Should mask mandates be enforced during times of disease outbreak, such as COVID 19? Should the national federal minimum wage be raised from its current $7.25 per hour?   Should the country rethink policing in view of recent issues involving police violence?

Week 4 Assignment: Revised Persuasive Essay

In week three, you composed a plan for your persuasive essay. Remember the instructions from week three: This assignment is based on research. It is not simply an expression of your opinion. A persuasive essay requires you to investigate a topic by conducting research, evaluating evidence; and establishing a position based on what you have learned. Each claim in your thesis should be supported by reliable evidence. The goal is to persuade a reader to adopt a certain point of view using sound reasoning and solid evidence by stating facts, giving logical reasons, using examples, and quoting experts.

Final Persuasive Essay should be a polished error-free document. It is recommended that you review and complete the revision worksheet before finalize submission.

The Final essay should include a thesis statement, clear position on chosen topic, acknowledgment of the opposing view, clear purpose and direction, and effective conclusion.

Revised essay should be error free and consistent in tone, point of view and verb tense.

Three reliable sources are required to support your position.

Reliable sources include Keiser Library, Google scholar, and others approved by your instructor.

See Revision Worksheet and Rubric for guidance and assessment of you work.

Choose one of the following Writing Suggestions or you may choose a topic relevant to your career or studies. The topic must be debatable (have two opposing sides), research based (use facts, not personal opinion) and relevant to your career. See page 172 for further guidance.

HEALTHCARE: Should mask mandates be enforced during times of disease outbreak, such as COVID 19?

BUSINESS: Should the national federal minimum wage be raised from its current $7.25 per hour?      (Note: some states, such as Florida, have raised theirs already)

CRIMINAL JUSTICE: Should the country rethink policing in view of recent issues involving police violence?

What have you learned about how to present a strong argument? How could/will you apply this knowledge in your professional or everyday life (3-4 sentences)? Sophia says: Think about the specific skills and techniques that you used while developing and writing your essay. What tools will you take with you from this experience?

Touchstone 4: Argumentative Essay

ASSIGNMENT: Write a 4-6 page (approximately 1000-1500 word) argumentative essay using the classical model supported by evidence and research.

Sample Argumentative Essay In order to foster learning and growth, all essays you submit must be newly written specifically for this course. Any recycled work will be sent back with a 0, and you will be given one attempt to redo the Touchstone.

A. Instructions
Remember the word “argument” does not mean a fight in a writing context. An academic argument is more like a thoughtful conversation between two people with differing viewpoints on a debatable issue. However, you are required to take a position on one side of the issue.

In order to foster learning and growth, all essays you submit must be newly written specifically for this course. Any recycled work will be sent back with a 0, and you will be given one attempt to redo the touchstone.

Your submission must include an APA style reference page following the essay. In your research, you will need 2-4 credible primary or secondary sources to use as support in your essay.
On a separate page, below your reference page, include thoughtful answers to the Think About Your Writing questions. References and Think About Your Writing questions are NOT included in the word count for this essay.

B. Think About Your Writing
Below your reference page, include answers to all of the following reflection questions.

1. What have you learned about how to present a strong argument? How could/will you apply this knowledge in your professional or everyday life (3-4 sentences)? Sophia says: Think about the specific skills and techniques that you used while developing and writing your essay. What tools will you take with you from this experience?

2. Consider the English Composition I course as a whole. What have you learned about yourself as a writer (5-6 sentences)? Sophia says: What did you learn that surprised you? Is there anything that you have struggled with in the past that you now feel more confident about?

Who is presented as hero/heroine in the work? What heroic qualities does he/she possess? Does he/she partially fail? How does he/she develop as a hero/heroine? What are the steps in the hero’s/heroine’s formation? What in particular advocates certain qualities of mind and action?

Analysis of the Novel

Directions: Write an analysis of the novel Ireland by Frank Delaney.
Format: Follow MLA Guidelines and Style for Paper Format; Follow MLA Guideline for Documentation and Citation.
Length: A minimum of 1,200 words (do not be restricted by the word count – if you have more to say, then say it!
References: A minimum of six (6) quotes from the novel. You must cite and document.

Analysis:
You will determine which of the literary elements you find the most important in terms of analyzing the novel. For example, if you feel characterization is the most important element of the novel, then you would determine your thesis based on the element of characterization. Then you would prove your thesis with quotations, examples, and paraphrases from the novel. Thus, your entire analysis of the novel is centered on the characters in the novel and the role they play moving the story forward. Also, you want to show the breadth of your knowledge of the novel as a whole, so be sure you choose examples from the whole text and not just a small section.
The analysis is not a synopsis or a summary of the story. A literary analysis is your analysis and discussion of the novel according to its literary elements. You may discuss how the various components of the work relate to each other, as well as how concepts and forms in the work relate to larger aesthetic, political, social, economic, or religious contexts. A literary analysis is an argument. The focus is on specific attributes of the text with a specific, arguable point (thesis) about these attributes. You will defend this point with reasons and evidence drawn from the text. Certainly, you can use outside evidence and support. Evidence from the text includes: direct quotations, summaries of scenes, and paraphrases. As well, you may use other critics’ opinions, along with the historical and social context of the novel.
Literary Elements: Below is a list of the most common literary terms and their general definition. Note that there are many other elements that you could discuss. Also, some of these elements could connect to your discipline/field of interest.
• Theme – The idea or point of a story formulated as a generalization.
• Character – Imaginary (or not) people created by the writer.
Protagonist – Major character at the center of the story.
Antagonist – A character or force that opposes the protagonist.
Minor character – 0ften provides support and illuminates the protagonist.
Static character – A character who remains the same.
Dynamic character – A character who changes in some important way.
Characterization – The means by which writers reveal character.
Explicit Judgment – Narrator gives facts and interpretive comment. Implied Judgment – Narrator gives description; reader makes the judgment.
Look for: Connections, links, and clues between and about characters. Ask yourself what the function and significance of each character is. Make this determination based upon the character’s history, what the reader is told (and not told), and what other characters say about themselves and others.

• Plot – The arrangement of ideas and/or incidents that make up a story.
Causality – One event occurs because of another event.
Foreshadowing – A suggestion of what is going to happen.
Suspense – A sense of worry established by the author.
Conflict – Struggle between opposing forces.
Exposition – Background information regarding the setting, characters, plot.
Complication or Rising Action – Intensification of conflict.
Crisis – Turning point; moment of great tension that fixes the action.

Resolution/Denouement – The way the story turns out.
• Setting – The place or location of the action, the setting provides the historical and cultural context for characters. It often can symbolize the emotional state of characters. If you choose this discussion, let the setting determine the answer to the question you might form.
• Point of View – Again, the point of view can sometimes indirectly establish the author’s intentions. Point of view pertains to who tells the story and how it is told.
Narrator – The person telling the story.
First-person – Narrator participates in action but sometimes has limited knowledge/vision.
Objective – Narrator is unnamed/unidentified (a detached observer). Does not assume character’s perspective and is not a character in the story. The narrator reports on events and lets the reader supply the meaning.
Omniscient – All-knowing narrator (multiple perspectives). The narrator takes us into the character and can evaluate a character for the reader (editorial omniscience). When a narrator allows the reader to make his or her own judgments from the action of the characters themselves, it is called neutral omniscience.
Limited omniscient – All-knowing narrator about one or two characters, but not all.
• Language and Style – Style is the verbal identity of a writer, oftentimes based on the author’s use of diction (word choice) and syntax (the order of words in a sentence). A writer’s use of language reveals his or her tone, or the attitude toward the subject matter.
• Irony – A contrast or discrepancy between one thing and another.
Verbal irony – We understand the opposite of what the speaker says.
Irony of Circumstance or Situational Irony – When one event is expected to occur but the opposite happens. A discrepancy between what seems to be and what is.
Dramatic Irony – Discrepancy between what characters know and what readers know.
Ironic Vision – An overall tone of irony that pervades a work, suggesting how the writer views the characters.
Or, you can consider the following:
• The Hero (es)/Heroine(s): Who is presented as hero/heroine in the work? What heroic qualities does he/she possess? Does he/she partially fail? How does he/she develop as a hero/heroine? What are the steps in the hero’s/heroine’s formation? What in particular advocates certain qualities of mind and action? This approach is a way of discussing an author or culture’s conception of goodness. You may, if you wish, deconstruct the image of the hero by showing how the author gives contradictory moral imperatives.
• The Political Implications: What are the political implications of the work? Who in the work is powerful and powerless? Does the text approve of the status quo? Does it advocate or depict revolution? Does the text cry out for change? Does the text leave mixed messages?
• Demonization: Whom (or what group or what attitudes) does the work demonize? What does the author (or components of his society) define itself against? Why might the author find these qualities threatening or dangerous?
• Gender Construction – you can combine these two genders for your analysis or work with one gender:
Construction of Gender (Feminine): What model(s) of femininity is/are depicted? Which are approved, rejected, corrected, preferred, etc.?
Construction of Gender (Masculine): What model(s) of masculinity is/are depicted? Which are approved, rejected, corrected, preferred, etc.?
• The Psychological Approach: What seems to be the psychological quirks/neuroses of the characters (or even author)? You may use the criteria of scientific diagnosis or even of pop psychology. You may even invent your own terms and construct your own definitions for the mental or behavioral conditions you note. In all cases, you must provide appropriate definitions of your terms. Note that this approach allows you to use “presentist” assumptions (deals with the present in reference to time and thought).
• Audience: For what audience(s) was the work conceived? What message(s) does the author have for its discreet audience? What tone or attitude does the author take toward the audience? Does he flatter, cajole, coax, reprimand? What is the author’s purpose in writing this text.
• Historical Criticism: This option allows you to investigate the origins of the events in the text, as written by Delaney. In other words, discuss the genre historical fiction. What is the true history of the events told by Delaney? Does he follow the truth closely? Why do you think he tells the story of Ireland in this way? This discussion compares Irish history to the story (stories) written by Delaney.

How effectively does the writer of your chosen text convey the main idea of the text? In what ways do ethos, logos, and pathos affect the author’s ability to persuade the audience? Discuss all three strategies.

Rhetorical Analysis

For your first paper, your assignment is to write a rhetorical analysis of a text of your choice. Be sure to select something complex enough to allow you to write a thoughtful and insightful analysis.

By definition, the act of analysis is breaking something into its component parts and examining the ways in which those parts contribute to the whole. Textual analysis often involves extracting and creating meaning. Rhetorical analysis is something more specific. Rhetoric involves all the available means of persuasion. So as you write a rhetorical analysis, you are not analyzing only the meaning of the text; you are analyzing the effectiveness of the text by examining the different strategies that the author uses to persuade their audience.

1. How effectively does the writer of your chosen text convey the main idea of the text? In what ways do ethos, logos, and pathos affect the author’s ability to persuade the audience? You must discuss all three strategies. For this topic, you must include thoughtful analysis of direct quotations from the text of your choice

Research the types of jobs you are qualified for and the types of employers you would like to work for. Convince specific employers to consider you for a job.

Project 3 Final Box

Overview
Most of us obtain jobs through a multi-stage process. First you research the types of jobs you are qualified for and the types of employers you would like to work for. Then you try to convince specific employers to consider you for a job. Your first communication with your future employer is likely to be through a resume and application letter. These documents must persuade him or her to continue the conversation.

Details
Your resume and application letter must be adapted to reflect your specific skills for a specific position. Find a detailed job advertisement for which you are at least mostly qualified (or will be upon graduation). You will analyze the job ad and the organization that published it in order to emphasize your qualifications for the position.

Documents required:

  • • An application letter addressed to the prospective employer. The letter should highlight the aspects of your experience that are relevant to the job.
  • • A resume that emphasizes your qualifications for the job. This resume will differ, perhaps significantly, from your generic resume.
  • • A cover memo written to your instructor. This memo will explain and/or list all the ways you adapted your resume and application letter to meet the needs of this job and employer. The cover memo can be short (a single page) and informal.
  • • A copy of the job ad. Copy and paste the entire ad into a Word.doc.
  • • A copy of your generic resume. This is the resume that you have used in the past, or the one on which you archive all new experiences. If you don’t have a generic resume, create one.

Note: The cover memo, job ad and generic resume will not be graded; however, if they are missing, your grade may be reduced.

Resumes
The purpose of the resume is to describe your qualifications for a type of job.
Content. The goal is to argue that you are qualified for a particular type of job and that you would be a capable, responsible, and personable employee who communicates effectively.
https://psu.instructure.com/courses/2182940/pages/project-3-job-application-documents 1/3

What does Atwood’s story suggest about age and women’s power? For each research source in your annotated bibliography, provide the bibliographic citation in MLA format (9th ed.), followed by the annotation: 2-3 sentences explaining the research source’s main argument the specific point you will be arguing using this source.

“Stone Mattress” is the title story in Margaret Atwood’s 2014 collection of short fiction. What does Atwood’s story suggest about age and women’s power?

Step 6: The Annotated Bibliography

An annotated bibliography is like a Works Cited with explanations. It must include your primary source (the story) and SIX literary critical scholarly research sources that you have read and plan to use in your essay.

A literary critical research source is a source that is written by a scholar about literature; for the purposes of this assignment, this means a book, an article published in an edited collection of essays, or a journal article. See the instructions in Module 2 about how to do research in English study.

For each research source in your annotated bibliography, provide the bibliographic citation in MLA format (9th ed.), followed by the annotation: 2-3 sentences explaining the research source’s main argument the specific point you will be arguing using this source.

Organize the annotated bibliography alphabetically by author; don’t separate primary and secondary sources.

See an example of an annotated bibliography here

You can change your mind about these sources, as your research and your ideas develop further. The annotated bibliography simply gives a snapshot of your research and ideas at this point in time and gives your instructor a chance to comment on that research.

What view does the story portray of Women in the turn of the century America? What does the story portray about the Progressive era in America?

The Yellow Wallpaper

Write a 3 page essay to answer the following questions
What view does the story portray of Women in the turn of the century America? What does the story portray about the Progressive era in America?

1. MLA format
2. Use excerpts from the text in your essay
3. Use 2 research sources (no Wikipedia)
4. Add a works cited page

Compose a persuasive essay response that provides and supports an opinion specifically about the light green, yellow, and light gray highlighted sections of the article. Specifically provide a thesis about the authors’ contention that the name “Braves” is derogatory, racist, humiliating, and offensive.

Formal Essay 1

Read the article:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1raQ_Bu3z8PLu9Z7EBzsT7monbfXze2o4/view

Compose a persuasive essay response (minimum 500 words) that provides and supports an opinion (argument, claim) specifically about the light green, yellow, and light gray highlighted sections of the article.

Specifically provide a thesis about the authors’ contention that the name “Braves” is derogatory, racist, humiliating, and offensive.

When providing that thesis, take a stand: agree or disagree with the quotation above.

Anywhere in your essay after the introductory paragraph, respond to the following question in the Streeter article: “Why should racist imagery be more important than ending a long cycle of humiliating our most marginalized citizens?”

Address and respond to that question with at least two declarative sentences, not interrogative sentences.

POINT OF VIEW: Compose this essay in the first-person point of view of Mario Rocha, an avid Atlanta Braves fan who holds season tickets. Every paragraph must clearly reveal that Mario is a Braves fan. Remember, in first person you are writing as Mario, not about Mario.

The paragraph requirement for Formal Essay assignments is introductory paragraph, a minimum of three body paragraphs, and a concluding paragraph.

Two sources are required, the Streeter source and one other credible source based on your own research. This assignment requires a minimum of one direct quotation from each source. Each quotation must be at least two complete lines of text but not more than four lines of text, placed in separate paragraphs, and must pertain to the content of that paragraph.

WORKS CITED: One full citation for each source must be constructed on the Works Cited page for each source used in the essay. To correctly construct and format a full citation for this online course.

MUST INCLUDE A WORKS CITED PAGE.

Dictionaries, The Holy Bible, and other reference sources may be used only as tertiary sources in connection with other credible published online sources.

Have a claim about what they are doing Rhetorically and try to convince the reader that your claim, what you think they did Rhetorically is correct. What do you look at when you try to Analysis a speech rhetorically?

Letter to Birmingham rhetorical essay

A Rhetorical Analysis is when you try and Analysis the Rhetorical process of a piece of writing or a speech. You try and understand HOW someone wrote it, WHY they wrote it, WHAT their agenda is and IF it is effective or not. You are CRITIQUING them, you are JUDGING them.

Rhetorical Analysis can work Two ways. You can Analysis WHAT they say in the speech, the claims they make and the intentions behind them or you can Analysis HOW they are making their claims, the Proofs they use and how they are trying to Appeal to their Audience. Many times, writers tend to do both in a paper.

This is an Argumentative essay style because you

  • A) have a claim about what they are doing Rhetorically and;
  • B) try to convince the reader that your claim, what you think they did Rhetorically is correct.

What do you look at when you try to Analysis a speech rhetorically?
-The Situation.
-Historical context.
-The Speaker/Author
-The Speaker/Author’s intentions
-The Audience
-The Text
-The Message.

-How the Logos, Ethos, and Pathos are working in the Speech.

This assignment needs to be at least 4 pages in MLA format. This will count as a Formal grade.Your Work Cited Page doesn’t count as one of the 4 pages. The is no limit to the sources you can use for this paper. You are allowed to use all the documents anyway you see fit and you are allowed to research.

Choose a Country that exports illegal drugs. Describe the methods in which that country exports illegal drugs into the United States. Describe the US efforts in eradicating the importation of such illegal drugs.

Drugs crime final

1. Choose a Country that exports illegal drugs.

2. Describe the methods in which that country exports illegal drugs into the United States.

3. Describe the US efforts in eradicating the importation of such illegal drugs.