Annotation Acronyms

The following acronyms may help students to remember different elements of writer’s craft to consider when annotating a text.

D.U.D.A.T.S. – the “6 gold pieces” of writer’s voice
Diction refers to a writer’s word choice with the following considerations:

Unity refers to the idea that all of the ideas in a written piece are relevant and appropriate to the focus.
Some considerations:

Coherence refers to the organization and logic of a piece of writing; some considerations include:

Audience refers to the writer’s awareness of who will be reading his or her piece of writing; some considerations are:

Tone refers to a writer’s ability to create an attitude towards the subject matter of a piece of writing; the tools a writer uses to create tone:

Syntax refers to the arrangement- the ordering, grouping, and placement- of words within a phrase, clause, or sentence. Some considerations:

D.I.T.S.- the elements of tone
Diction refers to a writers (or speaker’s) word choice; besides the dictionary definition of a word (its denotation) a word can have an emotional charge or association that creates a secondary meaning (its connotation) “the difference between the right word and almost the right word is the difference between lightening and a lightning bug.” Mark twain
Imagery refers to mental pictures or sensations that a writer evokes in a reader. Look carefully at the pictures that a writer creates; notes his/her descriptive details in the setting such as: colors, objects, weather, seasons, use of light or darkness, look at any symbols and what feelings they may suggest.
Theme refers to the author’s message or to the overarching idea that the text leads the reader to consider. Think about the author’s message; what attitude comes through in his/ her main point?
Style refers to the writer’s use of language; is it formal, informal, technical? What details did the writer choose in to include or omit? Examine the various elements of characterization; assess what messages the writer is sending through his characters’ actions, reaction, thoughts, speech, physical description or other character’s comments. What feelings are created by the writer’s plot? What feelings are created by the conflict and how it is solved or resolved?
Note: a huge thank you goes out to Sarah Ross for compiling the following list of acronyms for her students at Olympia in the form of literary analysis guide. Whenever possible, the original source is acknowledged.
T.A.P.S. - General Literary Analysis
Topic: what is the topic of the text?
Audience: to whom is the message directed?
Purpose: what is the writer’s goal?
Speakers: what can be inferred about the speaker’s attitude toward the topic or the audience?
S.O.A.P.S.Tone- Analyzing pint of view
Speaker: is there someone identified as the speaker? Can you make some assumptions about this person? What class does the author come from? What political bias can be inferred? What gender?
Occasion: what may have prompted the author to write this piece? What event led to its publication or development?
Audience: does the speaker identify an audience? What assumptions can you make about the audience? Is it a mixed in terms of: race, politics, gender, social class, religion, etc? Who was the document created for? Des the speaker use language that is specific for a unique audience? Does the speaker evoke: nations? Liberty? God? History? Hell? Does the speaker allude to any particular time in history such as: Ancient  times? Industrial revolution? World wars? Vietnam?
Purpose: what is the speaker’s purpose? In what ways does the author convey this message? What seems to be the emotional state of the speaker? How is the speaker trying to spark a reaction in the audience? What words or phrase show the speaker’s tone? How is this document supposed to make you feel?
Subject: what is the subject of the piece? How do you know this? How has the subject been selected and presented by the author?
Tone: what is the author’s attitude toward the subject? How is the writer’s attitude revealed?