What it Says/What it Does. Authored by: Susan Oaks. Project: Introduction to College Reading & Writing. License: CC BY-NC: Attribution-NonCommercial
Just as the SQ3R approach integrates many aspects of reading, working with, and understanding a text, What it Says/What it Does is an approach that integrates paraphrasing and summarizing, multiple aspects of analyzing arguments, and evaluating researched sources.
Although What is Says/What it Does is a simple graphic to implement, it’s based on careful reading, critical thinking, and text analysis. It’s an especially useful approach for a text that offers an argument, and/or for a relatively sophisticated text, as it helps you think through how the text “works.” In effect, it helps you understand the text by getting you to consider an author’s intentions behind their words.
The What is Does column, where you evaluate rhetorical devices and determine how the author creates meaning, helps you analyze the function of each paragraph or selected piece of text. It helps you identify rhetorical devices that an author relies on. It helps you understand how an author develops an argument, if the purpose of the text is to persuade. It helps you evaluate the logical soundness of the argument, and decide whether you can accept the meaning that the author intends. Finally, it adds to your own toolkit as a writer, since it enables you to see how an author consciously chooses words, information, and strategies to create meaning.
This example is based on the article “Forget Shorter Showers” that has been the basis for the TRY IT exercises in the Evaluating a Text section of this site. A What it Says/What it Does approach for the first 3 paragraphs might look like this:
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