Write a research paper about the impact of nutrition in America. Include at least 4 sources, incorporating them into the paper using summery, paraphrasing, and quoting.

What is Healthy Food?

This is a research paper about the impact of nutrition in America. This paper needs to include at least 4 sources, incorporating them into the paper using summery, paraphrasing, and quoting. My topic sentence is ” figuring out what foods are high in nutrient and are good for your body the will help your overall health.”

Write an original and cohesive argumentative research paper. Provide an effective introduction. Provide an appropriate thesis statement that previews two to four main points.

Should Recess time be eliminated or kept in a child’s daily school schedule?

No more than a combined total of 30% of the submission and no more than a 10% match to any one individual source can be directly quoted or closely paraphrased from sources, even if cited correctly.

Note: When using sources to support ideas and elements in an assessment, the submission MUST include APA formatted in-text citations with a corresponding reference list for any direct quotes or paraphrasing. It is not necessary to list sources that were consulted if they have not been quoted or paraphrased in the text of the assessment.

A. Write an original and cohesive argumentative research paper (suggested length of 8–10 pages).

1. Provide an effective introduction.

2. Provide an appropriate thesis statement that previews two to four main points.

3. Develop each of the previewed main points in effective paragraphs with support from a variety of sources.

4. Provide an effective conclusion.

B. Incorporate seven academically credible sources in your paper.

C. Acknowledge sources, using APA-formatted in-text citations and references, for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.

D. Demonstrate professional communication in the content and presentation of your submission.

Why might a writer begin a research project with a research question? What role does it play in getting started? In choosing research? In crafting a thesis sentence? What is the best way to locate sources? How do you know that a source is credible? How might you decide which sources to use and which will not be as useful for your paper?

Week 1 Research Narrative Essay

For this essay, you will reflect on your research writing experiences. Helping your professor understand your perceptions of various areas of research will enable the professor to better address the class’ needs in this course.

The Content
In this essay, you should explain the experiences with and/or knowledge you have about researched writing. Base your understanding on your previous experiences with researched writing in high school or college.

Write as if you are explaining information to a student in our class who has not had any experience with researched writing. Explain 3 to 4 of the points below.

1) Why might a writer begin a research project with a research question? What role does it play in getting started? In choosing research? In crafting a thesis sentence?
2) What is the best way to locate sources? How do you know that a source is credible? How might you decide which sources to use and which will not be as useful for your paper?
3) How would you get information from a source to write an annotation? Where would you look to get that information? What information should an annotation contain?
4) Why are citations important? How do you get information about citing a source? What experiences have you had looking up sources in books? What experiences have you had using the citations offered in a school library
5) What does “paraphrasing” mean? What steps will you take to avoid plagiarizing?
6) Why would a professor assign an annotated bibliography as a part of a research-writing project? Could you have written a paper from your annotated bibliography? How might a bibliography help you write an effective research paper?
7) What does “paraphrase” mean? How would you help another student paraphrase effectively and accurately?

Discuss three elements of Number the Stars that classify it as a bildungsroman.

Number the Stars

● Use the question below to answer in a short, critical analysis essay incorporating textual evidence from the novel Number the Stars by Lois Lowry.

(The Question) Discuss three elements of Number the Stars that classify it as a bildungsroman.

● Integrate quotes from the text to support the main points
○ 2:1 ratio–two parts analysis to one part quote but no quotes in the introduction or conclusion paragraphs.

● Use current MLA formatting (9th edition)
○ Include the works cited page with the primary source and other sources used.

Using the information provided in the lesson’s readings, create a classical argument outline using your Research Argument topic.

Classical Argument Practice

Estimated Time: 120 minutes

Consider your Research Argument topic. Let’s practice the classical argumentation style using your topic. This does not mean you are committed to using the Classical Argument to write you essay. However, it does bend your mind to considering a format that best suits your topic.

Using the information provided in the lesson’s readings, create a classical argument outline using your Research Argument topic.

 

Pick an article from CQ research and disagree and somewhat agree on it, and do some quotation. Describe two adversarial positions related to a subject brought up in your chosen report.

Pick an article you want to talk about it.

Pick an article from CQ research and disagree and somewhat agree on it, and do some quotation.

You must gather your sources first at CQ Researcher. You must build your argument in response to any CQ Researcher report from September 2021 to September 2022. Any links in your chosen report should be consulted and may be used as separate sources to use in your argument essay.
If the sources you locate do not provide enough information for you to form a thesis and a clear idea of an antithesis (the other side in the argument), you should then move on to The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. (Both of these databases can be accessed through the Wake Tech libraries website.) Any research past this point must be approved by me.

Your essay should describe two adversarial positions related to a subject brought up in your chosen report. (You may use the pro/con sides presented within your CQ report.)
When the 14 October essay is returned to you, you will begin extensive revisions, including additional sources (pro and con). You may now find and use sources outside CQ Researcher. The term “extensive revisions” means you must reconsider your thesis in the 14 October essay and incorporate newfound information into the revision. You may change your stance from one point of view to the opposite. (Even if you personally believe the 14 October thesis, you may switch sides now. Or you may keep your original stance if you go deeper into the subject, by narrowing down your thesis.)

What is terrorism? Discuss the strategies terrorists adopt to fulfill their goals. What is state weakness? Why do weak states often host transnational terrorists?

INSIDE TERRORISM

Essay type question
Each answer should be of about 250 to 300 words 1-2 pages
Your primary sources would be the books and articles from your textbooks and articles.
However, you can use outside sources like books and scholarly journals.
you are supposed to use in-text citation and a reference section for each answer.
Answers must be typed, double (or one and half) spaced, and in a font size no smaller than 11.
Unlike the paper critiques, the answer should not be based on your opinion if not stated otherwise.
You can conclude with your opinion, but that might be only about one paragraph.
Answers without citations (in-text and reference) will result in substantial reduction in Grade point. So cite constantly.
Remember to bold the question so I know which answer you are referring to.
Use the textbook (
BRUCE HOFFMAN. 2017. INSIDE TERRORISM. NEW YORK: COLUMBUA UNIVERSITY PRESS, chapter 1-6

Only to help you answer these questions.
1. What is terrorism? Discuss the strategies terrorists adopt to fulfill their goals.
2. What is state weakness? Why do weak states often host transnational terrorists?
3. Discrimination against minorities often results in terrorism. Evaluate the statement in the light of existing literature.   (Hints: Piazza 2012, Ghatak 2016)

Here are the links to give you access to the textbook.
BRUCE HOFFMAN. 2017. INSIDE TERRORISM. NEW YORK: COLUMBUA UNIVERSITY PRESS,
https://b-ok.cc/book/3582518/6125dc

Choose one cultural element of Korea you want to introduce to the world and suggest three ways to promote it by relating it to American culture.

One cultural element of Korea

Choose one cultural element of Korea ( e.g., music, art, literature, dance, architecture, clothing, cuisine, teen culture, etc.) you want to introduce to the world and suggest three ways to promote it by relating it to American culture.

The length should be one full page ( approximately 550-580 words ) / It is for a high school student.

Using one of the Module 1-required poems from A Sinking Ship is Still a Ship, explain what is significant about the journey(s) the narrator describes.

Reading Response 1

Topic: Using one of the Module 1-required poems from A Sinking Ship is Still a Ship, explain what is significant about the journey(s) the narrator describes. Remember that journeys may be literal, emotional, intellectual, or all of the above.

Use specific evidence from the poem to support your response, and focus on explaining why things are interesting or important (instead of simply summarizing/re-telling the story).

Build your list and keep good notes. Which elements recur again and again? Which ones do you encounter less frequently? Use this knowledge to imagine your own truly unique piece; one that will stand out from everything else out there.

Monologue Writing 101: 10 Elements of Great Audition Monologues by Gabriel Davis

Introduction

How do you write a killer audition monologue? Good question. In Monologue Writing 101 I’ve broken it down for you into 10 Elements of a Great Audition Monologue. In truth, there are so many different things that make any piece of writing unique, effective, gripping, funny, moving, engaging, etc. that one could write volumes on the subject. However, I’m guessing for many of you, you have a class assignment or an audition coming up soon. Plus, as one slightly well-known playwright once said: “brevity is the soul of wit.”
The 10 Elements were created as a way to boil down lessons in playwriting learned over the course of several years — and several volumes of books on the subject — into a short essential list. I taught these 10 Elements to students as part of the nationally recognized Joanne Woodward Apprentice Program at the Westport Country Playhouse. The material they wrote using these Elements was consistently surprising, entertaining, and enjoyable. I owe a great deal to my mentors playwright Milan Stitt and director/novelist Kathleen George in helping to shape my thinking on these elements. I am pleased to pass these on to you and I hope you, in turn, will pass them on.

10 Elements of Great Audition Monologues

Element #1: Your character must have a strong want. Think about the times you have become the most aggressive, upset, or combative. Most likely, if you felt this strongly, it was related to something you wanted or cared about very much. A character in a play or a monologue needs to want something badly. Without a strong want there is no drama — or comedy for that matter. Often the character needs to get something from the person they’re delivering the monologue to. They may need to unburden themselves by revealing a secret. Or they may need to get themselves charged up to do something difficult. They might speak a monologue to build courage, strength, or bravery for a task ahead. Or they may want to speak in order to change the way someone feels about them. Or if the monologue has an internal struggle — they may be speaking in order to change the way they feel about themselves. Whatever it is your character wants, we need to hear that want clearly behind the words they’re speaking.

Element #2: The monologue must have high stakes. Meaning, there is something important or significant at stake for your character. If the character doesn’t get what they want, what will be the consequence? Perhaps they’ll lose social standing, lose a friend, lose their self respect. Maybe they’ll lose their faith, or lose their once chance to prove their love to someone? Stakes give the monologue dramatic tension. Without stakes, a monologue is a walk in the park, its unimportant. There has to be something at stake for the character, so that if they fail to achieve their goal in the monologue, there will be significant negative consequences for them —either in a tangible or emotional form. A tangible stake might be, if the character fails to get what he or she wants they’ll lose the relationship with the person they’re delivering the monologue to. This clearly has emotional stakes as well—they’ll feel terrible, lonely, etc. A purely emotional stake might be that if the character fails to get what he or she is pursuing, they’ll lose their self respect, lose their nerve, lose their faith, etc. So you see, high stakes are important. When working on developing your monologue, ask yourself: what is at stake for this character?

Element #3: Variety of Tactics/Persuasive Moves. A great monologue has a character use a variety of tactics to achieve their want. A character might try to flatter the person they’re talking to as a tactic in order to make them more receptive to hearing them out. If flattery doesn’t work, or isn’t working by itself, they might switch gears and try the tactic of intimidating the person. Intimidation isn’t working; or it hasn’t clinched the deal? Perhaps they try enticing whomever is listening to them with something they know the other person wants. An enticement can be promising or even giving the person hearing the monologue something tangible, but more often emotional, that is of significant value to them. For instance, a father trying to get his daughter to change her behavior may show her affection as a tactic. This might be a particularly effective tactic if the father knows his daughter values his affection highly because it’s a rare commodity coming from him. In the end, a monologue is about persuasion. It’s about making the right “persuasive moves,” which are designed to work with the person who is hearing the monologue. And it’s about having the character use a variety of persuasive techniques to achieve that. Think of tactics like a dance—a dance is boring if it repeats a few steps over and over—it becomes interesting with variety. The more inventive you are in giving your character persuasive moves to make, the more interested in that character the audience will be. And the tactics you employ don’t only have to be geared outwardly toward the person whom the character is speaking to. If the monologue has an internal struggle going on, where the character is trying to convince themselves of something, then ask yourself: What must the character do to persuade themselves to take an action they know they need to, or to face something difficult, or to change something about themselves? The possibilities –and tactics – are limitless.

Element #4: Hook Opening A good journalist, novelist, magazine writer always needs a hook—a killer first line that pulls the reader in and makes them want to read the next line, and then the next, and the next. Similarly, a monologue with a strong hook should peak the audience’s attention (of course the rest of the monologue has to pay-off the excitement and expectations it sets up). There are a number of different kind of hooks. A hook can be a headline, which encapsulates the story the monologist is about to launch into—it lets us know what happened, but now we want to know how it happened and the monologue that ensues answers that question for us. Another hook is the “Thesis” or “Argument” hook. The first line sets up an argument—something the character believes, wants their listener to believe, or wants themselves to believe—and the rest of the monologue serves to prove that this opening statement is in fact true. Yet another hook is the Relationship Dynamics hook. This is a first line or opening statement that quickly sets up a dramatically charged relationship between the monologist and whomever they’re addressing.

Element # 5. Button Closing. When your monologue ends, you don’t want the audience to wonder, is he/she done? Is this a dramatic pause? You want your ending to be clear. Like a gymnast nailing their landing, a “button” is a line that gives an actor a clear end-point to work with. A “button” can bring the thoughts expressed in the monologue to a conclusion. Often it is the moment when a character finally accepts something, finally overcomes an obstacle, finally figures something out, or comes to a decision point. What is a decision point? The moment when a character is ready to take — or is taking before our eyes — a decisive action. Think of a monologue like a mini-play. The arc of the monologue should build to this final line. If the monologue’s hook opening brings a question into the audiences mind, the button close should answer it.

Element #6. Include detail that engages the senses! What should a monologue make us do? Empathize! If the audience isn’t feeling what the character is feeling, if they aren’t going through something with the character, the monologue has not achieved its purpose. One of the most effective ways to engage your audience is to engage their senses. We all share a common five senses, and using them to describe something that happened to us brings our audience right into the experience with us. For instance, using sensory details can communicate to an audience how a character is feeling without the writer having to label the emotion. If someone tells us that when so-and-so approached them, their heart began to race, for instance, we know they’re excited or scared (depending on the context) without them having to spell-out for us what emotion they were feeling. Can you write an effective monologue that engages empathy without sight, sound, touch, taste, smell? Sure, but it would be a lot more difficult. Talking about ideas, situations and feelings without linking them to sensory experience may work when connecting with people in real life, but it generally tends to be less effective for stage and screen. Writing that taps into our senses holds incredible power to move us.

Element #7. Character overcomes internal obstacle(s). Some of the most interesting monologues feature internal struggles. Shakespeare is filled with soliloquies that do this; the cannon of modern drama contains a number of examples we can draw on as well. Watching a character conquer their own self-doubts in the course of a speech or soliloquy will hold an audience’s attention. For an actor, internal-struggle pieces provide a terrific one-person showcase. The actor playing this material is given an opportunity to show themselves in a state of weakness and turmoil from which they are able to emerge stronger, even changed, as they overcome the internal obstacles/doubts/fears that stand in their way. Good writing is complex and layered—a monologue can have a character grappling with both internal and external forces simultaneously.

Element #8. Balance Past and Present Action. So many monologues get stuck in the past, recounting stories that don’t connect with the here and now. A great monologue connects with the present even when it discusses the past. We can feel the current relationship between the monologist and the person hearing it. Often we can see the monologist adjusting what they say based on how their listener is reacting. And we can feel that the character wants something, is seeking to gain something (be it tangible or emotional) from whomever or whatever they’re addressing. Keep in mind, while the monologist is often addressing another person, they can also be addressing a part of themselves, an idea, a force, etc. So, as you write a monologue that has your character recount a story, think of how they are using it as a tactic to accomplish something with whomever or whatever they’re speaking to now. Your character might recall a story to prove a point to their listener. To hurt their listener, your character might bring up a memory they know is painful for them. To make peace and reconnect with someone, a character might talk about a time when they were friends. Here are a few examples of how a character can use past events to deal with their own internal obstacles: A character may recount a painful memory—something that is holding them back—in order to heal. To fight sadness in the moment, a character may recall a happier time. To fight weakness in the moment, a character may recall a story that illustrates their strength. Walk the tightrope between past and present action well and you’ll be on your way to a strong monologue.

Element #9. Discovery! We don’t want to see a character do something they’ve done a million times in the same way they’ve always done it. For example, a door-to-door salesman calling on someone and giving their rehearsed speech is boring. But, take that same door-to-door salesman and have them realize during their rehearsed speech that what they really want is to leave sales and sing opera. That’s another matter entirely. A monologue is dramatic when the monologist doesn’t know exactly what they’re going to say until they say it. We are seeing them figure things out, right now, in the moment, as they speak. We are seeing them make decisions about how they are going to proceed with every sentence. Often we are seeing a character come to a realization, a personal discovery, or a new or more complete understanding of something for the first time. We do not want to know where the monologue is going to end when it starts. The element of surprise, of discovery, of unexpected directions, twists and turns makes for an entertaining journey.

Element #10. Exercise restraint to build dramatic/comedic tension. A character trying hard not to cry is much more interesting than one all-out-bawling for two minutes straight. Most of us try to avoid displaying strong, overwhelming emotion. A good monologue shows that struggle to keep strong emotions under-wraps. That’s not to say you can’t have a character have intense emotional outbursts, only reserve those expressions for key moments—perhaps the climax of your monologue. Have your character work, just as a real person would, to keep powerful emotions bubbling up just under the surface under control. Watching a person about to explode, about to be overwhelmed with emotion, but exercising will power and holding back is interesting. It builds expectation—are they going to lose it? Are they going to maintain their cool exterior? What a character doesn’t say, or doesn’t do—what they might be on the verge of doing—tells a story that contains inherent dramatic tension.

Using the 10 Elements
While skimming this tutorial fast when you’re in a rush will definitely help you get a decent monologue done on deadline, not everyone strikes gold their first time putting pen to paper. So don’t get frustrated if your first go of it isn’t the monologue of your dreams. If you are patient with yourself as you work through these 10 Elements and apply them in your writing you will see results.
If you’re serious about writing great audition material, I recommend coming back to these 10 Elements over time to get the most out of them. If you put in the investment of time and energy to learn and absorb each of the elements here, and if you read lots of monologues to see how these elements are used, you’ll have the tools to write great audition material consistently. You’ll begin to gain insights into what makes a monologue work and why many fall flat.

As you read and study monologues for the 10 Elements, you’ll find that some monologues contain several of the elements discussed here, while others may only feature one or two of them. Start by tracking which elements each monologue you encounter is using. Ask yourself some basic questions. Are the elements you identified in the monologue used effectively by the author? Why or why not? How are they used? Having specific examples of each of the Elements is the key to building a depth of understanding. Keep a list of the monologues that use the elements effectively. Build your list and keep good notes. Which elements recur again and again? Which ones do you encounter less frequently? Use this knowledge to imagine your own truly unique piece; one that will stand out from everything else out there. The more you understand how the monologues you admire use these elements, the easier it will be to write killer audition material on a consistent basis yourself.