall should not be built.
8
A poem about bald eagles.
9
A magazine ad telling you to buy Nike
Hyperdunk shoes because you’ll jump
higher.
10
A sign saying, “Rest Stop Five Miles Ahead.”
ANSWERS
1. Express
2. Inform
3. Persuade
4. Entertain
5. Express
6. Inform
7. Persuade
8. Entertain
9. Persuade
10. Inform