Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Final Exam Essay


Wow!! The semester has simply flown by. I guess it’s true what they say—Time flies when you are having fun. At least I was having fun this semester, and I hope that you were too. The one of my goals is to create an environment that destresses people concerning the writing process. I hope that you found our 2 hours per week together relaxing. And now what you have all been waiting for—the absolute final paper.


Your final exam essay is to be a reflective paper. In other words, I want you to reflect on the mountains of writing, the forests of grammar exercises, and the deluge of class discussions that we have had this semester and answer the question: What’s the point? In other words, what was the purpose of the activities of the class and how did they help you grow as a writer and become more confident in your writing abilities? Finally, hat are the take aways? How do you feel that this class has adequately prepared you for ENC 1102 and/or the writing demands in your other classes?


Yeah. I know. It’s hard and you have to think, but you can do it. Your essay should be 4-6 pages, have an effective introduction that ends in an appropriate thesis statement. It should cite specific examples and use and identifiable organizational strategy. Finally, because all is well that ends well, it must have an effective conclusion.


Your essay can take any form that you wish and employ any organizational pattern that you feel would be appropriate and effective to convey your ideas.


And so now you’re thinking, wow, there has to be a catch somewhere. So here’s the catch: You will complete this essay completely on your own without any input or editing from me.


This activity is designed to test to see how well you can apply the skills and tools that we have been working on all semester in a completely autonomous way. I look forward to reading what you have to say!!!


Happy writing,


Mrs. M



Due: Your essay is due by Wednesday, December 12 at 10:00 am. You may not submit your essay via email.








Monday, December 3, 2007

Documented Argumentative Paper


Overview


Since we will be killing two birds with one stone on this paper, the directions will be more involved and detailed. As a result, for you to be successful, you will need to follow these directions very closely. If you do, you will find that writing this kind of paper will be easier than you ever thought that it could be. I know that many of you have experience with writing research papers in high school and had to complete note cards and bibliography cards and all that. Who has time for all that? I’m going to show you how to streamline the process. There will be a few things that you will need though.


Materials:

Highlighter

PJC Student ID

Duo Tang Notebook to keep your research together and submit your research and essay for grading.


Reading:

Steps to Writing Well pp 355-406


The problem that most students encounter when writing a researched paper is that they tend to rely on the quotes to speak for them rather than using the quotes to substantiate their argument. Yes, there is a difference. This step-by-step process helps you avoid that tendency.


Finally, because the purpose of the paper and your role as the writer are different than they traditional researched paper, your topic selection is going to be critical. The traditional research paper in high school is designed for you to learn something about your topic and record your learning in the essay—it’s an informative essay. In an informative essay, the research is used to prove that you have learned something. In college, the expectation is different. You will be expected to have enough knowledge of the topic to be able to formulate an opinion about it. As a result, the research substantiates your argument by showing that other, more learned individuals share your opinion. Consequently, as you consider topics, think of things that you know something about. Don’t choose a topic that you have limited experience or knowledge of.

We have already completed steps 1-3 with the problem solution meets causal analysis essay.


Step 1: Choose a topic. Remember that it should be something that you know something about and aren’t researching and learning about for the first time.


Step 2: Decide on a working thesis statement. Your working thesis statement is one that is not carved in stone but is able to change as you write your paper. You may decide that your thesis is too broad for the length of the paper, so you will have to narrow it. Or you may find that your opinion changed a bit and so then you would need to refine your thesis. Hence, we call this preliminary thesis statement a “working” thesis statement.


Step 3: Write a position paper. And now you are wondering what exactly is a position paper? Never fear—I won’t leave you hanging long. A position paper is just what the name implies—It’s an essay in which you present your position on a given subject. In other words, it’s an argumentative essay and it will become the foundation of your research paper. Your position paper should be 3-5 pages in length, have an effective introduction which ends with your working thesis statement, a well-developed body which has a recognizable organizational pattern, and an effective conclusion. I will grade your position paper based on the aforementioned areas.


Step 4: Do research. I’ll give you the class period and be available to help you with research issues on Mon 12/3. During that time, I will show you time saving tips concerning efficiently finding what you need when you need it and the various resources available to you. You'll need to find 10-12 articles that deal with your topic in some way. The articles can be historic in nature--provide an overview of the problem, discuss solutions that have not worked in the past, suggest a new solution that has yet to be tried. If I were doing research, I would find articles evenly distributed among the sections of the paper.

Step 5: Prepare an annotated bibliography using the 10-12 sources that you found during your library research time. An annotated bibliography is an alphabetical list by author (if the article has not author, use the first word of the title and place it in the list in the appropriate alphabetical spot) of sources that you might possibly use in your research paper. The Each entry has an annotation, or brief summary (2-3 sentences), that explains what the article is about and why it might be useful to you in your paper as you develop your argument. Here are sample annotated bibliography entries:

Prager, Emily. "Our Bodies, Ourselves." The Bedford Reader. Ed. X. J. Kennedy, Dorothy Kennedy, Jane Aaron. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's Press, 2000. 288-290.

This article deals with the ways Barbie dolls have influenced generations of women’s body images. She presents such arguments as the emasculation of Ken, Barbie’s disproportionate, unrealistically shaped body, and points out that some could even consider her a liberated woman.

Sontag, Susan. "Women's Beauty: Put Down or Power Source?." 75 Readings: An Anthology. Ed. Santi Buscemi, Charlotte Smith. New York: McGraw Hill, 2007. 91-94.

Sontag argues that it is virtually impossible to be considered beautiful and effective or competent at the same time. She points out that women, who are traditionally seen as the weaker sex are the only ones that can be described as beautiful. In addition she looks to Christianity as a source of the dichotomy between outward and inward beauty.

The above entries are color coded for a purpose. The information in gold is the bibliographic information. Bibliographic information is the road map, if you will, that leads someone else to be able to find the exact same information that you did in putting together you paper. It includes the author's name, title of the article, where it was published originally, the place of publication, date of publication, etc. To make your life much easier, there is a website that will help you make sure that you have the bibliographic information properly formatted: http://citationmachine.net/. You will choose "MLA." Click on "(more resources)". Then Choose "Work from a Subscription Service Accessed through a Library - one or more authors." At this point you will get a form to fill-out. Include as much information as possible from the articles and then click "submit." The information you provide will be automatically formatted and all you have to do is copy and paste it into your word processing program and make it look like the sample one I have given you.

Step 6: Integrate your research into your position paper as you revise and hone your argument using the proper documentation format. I will show you exactly how to do that as we progress through the assignment. There are three ways that you can integrate source material into your essay.

1. Summary: You can summarize one or more than one article. This is particularly useful when you are providing an overview of an issue. In a summary, you hit the high points of the author or authors' argument. At the end of the summary, you provide a parenthetical citation like this:

One article by one author: (Jones)

One article by more than one author: (Jones, Smith, Wesson)

More than one article: (Jones; Smith; Wesson)

Notice the difference in punctuation. Commas between the names means that they authored the same article; semi-colons different articles

2. Paraphrase: In a paraphrase, you put something the author said in your words, changing not only the vocabulary but also the sentence structure of the original. In other words, you can't just plug-in a few synonyms and call it a paraphrase. At the end of your paraphrase, you also need a parenthetical citation as with a summary.

3. Direct quotation: When you find a statement or statements that perfectly fit your argument and help support your position, you would copy that information word for word in to your paper placing quotation marks (" ") around that information and a parenthetical citation at the end.

As you begin to integrate source material into your essay, you need to think of it as adding a new paragraph to your essay. You wouldn't just stick a new paragraph in your essay without making sure that it makes sense where it is placed and that it doesn't interrupt the flow of the essay. You make sure to use transitions and show how it is connected to what is being said at that point in the essay. The same is true with source information. You have to integrate into your essay rather than just picking a place an plopping it in. So here are the steps you should follow in incorporating source material into your essay:

Introduce the source material in some way. You can suggest what the reader is supposed to get from the source information. If it is the first time that you are using a source, include the author's name and the title of the work in your introduction. Here's a sample:

John Jones argues that 16 is to young to receive a drivers permit in "Sweet Sixteen and a Deadly Killer." He points out that "due to emerging brain research, it has been proven that the part of the brain that controls impulses is not fully developed in 16 year-olds" (15). Because a person at sixteen is more impulsive than a 21 year old, we should consider issuing graduated drivers licenses which give drivers increasing responsibility and privileges as a driver.

The garnet portion is the introduction of the quotation (your text calls this portion a signal phrase). It sets the reader up for the quote. The purple portion is the actual information from the source material. Notice that the number in the parentheses comes before the period and it is the page number that the information can be found on. Most of your articles will not have page numbers, so the author's last name, if there is one, or the title of the article should go in the parentheses. Finally, the information in blue is the transition back into your argument from the source information.

In addition you will need to include a works cited page. A works cited page alphabetically lists only those articles that you included information from in your essay in the proper format. Again, I will show you where to find that information and how to use it. Information concerning integrating research and documenting research can be found on the following pages in the following textbooks.


Steps to Writing Well pp 355-406


Notate Bene: When you turn in your final draft, you will turn in everything—your position paper, copies of your research, final draft of your essay. Part of your grade, as you will see from the following rubric, will be for the process. In other words, did you successfully follow the directions?


Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Class Assignment and Homework Assignment

Special Note: There are two assignments contained in this post--one is an in class assignment and one is a essay assignment

Part I: For class today:

We have been building on writing skills as we have merrily trotted through the class. However, with this last essay, we are going to be combining organizational patterns and melding them into one essay. Never fear, I will not leave you wondering blindly in the compositional wilderness. As always, I have a few activities planned and have clearly laid out the assignment in easy to follow, step-by-step directions. All you have to do is follow directions and you will be in great shape. We've already taken the first step with the Causal Analysis essay we have just completed. The next step will be embedding our causal analysis paper into a problem solution essay. To that end, you have a reading assignment to do:

Read the chapter in your text book called "Chapter 13: Writing Essays Using Multiple Strategies." There are two essays in that chapter--one a professional essay and one a student essay. Read them both, but answer the "Questions on Content and Style" that follow the professional essay. Turn your answers in via email as an attachment before midnight Wednesday November 14th.

Part II: Essay Assignment Due by midnight Wednesday, November 22, via email as an attachment:

Problem Solution Meets Causal Analysis


On the surface, this paper seems like a lot to accomplish. However, these two modes of writing go nicely together. In order to effectively analyze a given problem, writers really have to discuss the causes of the problem and describe the impact that problem has on a given group of people—that’s the causal analysis portion of the paper. Really, it’s impossible to write a problem. Ultimately the purpose of this kind of essay is to not only help your reader realize that something is a problem, but also to join you in doing something about that problem.


Before you write:


  • Decide on a topic. You may stick with the topic that you used for your causal analysis essay or you may choose another topic if you wish. However, your topic selections is going to be key with this paper, more so than any other paper we have written. You will have to make sure that you know enough about the topic without doing research that you can fully develop your ideas. There are going to be topics that are off limits. They are abortion, capital punishment, legalization of any controlled substance.

  • Organize the information concerning your topic according to the following sample outline.



General Outline


  1. Introduction and thesis. Your thesis needs to indicate the kind of essay you are writing as well as include an opinion.

Sample Thesis: Academic dishonesty has become so prevalent and so easy with the increases in technology in recent years. However the real problem is that most students don’t realize that they are being academically dishonest and need to be educated so that it never becomes an issue.

  1. The history of the problem

    1. Explain clearly what the problem is and how it has developed over time into a problem for us today.

    2. Give examples of the problem

    3. Explain the causes of the problem (Causal analysis)

    4. Discuss who the problem affects and the effects it has on them (Causal Analysis)


  1. Transitional paragraph. This paragraph functions much the same as the transitional paragraph in the block style comparison contrast essay. In this essay, it moves you from a discussion of the problem into a discussion of the solutions. As a result, it acts as a mini conclusion to the problem section and a mini introduction to the solutions section.

  2. Solutions—You need three plausible, realistic solutions, and you need to save the best solution for last.

    1. Solution #1

      1. Describe the solution

      2. Evaluate the solution

      3. What are the benefits of the solution—in what ways will it work?

      4. What are the limitations of the solution—in what ways won’t it work?

      5. Based on your evaluation, explain what circumstances are necessary for this solution to be effective.

    2. Solution #2

      1. Describe the solution

      2. Evaluate the solution

      3. What are the benefits of the solution—in what ways will it work?

      4. What are the limitations of the solution—in what ways won’t it work?

      5. Based on your evaluation, explain what circumstances are necessary for this solution to be effective.

    1. Solution #3

      1. Describe the solution

      2. Evaluate the solution

      3. What are the benefits of the solution—in what ways will it work?

      4. What are the limitations of the solution—in what ways won’t it work?

      5. Based on your evaluation, explain why this is the best solution.

  1. Conclusion—In your conclusion, you are going to have to use the call to action method of conclusion (#4 on p 83 in Steps to Writing Well) because, in writing this essay, you are hoping to get people to join you in solving this particular problem.


As you write:


  • Visualize your audience—picture the person you are writing this essay for.

  • Keep in mind the needs of your audience—what are you trying to communicate through this essay? What does your audience need you to do to be able to visualize what you are describing? What does your audience need you to do to feel the sensations that you want them to feel?

  • What background information does your audience need to understand the context of the situation?

  • Make sure that you clearly define the problem, discuss the causes and effects, and offer plausible solutions

  • Include description and figurative language (pp 310-311 in Steps to Writing Well)

  • Be sure to use sensory details

  • Make sure that you have an introduction which contains a thesis statement and a conclusion to the essay. Your introduction should use an identifiable introduction strategy.


The writing assignment:


Write a 6-8 page essay in which you define a problem and offer solutions to that problem. Your essay could be humorous or serious. As always, your essay will be better if you write what you know or something you know a great deal about. Please avoid topics about soccer, boyfriends, girlfriends, spouses, significant others.


Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Hand-outs: 11/7/07

Due by midnight, Wednesday, November 14, 2007 via email

Essay #5—Causal Analysis Essay


Cause and effect relationships are something we learn as very young children: If I break mommy’s vase, she will be mad. If I throw a temper tantrum, I get put in time-out. If I touch a hot stove, it hurts and I have a boo boo. However, as we age and mature, those relationships get much more sophisticated and we need to be able to discuss them. For example, what happens if you get a speeding ticket? There’s no, one, single effect of that one action. It’s a much more complex issue. The goal of exploring this way of organizing an essay is to become more adept at discussion the causes and effects of those more sophisticated issues that we confront every day.


Before you write:


  • Review pages 263-265 in Steps to Writing Well.

  • Decide on a topic. If you are having trouble thinking of a topic, there is a list of potential topics in Steps to Writing Well.


As you write:


  • Decide on your purpose for writing—that is what is the main point of your essay? Decide which item of comparison is the preferred one and make that clear in your thesis.

  • Organize your ideas—use some sort of invention strategy (brainstorming, clustering, free writing, etc)

  • Visualize your audience—picture the person you are writing this essay for.

  • Keep in mind the needs of your audience—what are you trying to communicate through this essay? What does your audience need you to do to be able to visualize what you are describing? What does your audience need you to do to feel the sensations that you want them to feel?

  • What background information does your audience need to understand the context of the situation?

  • Make sure that you present the causes and analyze the effects.

  • Include description and figurative language (pp 310-311 in Steps to Writing Well)

  • Be sure to use sensory details

  • Make sure that you have an introduction which contains a thesis statement and a conclusion to the essay. Your introduction should use an identifiable introduction strategy.


The writing assignment:


Write a 5-7 page essay in which analyze the causes and effects of an issue or situation. Your essay could be humorous or serious. As always, your essay will be better if you write what you know or something you know a great deal about. Please avoid topics about boyfriends, girlfriends, spouses, significant others.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Reading Log #11

Sorry we missed each other yesterday. I was running just a few minutes late, had to get gas in my daughter's car as we had to swap cars for the day and it was below empty, and had to fight with the copier once I got there to get the assignment copied that I had hoped to do with you yesterday. It's all good though because you can be better prepared for it by completing the following assignment for homework.

Find the section titled "Strategy Six: Development by Causal Analysis" in your text book on pp 263. Read that section, paying attention to the things you should do and should not do as you read the section. Then read the professional essay by Barbara Kingsolver's "How Mr. Dewey Decimal Changed My Life" on p. 691 in your text. Then identify each of the elements on the "should do" list in the essay and provide examples of them in your post. For example, the first tip is to provide a reasonable thesis statement. You would then determine what the thesis statement of Kingsolver's essay is, write it down, and then explain why you think it's reasonable or not. Do that for all of the tips.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Wednesday's Class--10/24/07

I am sorry that I was not able to meet with you today. Here is what we would have completed in class had I been there. Please complete both assignments and submit them via email by midnight October, 24, 2007.

Your comparison/contrast essays are still due. Turn them into Mrs. Bigelow in building 4200. She will put them in my mail box.

Assignment #1
Types of Love


An almost infinite variety of types of love exists. The love of parents for their children is different from the love of brothers for their sisters, of wives for their husbands, of kids for their pets, and on and on. Choose two people in your life whom you love and write a 2 page essay explaining how your love for each of them is different. Be sure to complete a comparison table and an outline. Submit your planning and essay via email as an attachment.

Assignment #2
Grammar Editing

Directions: All of the following sentences have one or more errors. Find and correct the errors in each sentence.

When dad took Carlos and I to the Trevor museum last week we saw a painting titled The roaring Twenties.

Although I dont know weather it was painted in the 20s or not, it sure looked like it could have been.

In the 1920s—when life for some was lighthearted, outrajous, and indulgent—came to be know as the jazz age.

The novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald—This Side of paradise, Tender is the night, and The Great Gatsby—describes that era.

Anyone interested in the Jazz Age should read Tales of the Jazz Age, they will find the madgority of the stories most illuminating.

The stories acknowledge that victorian principals, which dominated the country until then were dying quick.

Each of the stories, in my judgement, explore familiar Fitzgerald themes such as the search for romance the lure of money and that doom is near.

The protagonists of The Diamond as big as the Ritz, a fantasy are students at a prestijious school.

Have your read “Woman with a Past,” asked ms. Harris, “that story really impressed my friends and I when we were your age.”

“I wish I read more stories before I read the novels,” answered Tawanna, “I would of gotten more out of the novels.”

Dont some writers try to expose evil, is’nt reform their primmary goal.

Upton Sinclair for example was a writer whom fought tennaciously for ordinary peoples’ rights.

Written in 1906 Sinclair’s novel The Jungle for instance, is the grim story of Jurgis Rudkus a Slavic immigrant who poverty corrupts.

He works in the stockyards of chicago where they use primmative methods of food preparation and subjects workers to terrible labor conditions.

The worker’s houses, which they love at first were constructed too quick and cheal, however the buyers are trapped.

Wore down by the brutal conditions Ona, Jurgis’s wife loses her ambition her hope and finally her life.

Those sort of book sometimes have a powerful affect on contemporary readers, The Jungle for one. Caused a sensation.

To show his concern president Theodore Roosevelt invited Sinclair to the white house for discussion, analysis, and to plan.

Which of the abuses shocked readers most, the revolting conditions in the meatroom or treating workers so shabbily.

Well one of the results were the passage of the pure food and drug act of 1906.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Extra Credit Opportunity

Want Extra Credit points? Have I got a deal for you!!

Attend the presentation by Dr. Delaino (PJC President) on Wednesday at 10:30. Not only do you get a chance to see, hear, and ask any burning questions you have of the president, but you also get free lunch. The festivities take place in the commons (email me if you don't know where that is). Find me so that you will get your 10 extra credit points.You'll have a new blog to reply to tomorrow.