Category: English

  • “The American Dream and Work Culture in Ling Ma’s Convenience Store Woman” Exploring the Sociohistorical Commentary of American Society in [Text] by [Author] “Uncovering Misunderstandings: A Critique of American Society through Biographical and Historical Research” “Improving Writing Skills: Addressing Common Errors and Mastering MLA Formatting”

    I chose to do the conviencence store woman by Ling Ma 
    From the syllabus: “Examine an author’s or playwright’s critique of American society in their work through methodical research.”
    This essay asks you to research one of our texts and examine it through an historical or biographical approach. Find in one of our readings a topic related to American society, American work culture, and/or the American Dream and examine how the author/playwright explores that topic through that work of literature.
    “Literature adds to reality, it does not simply describe it. It enriches the necessary competencies that daily life requires and provides; and in this respect, it irrigates the deserts that our lives have already become.”
    ― C.S. Lewis
    Directions
    Literature is not just to entertain, but also to instruct. For the purposes of this essay, you’ll research and argue how the concerns authors/playwrights have about American society can be expressed through works of literature. All societies have problems, areas their citizens find irritating, hurtful, or dangerous; for this essay, make an historical or biographical assertion about the author with regard to their critique of American society, American work culture, and/or the American Dream.
    Choose a story from our class (on which you have yet to write) and, through research, seek out biographical or historical information that helps you explain what issue the author/playwright was writing about and whether or not their work inspired any change. For this project, you will need to research an issue or problem with American society, American work culture and/or the American Dream; examine the author’s/playwright’s relationship with that issue or problem; explain how the story addresses it; and, finally, discover the lasting cultural impact of their work.
    It helps to take a positive interest in your writing, so consider choosing a text that genuinely interests you and about whose author/playwright you’d like to know more. Perhaps you might write on the creator’s style, use of literary devices, movements in which she/he took part, social or cultural impact, lasting legacy, controversies he or she faced, or any other number of contributing factors to his/her body of work. This essay has a goal of analyzing the text through the discipline of history, either cultural or biographical (or both), so be sure address at least one major historical question in your analysis. A good strategy is to answer a few questions that seem most relevant, but are part of a larger, well-constructed essay. 
    In addition to providing textual evidence from the primary source, you must support your analysis with credible secondary sources. Synthesize into your argument the ideas of others: think critically about them, analyze their value, then use these ideas to support your own thesis. Demonstrate the authority and value of these sources within your essay itself. A minimum of four (4) quality secondary sources—in addition to the primary source—are required, including:
    At least two (2) academic (or peer-reviewed) sources, such as journal articles or textbooks
    At least one (1) popular source, such as a news periodical or a reputable book review
    One additional credible source of your own choosing
    Explain to the reader the credentials of those you incorporate into your essay, and provide context for their inclusion in your work. If you have questions about what constitutes an academic or popular source, please don’t hesitate to bring them to me. 
    Additional Notes/Rubric
    100 points | 1,500-word minimum | Due Friday, May 10 @ 5pm.
    This assignment will remain open until Tuesday, May 14 @ 5pm. There is no penalty or reduction in score for an essay submitted over the weekend, but any late essay submitted outside of the 55-hour window (after Sunday, May 12 @ 11:59pm) is subject to a 10% reduction in score and may not include detailed feedback.
    Because Essay 03 abuts final grade reporting, I will keep all essay markup and comments to an absolute minimum. If you would like my traditional markup/comments on your submission, please leave me a note in the assignment comments when you upload your file. All assignments close Tuesday, May 14 @ 5pm.
    _______________________________________
    This research essay should:
    open with an introduction that [1] catches the reader’s attention, [2] provides a historical or biographical context for understanding the essay (the text, its author, and your stance on the piece), and culminates in an explicit thesis statement making a claim about the author/playwright and their exploration of an issue or problem with American society
    expound on the thesis by
    supporting with logic your interpretive stance of the work’s sociohistorical commentary
    identifying in the primary text evidence which illustrates or otherwise supports your interpretation
    incorporating credible support for your argument from your research
    organize those examples and research in paragraphs where you explain their connection to your thesis, providing details that help the reader understand your position
    conclude satisfactorily, with what might be a lesson learned, or concluding argument, but is never a summation of the whole essay
    mention the title and author(s) or creator(s) of any referenced work (including MLA documentation–9th ed.)
    adhere to the Written Assignment Formatting GuidelinesLinks to an external site. (pdf via Drive)
    This research essay should avoid:
    Long or block quotes 
    Second-person pronouns and references to the reader
    Over-reliance on plot summary
    Over-reliance on web material, reviews, and/or the encyclopedia or dictionary
    Selecting Murata’s Convenience Store Woman, a story set in Japan
    Ask yourself the following questions for essay development (though you needn’t answer each of these):
    What elements of the biography of the author adds to or alters your interpretation of the text?
    Are you able to detect any underlying philosophy held by the author (i.e. Romanticism, Victorianism, Populism, Christianity, etc.)? If so, how does this philosophy affect the presentation of the text?
    What was the author’s purpose or intent in writing the text? Were they successful?
    What were the common themes present in the text and how did they fit within the context of the time it was written? What do the chosen themes demonstrate the author’s time, place, purpose, or argument?
    What was the social context of the text? What are the elements of the time in which it was written? What else was happening during that time?
    Have historical events that have occurred as time has passed since the writing and publication of that text added weight or changed the context of the tale?
    _______________________________________
    Thesis Statement, Organization & ¶ Unity/Coherence: 15%
    Biographical/Historical Research: 30%
    Application of Evidence: 20%
    Mechanics & Voice: 15%
    MLA Style: 15%
    Document Formatting: 5%
    _______________________________________
    Rubric
    Literary Research
    Literary Research
    Criteria Ratings Pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeThesis Statement & ¶ Unity/Coherence
    15 to >13.5 pts
    Exceeds expectations
    Clear, argumentative thesis identifies what research reveals about an author or playwright and their critique of American society; explicit topic sentences provide controlling ideas for supporting paragraphs; paragraph structure and content support thesis statement; transitions enhance flow of essay
    13.5 to >11.5 pts
    Meets expectations
    Implied argumentative thesis addresses what research reveals about an author or playwright and hints at a revelation of their critique of American society; implicit topic sentences provide general direction for supporting paragraphs; minor errors in paragraph structure and/or content, sometimes disconnected from thesis; identifiable but formulaic transitions; generally focused
    11.5 to >10.0 pts
    Satisfies requirements
    Common mechanical thesis; indefinite in its importance and/or takes an uncontested position; misapplication or misunderstanding of research and/or critique of American society; confusing or indeterminate controlling ideas in supporting paragraphs; repeated disruptions in paragraph organization, unity, and content; transitions lacking or absent; unfocused
    10 to >8.5 pts
    Fulfills some requirements
    Thesis does not make a claim or control essay; neglects historical or biographical research in relation to an issue with American society; missing topic sentences; paragraphs are disconnected from the thesis statement; lacks direction
    8.5 to >0 pts
    Does not fulfill requirements
    Thesis is absent; unclear organization; paragraphs lack unity; written without a reader in mind
    15 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeBiographical/Historical Research
    30 to >27.5 pts
    Exceeds expectations
    Logical and purposeful examination of the creator and/or history; critical and detailed analysis of American society; creative and interesting information; includes detailed explanations and illustrations; meets or exceeds minimum word count
    27.5 to >23.5 pts
    Meets expectations
    Interesting but vague examination or major points; adequate analysis of American society; readable exploration of information; limited use of explanations and illustrations; meets or falls just shy minimum word count
    23.5 to >20.5 pts
    Satisfies requirements
    Inadequate examination of key points; shallow analysis of American society; confusing information; unclear explanations or illustrations; meets or falls just shy of minimum word count
    20.5 to >17.5 pts
    Fulfills some requirements
    Insufficient content to support thesis statement; uncritical analysis of American society; light on information; unfocused analysis; does not approach minimum word count
    17.5 to >0 pts
    Does not fulfill requirements
    Essay is too short to develop its points; lacks analysis of the subject
    30 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeApplication of Evidence
    20 to >18.5 pts
    Exceeds expectations
    Synthesis of texts shows understanding of how they support discussion; primary text used extensively to illustrate thesis; secondary texts employed comprehensively in support of thesis; thorough attributions; quotations are carefully chosen and integrated into discussion; summary and paraphrase used in addition to direct quotation
    18.5 to >15.5 pts
    Meets expectations
    Number and quality of texts shows concern for research, though lacking effective synthesis; primary text referenced intermittently; secondary texts are not as carefully integrated into discussion; authorities are identified; quotations sometimes seem disjointed or out-of-context
    15.5 to >13.5 pts
    Satisfies requirements
    Questions about number, quality, and relevance of texts; primary text rarely used; selections lack attribution; authorities are unidentified; quotations lack context; excessive and uncritical reliance on online material, especially dictionaries, encyclopedias, reviews, and/or homework help sites
    13.5 to >11.5 pts
    Fulfills some requirements
    Inattentive use of primary and/or secondary texts; selections and authorities are unidentified
    11.5 to >0 pts
    Does not fulfill requirements
    Primary and secondary texts are absent; selections don’t align with citations
    20 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeMechanics & Voice
    15 to >13.5 pts
    Exceeds expectations
    Purposeful sentences; effective word choice; written with a reader in mind; argues in an academic tone with appropriate diction; prose is interesting and creative as well as capable; almost always accurate in punctuation, spelling, proofread carefully
    13.5 to >11.5 pts
    Meets expectations
    Sentences are grammatically complete, but may be wordy; word choice sometimes abstract or inexact; minor or inconsistent punctuation mistakes; references the reader; few spelling errors; in need of additional proofreading
    11.5 to >10.0 pts
    Satisfies requirements
    Problems in agreement or reference; sentences are wordy and may shift in structure; relies on personal narrative or references to the reader; words seem haphazardly chosen or needlessly slangy; problems with grammar and punctuation
    10 to >8.5 pts
    Fulfills some requirements
    Repeated sentence-level errors; questionable tone and/or diction; persistent problems in punctuation and spelling distract reader from sense of sentence
    8.5 to >0 pts
    Does not fulfill requirements
    Unintelligible prose; inflammatory tone and/or diction; incomprehensible sentences
    15 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeMLA Style
    15 to >13.5 pts
    Exceeds expectations
    Exceptional implementation of MLA documentation and style; nearly flawless use of parenthetical documentation; accurate identification of sources; careful treatment of titles and names of authorities
    13.5 to >11.5 pts
    Meets expectations
    Acceptable implementation of documentation and MLA style; includes parenthetical documentation; some errors concerning identification of sources, names of subjects, titles, and/or authorities
    11.5 to >10.0 pts
    Satisfies requirements
    Some statements inadequately documented; mistakes in MLA style and/or documentation; significant errors identifying sources; misspellings of subjects, titles, and/or authorities
    10 to >8.5 pts
    Fulfills some requirements
    Scantly internal documentation; little attention paid to MLA style; some works cited not used in essay; little care given to source identification, subjects, titles, and/or authorities
    8.5 to >0 pts
    Does not fulfill requirements
    Missing documentation; selections don’t align with citations
    15 pts
    This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeDocument Formatting
    5 to >4.75 pts
    Exceeds expectations
    Careful attention given to document formatting and essay requirements; complete information in the upper left-hand corner; pages named and numbered; text is double-spaced, and the first line of each paragraph is properly indented
    4.75 to >3.75 pts
    Meets expectations
    Less attention given to document formatting and/or essay requirements; incomplete information in the upper left-hand corner; pages numbered; text is spaced, and the first line of each paragraph is indented
    3.75 to >3.25 pts
    Satisfies requirements
    Minor errors in document formatting and/or essay requirements; missing information in the upper left-hand corner; pages left unnumbered; problems in text spacing
    3.25 to >2.75 pts
    Fulfills some requirements
    Major errors in document formatting; missing identifying information; repeated errors in text spacing
    2.75 to >0 pts
    Does not fulfill requirements
    Lacks formatting
    5 pts
    Total Points: 100
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  • Title: Exploring Tone and Imagery in Four Short Stories

    Kirszner, L. G., & Mandell, S. R. (2024). Portable literature: Reading, reacting, writing (10th ed.). Cengage Learning US.
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    2. Also discuss in general the category.
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    https://pluto.tv/us/on-demand/series/5ef0d81d146bc5001ae9f7d0/season/3/episode/63b4711d996af50007666e94

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    Respond to two or three of your peers in the group. Commiserate with them! Did you have similar or different reactions or decisions for the easy/hard ones that you chose. Share your experience and responses with them!

  • “Unleashing the Potential: A Prospectus for a Revolutionary New Product”

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    In this writing assignment, you will be asked to write a short response to a reading assignment, in which you will share your reaction and your opinions on the text. This assignment will help you to do the following:
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    • Prepare to discuss the reading in class, where you will be invited to share your thoughts and listen to your classmates’ points of view
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    Word count: The entire assignment should be between 200-400 words.
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    2. Choose a line of one to three sentences that particularly stood out to you. This could be something you strongly agree or disagree with, or something you found especially thought-provoking or well-worded. How does this line fit into the text as a whole? How does it support the main ideas?
    3. Explain your reaction to the line you chose, and share how it connects to a personal experience or belief of yours. Explain if you learned something new from reading it, or what you think others should learn from it.
    4. Write a question for your classmates asking for their opinions about the text. Your question does not have to be specifically about the line you chose; it could be about any part of the text, or the text as a whole.
    Grading:
    This assignment is worth 10 points. In order to receive full credit, the assignment should do the following:
    • Answer every part of the prompt
    • Demonstrate reasonable comprehension of the reading assignment and critical thinking
    • Express ideas clearly
    • Meet the required word count
    • Be in your own words and contain absolutely no plagiarism or AI-generated text

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