Monday, September 23, 2013

Assignment #1 Odds and Ends


ODDS AND ENDS TO REMEMBER WHILE DRAFTING ASSIGNMENT #1


SAMPLE Example of Assignment #1 Layout:

 

Stem Cell Research: An Annotated Bibliography[b5] 


S[b6] enior, K. "Extending the Ethical Boundaries of Stem Cell Research." Trends in Molecular Medicine. 7 (2001): 5-6. Print.

[SUMMARY[b7]  paragraph that succinctly states what the above article is about, and which presents this information in YOUR OWN VOICE. If you paraphrase or cite the source, then you are expected not only to integrate these quotes and paraphrases, but to correctly cite them using MLA-style in text citations. See below for explanations, if you do not know how to integrate your quotes or correctly employ in text citations.]

[OPINION[b8]  paragraph that states what you think of this article. Provide, if you are able a thesis (main argument or question) you have about this article. Also reference any rhetorical analysis you have done: who is the author, publisher, intended audience, etc…, of this article and how do these things affect your opinion of the article.

T[b9] he Usual Suspects. Dir. Bryan Singer. Perf. Kevin Spacey, Gabriel Byrne, Chazz Palminteri, Stephen Baldwin, and Benecio del Toro. Polygram, 1995. DVD.

[Summary paragraph here.]

[Evaluation paragraph here.]


HOW TO INTEGRATE QUOTES AND USE IN TEXT CITATIONS
WITHIN YOUR SUMMARY &/OR OPINION PARAGRAPHS

Introduce your author by mentioning him or her by name. After you write about what this author argues, you might want to use a quote to back you up. If you do so, make sure that you attribute the quote to this author by stating, “He states that,” or “According to her,” etc… Before punctuating the end of your quote, close the quotations and insert your MLA in text citation in parentheses; the citation is usually the author’s name followed by a space and the page number. If you mention the author’s name in the same sentence in which you insert his or her quote, then you only need to place the page number of this quote in the parentheses; in other words, leave out the author’s name. Remember to close quotation marks before the parentheses and to place your period after the parenthesis. Even if the quote ends in the middle of your sentence, you always place the parentheses at the END of a sentence.

EXAMPLE: Frederick maintains that the 1st Platoon was under severe stress in Iraq in 2005 and 2006. He states that by the end of the year-long deployment, “Twenty-one men from the battalion were killed and scores more were wounded badly enough to be evacuated home” (Frederick xvi).

Because I didn’t use Frederick’s name in the sentence in which I quoted him, I had to place his name in the parentheses after the quote along with the page number. Again, if you use the author’s name in the same sentence in which you quote him or her, you only need to include the page number in your parentheses.

If the author is unknown, you must refer to the title of the book or article or website you are quoting, such as (“Military Families” 24). If there is no page number and the article is found on a website, use 1 as the page number.


RUBRIC FOR HOW I WILL GRADE ASSIGNMENT #1

• A (93-100), A- (90-92)—Excellent: Work that presents original thinking or insight that is clearly written in your real voice and is correctly formatted, includes flawless examples of rhetorical analysis within opinion paragraphs, correct MLA-style citations, and sophisticated grammar usage. Five sources are cited and when encountering this annotated bibliography, I understand that the student is passionately invested in the course and the material, and has an idea where he or she is headed; in other words, analyses of different articles is rigorous and begins to highlight and point toward the individual student’s own interests.
• B+ (87-89), B (83-86), B- (80-82)—Good: Work that fully satisfies this assignment’s expectations with clear competence. The level of sophistication of analyses and writing that represents an A is absent, but the piece is well written in terms of providing MLA citations, summaries, opinions, proper grammar usage, formatting, and meets the criteria demanded by the assignment.
• C+ (77-79), C (73-76), C- (70-72)—Fair: An adequate piece of work that minimally meets an assignment’s specifications and is generally correct in terms of mechanics and structure, but lacks thorough analysis or elaboration and focus.
• D+ (67-69), D (63-66), D- (60-62)—Poor: Work that is inadequate in at least one way, including failure to maintain focus, skimpy or illogical analysis, and significant errors in writing mechanics.
• F range (0-59)—Failure: Work that fails to respond acceptably to an assignment or that fails to be submitted on time.

Plagiarism and Academic Integrity
Plagiarism—passing off the work of another person’s as your own—is a serious offense. In the academic world, plagiarism is theft (and punishable). Information from sources, whether quoted, paraphrased, or summarized, must be given credit through citations. It is especially important that paraphrase be both cited and put into your own words. Merely rearranging a sentence or changing a few words is not sufficient. It is your responsibility to adhere to the university’s standards for academic integrity. Violations of academic integrity include any act that violates the rights of another student in academic work, that involves misrepresentation of your own work, or that disrupts the instruction of the course. In addition to plagiarizing, other violations include (but are not limited to): cheating on assignments or examinations; selling, purchasing, or exchanging of term papers; falsifying of information; and using your own work from one class to fulfill the assignment for another class without significant modification. Proof of academic misconduct can result in the automatic failure and removal from this course. For questions, refer to the English Department’s Undergraduate Handbook, the Undergraduate Catalogue, the Ram’s Eye View, and the University website.




 [b1]Your name; make entire document Times New Roman 12-pt. type, and make sure your documents margins are 1” on either side; don’t forget to number the pages.

 [b2]Your professor

 [b3]Your course

 [b4]The date

 [b5]Title your bibliography

 [b6]Alphabetically each entry according to the first letter of each MLA bibliographic citation

 [b7]Beneath each bibliographic citation, include a summary paragraph that does not plagiarize the source.

 [b8]Beneath each summary paragraph, include your own opinion of the source, a thesis, and applied rhetorical analysis.

 [b9]Make sure that this letter is lower in the alphabet than your first MLA citation.

No comments:

Post a Comment