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Reading Nonfiction Study Guide: GED Language Arts, Reading (page 3)

By LearningExpress Editors
LearningExpress, LLC
Updated on Mar 9, 2011

Research Reports

You may also be asked to address research writing on the GED. This is another area of nonfiction that can be either purely factual or a matter of opinion. In research writing, however, the author generally states quite openly whether he or she is presenting an opinion of an issue—and will use facts and figures from research to support that opinion.

A research report addresses some area of scientific study, providing many facts, figures, and statistics that were learned during the study. This type of writing can include almost any subject, from medical research to political opinion polls to a company's annual financial report. Research reports frequently also include charts and graphs that visually illustrate the study's findings—whether it's a simple chart showing a company's increased profits over a period of time, or more complex diagrams illustrating various trends in public opinion or chemical reactions under differing conditions.

Some research reports also present the author's opinions or conclusions that he or she has drawn from the facts in the study. These opinions, however, are generally clearly stated as opinions, rather than disguised as purely factual reporting, such as can be found in journalistic writing. The author may believe that a company needs to take certain steps to increase profits and decrease costs, and will use the facts from the study to demonstrate why this is so.

Literary Nonfiction

Another form of nonfiction writing is called literary nonfiction because it uses many of the techniques and styles that we discussed in Chapter 3 on fiction. Informational nonfiction deals with facts and figures and statistics, while literary nonfiction deals with opinions, perceptions, and ideas that are held by the author. It is still nonfiction, because the subject matter is real and not make-believe, yet it is not strictly informational, because the author is not merely trying to educate but to persuade the reader, to present an opinion and convince the reader that it is the correct opinion.

Again, there are many types of literary nonfiction, but we will examine just a few of the major types that you may encounter on the GED. These types of literary nonfiction include biographies, essays, letters, and speeches.

Biographies

A biography is the story of a person's life. It is nonfiction because it deals with facts concerning a real person who really lived at some point in history. A biography is written by an author about someone else, which distinguishes it from memoirs or autobiographies (which we will discuss in a moment).

The word biography comes from the Greek words bios, meaning life, and graph, meaning writing. So a biography is literally a life writing, a story about someone's life. This could technically include the life story of a fictional character, but in general the term biography is used to refer to the story of a real person.

Once again, you will discover that biographies are factual and non-fictional—yet they may still present matters of opinion. There are many biographies written about Abraham Lincoln, for example, yet not all draw the same conclusions about his career as president of the United States. Two different writers might write biographies about the same person and address the same facts and historical events, yet the authors may use those facts and events to draw very different conclusions about the person.

Biographers (the people who write biographies) draw their information from many different sources. If the person they are writing about is still living, a biographer will base much of his or her information upon conversations with that person. Many biographies, however, are written about people who are no longer alive—and who have been dead long enough that there is nobody alive who actually knew that person. In this case, there is obviously no chance to talk with the subject or the subject's friends, and biographers must rely upon other sources of information to learn the accurate facts and dates and statistics of the person's life.

For example, an author might write a book about Julius Caesar, an emperor of Rome. Julius Caesar lived more than 2,000 years ago, so the biographer will be forced to draw information about him from other documents—books that have been written by other writers, historical documents, and similar sources.

This sort of biography is similar to research reports in one important detail: It provides the reader with many facts and dates, and it tells the readers where those facts came from. This is known as documenting one's sources-telling the reader where the author found a certain fact or figure so that the reader can verify the author's accuracy.

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