Academic
Prose Papers (8% in total)
(There are four Academic
Prose Papers worth 2% each)
TURNITIN.COM
SUBMISSIONS REQUIRED, TEN (10) MINUTES OR MORE PRIOR TO BEGINNING OF CLASS ON OR
BEFORE THE DUE DATE, AFTER WHICH THE PAPERS WILL LOSE 5% PER CALENDAR DAY LATE,
PER LATE WORK POLICIES ON THE COURSE SYLLABUS.
General guidelines:
- Academic Prose
Papers are certainly very simple and short assignments, and they should be
written in a very formal prose style, for they are meant to help students
to develop their academic prose style (more about this under “Grading
Criteria).
- They are two
paragraphs long, and the length of the paper in total should be between a
minimum of 100 words to a maximum of 150 words.
- To make certain
your word count is correct (in MS Word) you can click on “Tools” and then
click on “word count.
- Use the formatting guidelines
established during class lectures.
- The assigned text will always be poems
you will access from the Web by clicking on the appropriate link from the
“Assignment Calendar” section of the course syllabus.
Prompt:
- I simply want
your thoughts on the assigned reading—it could be a video clip or an
article—that might take the form of addressing one or more of the
following:
- If it is about
a new technological advance, what are the benefits and/or the downsides?
- Perhaps there
is something the video/article fails to consider.
- Does it lack
information you wanted to see included?
- The above list
(1 through 3) is just an example of an approach to this assignment. If you
have other thoughts then feel free to take a different approach.
Grading Criteria:
- The total number
of words in your two paragraphs must be 100 to 150 words.
- Use a document
header, as you should for all assignments.
- Use a two-part title
separated by a colon, neither part of which should contain the name of the
assignment, nor should it contain part or all of the name of the poem.
- The formatting
guidelines on the syllabus/class lectures must be observed.
- The paper should
be two paragraphs long.
- Writing must be
free—or predominantly free—of typos, awkward/unclear phrasing, and
sentence level errors.
- Do not use
contractions.
- Do not use first
person pronouns such as “I” “me” “my.”
- Do not use
second person pronouns such as “you” “your” “yours.”
- Do not engage in
personal stories, meaning stories of your own life experiences, or the
experiences of friends, family, and so on.
- Do not begin
sentences with conjunctions: but, and, or, nor, for, so, yet.
- Do not pose any
questions in any assignments. This means, quite literally, not to use
questions. Make statements instead.
- Do not quote the
bible or make allusions to religion in any way.
- Avoid any form
of direct address to the reader, such as "think about the fact that .
. ."
- Avoid too casual
of a prose style, such as sentences that begin with words like "well,
sure, now, yes, no."
- Do not use the
phrase “a lot,” which can usually be replaced with one of the following
words: many, most, much.
- Because Academic
Prose Papers are so short, do not quote more than a very brief line or
two, if anything at all, from of the poem.
Some Important
Points:
- Remember that
part of this course involves working toward higher level writing
skills. To that end, your writing
should sound less like a verbal conversation between friends, and more
like an academic paper, which means it has a formal tone. Everyone should be attempting to make
his or her prose sound more scholarly.
- Engage the
Assignment Calendar section of the course syllabus for due dates and the
poems over which you will write these papers.
How to turn in these
papers: a
paper copy is due during class on the due date. Additionally, an electronic
copy is due, ten (10) minutes or more prior to the beginning of class on or
before the due date, after which the paper will lose 5% per calendar day late,
per late work policies on the course syllabus; it must be turned in to
TurnItIn.com as a MS Word doc or docx file. Use the TurnItIn.com “file upload”
method on the submit screen. You will be instructed during class about how to
create a TurnItIn.com account, and how to turn in your work. Your essays will
be considered late until both the paper copy and the electronic copies are
turned in. All other rules for late work, as delineated in section six of the
course syllabus, also apply. Moreover, your electronic turn-in must be an exact
duplicate of the paper copy. In other words, no further corrections or
revisions will be accepted. Also, if the electronic and paper copies do not
match up it will have a negative impact on the assignment’s grade.
TURNITIN.COM
SUBMISSIONS REQUIRED, TEN (10) MINUTES OR MORE PRIOR TO BEGINNING OF CLASS ON
OR BEFORE THE DUE DATE, AFTER WHICH THE PAPERS WILL LOSE 5% PER CALENDAR DAY LATE,
PER LATE WORK POLICIES ON THE COURSE SYLLABUS.