ENGL147 Full Course Latest 2020 JULY

Question # 00614030
Course Code : ENGL147
Subject: English
Due on: 07/08/2020
Posted On: 07/08/2020 11:11 AM
Tutorials: 1
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ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 1 Discussion

You Do Have a Voice; You Do Have a Perspective:?Explore a Topic?and Viewpoints

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 63-91, and review pp. 266-270

Lesson

Play media comment.

Minimum of 1 scholarly, peer-reviewed article from the Chamberlain University Library (Links to an external site.) (in addition to the textbook)

Apply the following writing resources to your assignment:

Link (multimedia presentation):?Citing References in Text?(Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website):?APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.)

Part 1: Research, Read, Think, Respond

First, please note the course theme announcement your instructor has posted. Your topic must address the course theme. Then, carefully read this week's Lesson and textbook pages. Once you have completed and considered those readings, with the assigned course theme in mind, you should have some viable starting ideas for a tentative topic.

Next, with a few of your own potential topics related to the course theme in mind, please go to the Chamberlain University Library (Links to an external site.). Please first review the Searching for Scholarly Sources in the Chamberlain University Library tutorial in the bulleted list above under Required Resources (important and helpful), and then spend a good amount of time experimenting with keywords and narrowing techniques.

During this process, the tentative topics you had in mind when you started will narrow, possibly change, perhaps take on different qualities. Your goal for this discussion is to generate possible topics, to research and locate scholarly sources that address those possible topics, and to narrow to a focused topic you will write about for the course.

Instructions for Your Discussion Post:

Referring back to the "But How Do I Choose My Topic" section of the Lesson, share your approaches to each step and which tentative topic and stance you arrived at. In one rich, substantive paragraph, address the following:

During the exploration of topics phase, which of the topic generation methods from this week's lesson worked best for you and why? Please be specific and offer examples. Did you brainstorm and narrow? How?

Describe your use of the questioning process that helped you to narrow your focus, the Who, Where, When, Why, How.

When you spent time thinking about whether your topic is truly debatable, what possibilities arose? Where do you stand? Where might others stand with or in opposition to you?

Finally, review the "What Do I Want to Accomplish" paragraph in the lesson and describe what you wish to accomplish.

Then, for that same topic, share the position and thoughts offered in one article from your library search. In one rich, substantive paragraph, address the following:

Please provide the title and author of the scholarly, peer-reviewed article you chose and offer a brief summary of the author's purpose and points.

Does the author tend to agree with you or not? Please explain.

Do you feel this article may be useful to you in your work on the major argument research paper? Why or why not? Be specific.

Initial Post Citation and Referencing: All sources discussed?must be cited and referenced?in APA format. For pointers on APA citations, please refer to the Chamberlain Library's?Citation and Writing Assistance?website (noted in Required Resources).

Follow-Up Post Instructions

Respond to at least two peers or one peer and the instructor. Please provide rich, substantive, constructive feedback that will help your fellow students develop their topics by asking questions, pointing to additional research, or providing professional and personal examples. Help your fellow peers to brainstorm potential supporting and opposing points for their topics. Finally, offer some suggestions for how your peers might narrow their topics. A respectful, professional tone is expected.

Note:?If you see that someone has already received feedback from two peers, please choose to help a peer who has yet to obtain feedback. Check back regularly and reply those who have responded to you, including any classmates and/or your instructor

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 2 Discussion

Humble yet Assertive? Agreeing with Opponents? Concession and Refutation, and Workshopping toward Your Week 2 Assignment

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: Chapter 3 and pp. 94-107, 295-297, and 306, 337-356

Lesson

Minimum of 1 scholarly source (in addition to the textbook)

Apply the following writing resources to your assignment:

Link (multimedia presentation):?Citing References in Text?(Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website):?APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.)

Part 1: Research & Review

With your specific argument stance (thesis/claim) in mind, locate one scholarly source with opinions that do not agree with your own stance. Using Toulmin's model, demonstrate source evaluation and the use of concession and refutation to rebut an opposing viewpoint, keeping in mind the importance of a humble yet assertive tone.

First, in 1-2 rich paragraphs, examine the author's application of the Toulmin Model. First, note your source's author, title, and year, and answer all of the following as related to the author's use of argument:

Claim: What is the article's main point and purpose? Who is the author's audience?

Grounds: Provide at least one example of support the author uses for this claim. Be sure to use proper quotation or paraphrasing methods with correct APA in-text citation.

Warrants: How does the author successfully connect this evidence to the article's main point?

Backing: Evaluate the author's sources for currency, credibility, and relevance.

Qualifiers: Note some specific absolutes (all, every, each) and some specific limiters (some, several, many) in the author's stance and points. How do they add or subtract from the argument?

Then in 1-2 rich paragraphs, also in your main post, answer the following as related to your stance for your argument essay:

Locate a specific opposing point within the article: Note one point in this article that opposes your stance, using proper source integration and citation techniques.

Concession: Although the point is in opposition to your own stance, describe the merits of the point. What elements of the point do you see as valid? Who in your own audience might agree with this opposing source and why?

Refutation: Although you are able to find merits to the point and to see that some readers may agree with this opposing viewpoint, how will you refute the point? What might you say and do to convince readers that despite holding some merit, the viewpoint is not as valid or useful as your own stance on the issue? How will your approach to this opposing viewpoint influence your audience's reaction to your essay? Again, remember to use correct quotation or paraphrasing techniques with correct APA in-text citation.

Follow-Up Post Instructions

Respond with depth and substance to at least two peers, thoroughly answering the following:

In reviewing your peer's concession to and refutation of their chosen opposing article, note specific ways in which your peer utilized concession and refutation well.

Then, note specific ways in which your peer might employ concession and refutation in more powerful or different ways.

Remember, the goal here is to find multiple perspectives, but those perspectives should be both professional and respectful. Ask questions to keep the conversation going.

Note: If you see that someone has already received feedback from two peers, please choose to help a peer who has yet to obtain feedback. Check back regularly and reply those who have responded to you, including any classmates and/or your instructor.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 3 Discussion

Breaking the Cherry-Picking Habit - Why Write an Annotated Bibliography? Layers of Information and Finding Your Source's "Niche" in Your Argument

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 2-26, 32-36, and review pages 270-293 & 337-356.

Lesson

Minimum of 1 scholarly source (in addition to the textbook)

Apply the following writing resources to your posts:

Link (multimedia presentation): Citing References in Text (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website): APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Initial Post Instructions

Main Post Paragraph 1: Share Your Thoughts on Annotated Bibliographies

Please take the time to reflect and to honestly respond to all of the following (in a single, well-developed paragraph):

When you started this class, did you fully understand the definition of an "annotated bibliography"?

Based on your textbook and lesson readings for this week, what do you now understand an annotated bibliography to be? Have you been guilty of "cherry picking" from the sources you write about? Explain.

In what ways do you anticipate your annotated bibliography being helpful to you in writing a strong, compelling argument research essay?

Also, after reviewing the lesson and the textbook, what remaining questions do you have about the annotated bibliography in general and/or about our assignment this week?

Main Post Paragraph 2: Perform an Initial Source Evaluation

Part of this week's assignment will ask you to richly evaluate your potential sources for your argument research essay. This post will get you started by allowing you to practice with one of those sources. In a single, rich paragraph:

Introduce the source by author, title, and year, and summarize it briefly.

Explain why you chose this source over others.

Briefly run through all five elements of the CRAAP test.

How thoroughly have you read this source and how many times?

How have you benefited from more thorough readings of the source?

Follow-Up Post Instructions

Respond to at least two peers or one peer and the instructor. Here, we have an opportunity to learn by example and to offer guidance for one another. The purpose of your responses to others is to support success. Provide rich feedback that you feel guides your classmates toward a high-quality annotated bibliography. Try to reply to classmates who have not yet received a useful response.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 4 Discussion

How Do the Top Dogs Do It? Learning from Example Toward Effective Drafting

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 469-494.

Lesson

Minimum of 1 scholarly source (in addition to the textbook)

Apply the following writing resources to your posts:

Link (multimedia presentation): Citing References in Text (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website): APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Initial Post Instructions

Main Post Paragraph 1: Evaluate an argumentative point

Choose a reading from the assigned pages in your textbook and note how the author addresses an argumentative point in the body of the article (in other words, not in the introduction paragraph(s) nor in the conclusion paragraph(s). Work to find a body point that demonstrates a range of strategies like logic, refutation, and author's voice.

Then, please take the time to read and re-read the entire piece and your chosen section a few times, jotting down notes to help you, before composing a paragraph that addresses all of the following:

In what ways do you see the author's voice being used? How does the author's own voice (not the sources' voices) drive and frame the argument?

What does the author use for support for the point? (for example, logic created by the author, sources, a combination?) Is this effective, in your view? Why or why not?

Does the author use any logical fallacies? If so, name them and explain why they are fallacies. If not, explain why the author's logic is solid.

Does the form of this reading match the form of the writing we are learning: full essay paragraphs? If so, explain why and how. If not, explain why you think this particular piece of reading does not use academic essay format and what you might do to revise it. In other words, if there are many short paragraphs, could you put some together to form single paragraphs that are still driven by the author's voice?

Main Post Paragraph 2: Practice Using Your Voice in a Full Body Paragraph Toward Your Essay

Referring back to the lesson, please compose and present a single, well-developed draft of one body paragraph for our argument research essay, paying special attention to making your voice the driving force and to using solid logic. Remember the parts of a good body paragraph for an argument essay:

Composing a smooth, clear topic sentence in your voice that provides a transition and that asserts your topic for the paragraph

Using your voice to introduce and present your evidence that supports your topic sentence

Using logic in your voice to tie the evidence to your argumentative point

Avoiding logical fallacies

Using concession and rebuttal if you are presenting opposing viewpoints

Ending strongly with your voice in an extended explanation of how all factors involved in this paragraph drive home your argument in this particular point

Making sure to synthesize throughout, with clear connections between all evidence and all of your logic and assertions

Follow-Up Post Instructions

Respond to at least two peers or one peer and the instructor. Here, in reading others' posts and replying to them, you will learn a great deal more about approaches to composing good argumentative points. In your follow-up posts, please share your thoughts on your classmates' analysis of the textbook reading and review your classmates' own paragraph drafts, using the best practices studied this week to evaluate how well the student has applied all principles and to offer suggestions for improvement. Please fully explain your evaluations.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 5 Discussion

“Drop the Microphone”: Examine Examples toward More Compelling Argument Essay Drafts, and Putting the Spotlight on You - The Person and the Passion Behind the Stance and Topic

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 402-422.

Lesson

Minimum of 1 source from the textbook

Apply the following writing resources to your posts:

Link (multimedia presentation): Citing References in Text (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website): APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Initial Post Instructions

Main Post: Share "Good to Great" Techniques You Picked up in Your Textbook Readings

To begin, look over the readings (sample essays/articles) of the text. Read as many as you'd like; you do not need to choose just one. You are not evaluating one essay in this discussion (although you may work with just one if you would like). Rather, you are evaluating argument techniques, effective word choice and transitions, the author's voice, and the development of points with evidence. Not everything in these readings will be relevant for you; it is your job to find those powerful gems of wisdom that make you think, "Yes! I can apply this same technique!"

So, as you look through the readings and choose single items and sections to focus on, take your own notes and jot down your own thoughts before writing and posting your formal response to the following:

Quote one exact passage from a reading explaining the technique that appealed to you. This may be a particular use of logic, the way an author puts flair on a synthesis of support and opposition, a transition technique you had not considered, the way an author discusses (concedes and refutes) an opposing viewpoint, how an author drives the writing with voice, or any argument technique that "spoke to you." Next, explain in as much detail as possible how you will use this technique in your own argument research essay. Which portion of your essay and/or with which source? How will you apply it to strengthen your essay?

Example structure:

Quotation: (quote, cite in-text, and include at the end of your post a full reference)

Technique that appealed to you in this quotation and why (being as detailed as possible).

How you will use the technique: Be very specific and detailed, explaining exactly where in your essay you would like to use it, in which section, with sources, for voice, for anything that contributes to the effectiveness of your essay.

Example:

Quotation 1: McCloskey (2016) asserts: "In any case, the problem is poverty, not inequality as such—not how many yachts the L'Oréal heiress Liliane Bettencourt has, but whether the average Frenchwoman has enough to eat" (p. 499).

Technique that appeals to me: The technique that appeals to me in this passage is the stark contrast between rich and poor and the very specific example, not just of rich people, but of a specifically named rich person. This appealed to me because seeing an author paint a picture in my own mind helped me to understand that I can easily improve my essay with this simple technique. I also love the transition here and the clarification of the problem. It's a good transition to show a shift to what really matters, and I hadn't thought about defining what the problem "is" and "is not."

How I will use the technique in my draft: I will use this technique in a few places in my essay where I give general examples but could be much more powerful for my reader by offering something precise. One particular point in my essay addresses the problems some people have with no transportation to local clinics. In my essay, I wrote, "Consider, for example, those single mothers who cannot afford a vehicle and whose hands are tied when their children suddenly become very ill." To apply McCloskey's technique, I might instead say, "Consider, for example, the single mother who lives five miles from the nearest local clinic. Her three-month-old baby suddenly spikes a fever of 101 degrees, she has no car, all of her relatives live in other states, and it is below freezing outside." In addition, I looked for places in my essay in which I could use this stronger transition and definition of problem technique. I found in my third paragraph, this: "If a clinic is more than a mile away, walking there with a child is an unreasonable expectation but necessary." I realized that while this is a good argument, I could make it clear that distance is not the central issue, like McCloskey did with inequality. My idea for adding clarity is: "However, precise distance is not the key concern; the real concern is the peace of mind that local access brings to families." I'm still working on the wording of this, but I will definitely apply this technique.

Reference for source used in this example:

McCloskey, D. N. (2016). The formula for a richer world? Equality, liberty, justice and wealth. In S.U. Seyler, & A. Brizzee (Eds.), Read, reason, write: An argument text and reader. (pp. 497-502). McGraw-Hill.

Follow-Up Post Instructions

Respond to at least two peers or one peer and the instructor. Here, in reading others' posts and replying to them, you will learn a great deal more about approaches to composing good argumentative points and about the passion and the person behind your classmates' stances. In your follow-up posts, please share your thoughts on your classmates' analysis of the textbook reading and respond to their personal reflections with substance.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 6 Discussion

Being a True and Dedicated Colleague: Guided Formal Peer Review of Argument Research Essay Drafts

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Required Peer Review SheetPreview the document

Lesson

Initial Post Instructions

Main Post Part 1: Attach Your Draft and Explain Your Goals

After you have thoroughly read and revisited this week's lesson, you will be ready to perform rich, authentic, expansive, useful peer reviews for your classmates. This is one tool of several that you will use during the important process of revision. During revision, you will "re-vision" your writing to find ways to improve argument, focus, support, organization, voice, and all other aspects of an argument research essay; therefore, additional "sets of eyes" are extremely useful. What's more, you, the reviewer, will pick up ways to improve your own paper while reading the approaches others are taking, during your reviews of your classmates' essays.

To that end, this week in our discussion area, we will be sharing our full argument research essay drafts in a class peer review. In order to make this process run smoothly, please be sure to follow these instructions:

Find your name on the peer review assignment list provided by your professor to determine whether you are in Group A, B, C, D, or E.

Once you have located your assigned group (and no later than Wednesday), join that discussion area by attaching your most recently revised draft as your initial post.

This may be the draft you submitted to your instructor in Week 5, or you may have made changes since then and will wish to post your most updated copy (remember the "good" to "great" portion of the Lesson!)

In your post, also compose a good paragraph offering information about your draft in which you address at least three of your major revision goals. Do not list mechanical items like grammar and APA because it is a given that you'll edit and proofread for those items. Instead, note at least three content-related goals, such as stronger support for one point, connecting sources to your logic more powerfully, and unifying your points to align well with your thesis. These are just examples; please write a paragraph that notes your own goals and explains the "why" and "how" of those. Be sure to ask your professor if you have any questions about the peer review process.

Peer Review (Follow-Up Post) Instructions

You must reply to two of the peers in your group with a full review of each of those peers' drafts.

Find the two peers who have posted after you in terms of time.

Read their attached essays and any notes they left to accompany the draft.

Download the Peer Review Sheet. Complete the form separately for each of the two peers whose drafts you will be reviewing.

Return your completed Peer Review Sheet as an attachment in a response post to each of your peers separately. Peer reviews must be completed and posted as replies to your classmates no later than Friday night. The reason your peer reviews are due earlier in the week than other discussion replies is that your classmates must have enough time to utilize your feedback.

Through Sunday: Continue to check into your group Discussion area to reply back to your reviewers with any questions or clarification you have for them and to check for questions and comments from the students you reviewed.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 7 Discussion

Ending Toxic Relationships with Revision; Revision Workshopping

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 303-305.

Lesson

Apply the following writing resources to your posts:

Link (multimedia presentation): Citing References in Text (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website): APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Initial Post Instructions

Main Post Part 1: Share Your Revision Plan

You have now received feedback from your instructor and from your peers, and you have already been applying revision strategies to your draft in the past week.

This week, you will perform final, guided revisions in six levels: global, section, paragraph, sentence, word, and final proofreading. After you have read and studied the lesson and the assigned textbook readings for the week, you will make a plan for addressing these levels of revision.

In one full paragraph, please share how you are approaching revisions now and how you will continue to do so before submitting your final draft. In this paragraph, answer the following questions:

Which days and time slots on your calendar this week have you set aside to fully address each of the six distinct levels of revision as addressed in the lesson? Be very specific.

Why did you choose these days and time slots? Be very specific.

By now, you should have begun working through the stages of revision. Which stage are you in? Please share how you approached the stage(s) you have worked through. What insights have you gained? What changes have you made? Be very specific.

Main Post Part 2: Share Your Rewards Plan

We understand the importance of self-care and of rewarding ourselves for our good efforts. "Revision Week" can be stressful because revision takes hard mental work and time and because you may also be very busy in other classes or with other endeavors. Review the portion of the lesson that suggests ideas for rewarding yourself during your revision stages in order to stay refreshed and motivated.

In one full paragraph, please carefully describe at least three of your unique post-revision level rewards for this week.

What are the rewards?

Where do they occur?

What will they look like?

Who will be there?

How will each reward refresh you?

Be very specific and descriptive; let your classmates truly "see" the creative and rejuvenating choices you are making!

Follow-Up Post Instructions

Respond to at least two peers or one peer and the instructor. Here, in reading others' posts and replying to them, you will learn a great deal more about approaches to applying levels to revision and to avoiding burn-out through creating incentives. In your follow-up posts, please share your thoughts on your classmates' approaches to specific revision levels and note similarities and differences between your classmates' approaches and your own. In addition, share your thoughts on your classmates' ideas for self-reward, also noting similarities and differences between your classmates' self-reward ideas and your own.

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 8 Discussion

Reflection

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 510-523.

Lesson

Apply the following writing resources to your posts:

Link (multimedia presentation): Citing References in Text (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website): APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Initial Post Instructions

Main Post Part 1: Read and Respond

After thoroughly reading the Week 8 lesson and the required textbook pages, go back and re-read, specifically, the articles from the assigned Week 8 textbook pages. Ask yourself: In the textbook readings, which statements in these articles inspire me? How and why? Do any statements bother me? How and why?" Take careful notes, jotting down quotations and your reactions to them, based on those questions. After you have given good time and attention to this process, you will begin writing Part 1 of your discussion post.

A note: Keep in mind that your actual post will require that you express yourself openly. While correctness is always important, try to steer away from obsessing over strict "rules" so that you may focus on you and your feelings and passions. It is absolutely crucial that we step away, at times, from intellectualizing and dive, instead, into pure gut reaction, to what our heart says about what we are reading and into writing about that freely. This is the fertile soil for those big ideas that might turn into dreams, then into realities, in our future.

Instructions for Part 1:

Identify two specific direct quotations from two separate readings in your assigned Week 8 textbook pages that you noted having a gut/heart reaction to. Be sure to use signal phrases and to cite these in-text and in an end reference.

In at least one full paragraph, write about one quotation at a time. Identify the first quotation, then truly let yourself go. Let your heart and gut speak. Why did you choose this first quotation? How did it make you feel? Why? Then, in the same paragraph, identify the second quotation. Finally, as with the first quotation, truly let yourself go. Let your heart and gut speak. Why did you choose this second quotation? How did it make you feel? Why?

Main Post Part 2: So...What Are You Inspired to Do?

In another full paragraph minimum, still sticking to your heart and gut, freely write about what your reactions in Part 1 inspire you to do.

Note: Before composing this part of your post, you should brainstorm separately, in your own notebook or on a "brainstorming Word doc," generating many possibilities: large, small, local, global, at home, in the community, with one person, with a thousand people, whatever occurs to you. Let yourself "go" and list, list, list everything that comes to mind as an action you might take in response to your feelings in Part 1. Some of your ideas may seem far-fetched; don't be afraid to express them. Do not limit yourself to sharing just the practical, smart, reasonable actions. Have fun! Then, turn that into a good paragraph for your post.

Follow-Up Post Instructions

Respond to at least two peers or one peer and the instructor. Here, in reading others' posts and replying to them, you will be exposed to reactions that may be very similar to your own and reactions that may be quite different from yours. You will hopefully also see some wonderful and eye-opening ideas for application. So, in your reply posts, please focus on sharing similarities and differences in your reactions and help your classmates brainstorm for more actions that might be taken based on your classmates' gut and heart reactions and on your own.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 1 Assignment  

Argument Research Essay Topic and Proposal

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 63-91, and review pp. 266-270

Lesson

Link (PDF):?Proposal Template with ExamplePreview the document

Minimum of 2 scholarly sources (one supporting, one opposing)

Apply the following writing resources to your assignment:

Link (multimedia presentation):?Citing References in Text?(Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website):?APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.)

Instructions

The goal of an argument research proposal is to create a working argument thesis statement and a basic research plan that considers context, audience, and purpose and that presents potential sources that support and run counter to your stance.

Keep in mind that rather than being an outline or structural plan for your essay, this proposal should ground you in the scholarly conversation, should offer direction for research needs, and should give your professor ample focused material viable for providing effective feedback before the drafting process.

Access the Proposal Template and complete the six required sections:

Narrowed Topic

Research Question

Claim

Rationale and Research Plan

Review of Differing Viewpoint Sources via Synthesis Matrix

Reference Page

For an example proposal and development techniques, refer to your textbook reading for the week.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 2 Assignment  

Pre-writing, Argumentative Essay Introduction and Thesis, an Argumentative Plan, and First Sources

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: Chapter 3 and pp. 94-107, 295-297, 306, 337-356

Lesson

Link (Word doc): Assignment TemplatePreview the document

Minimum of 6 scholarly sources

Apply the following writing resources to your assignment:

Link (multimedia presentation): Citing References in Text (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website): APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Instructions

For this assignment, you will continue to pre-write and plan for your argument research essay by applying pre-writing to your thesis from Week1 (revised as necessary according to instructor feedback and your own further thought). You will also construct a first draft of your full introduction paragraph, utilizing what you have learned from your textbook readings, the Week 2 Lesson, and your Discussion participation. Finally, you will discuss your overall argument structure plan and provide a list of at least six scholarly sources in APA Style that represent an equal number of sources that support your stance and sources that oppose your stance.

Access the Week 2 Assignment Template and complete the five required sections:

Your Current Thesis

Pre-writing

A Draft of Your Full Introduction Paragraph

Argument Appeals Plan

List of Sources in APA Style

For tips on examples of what to do and what to avoid when writing an introduction, refer to the lesson and assigned readings for the week.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 3 Assignment  

Guided Annotated Bibliography: Reading Critically and Practicing Summary, Paraphrase, and Quotation

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 2-26, 32-36, and review pages 270-293 & 337-356

Lesson

Link (Word doc): Guided Annotated Bibliography TemplatePreview the document

Minimum of 6 scholarly articles

Apply the following writing resources to your posts:

Link (multimedia presentation): Citing References in Text (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Link (website): APA Citation and Writing (Links to an external site.) (Links to an external site.)

Instructions

For this assignment, complete the following:

Review from the lesson and textbook readings argumentative appeals, models for argument, effective and correct use of sources, and the purposes for/examples of annotated bibliographies.  Assess any feedback provided by the professor and/or your peers from discussion.

Use the provided template.

Compose a full and complete annotated bibliography that includes the 6 scholarly sources with which you are most likely to work as you begin drafting your essay. These may change later, as you will continually research during drafting to find more powerful sources and/or new ideas for support and opposition. You may use sources from previous assignments if you have read and re-read them and feel they are highly valuable at this point still. On the template provided, you will:

Compose a full, rich, detailed paragraph discussing the process you used in gathering and annotating your sources. The template will guide you with required questions that you must answer for this paragraph.

Compose full APA References for six scholarly sources, ideally three that support your points and three that oppose them, but no fewer than two opposing sources.

Write a rich annotation for each source, according to best practices studied in your readings and according to the instructions on the template.

Keep in mind that your purpose is analytical. You will very briefly summarize the source in a single sentence, then move into the source’s credibility, relevance, timeliness, and usefulness, followed by detailing specific connections to your argument and points and to other sources, if applicable. By the time you have finished this assignment, you should have a very clear idea of how your argument and the conversation between your voice and your sources will play out. This assignment will also provide your instructor with a solid preview of the quality of your argument as a whole.

Before submission, proofread and edit carefully for APA, spelling, punctuation, and grammar. While you are strongly encouraged to utilize electronic proofreading and APA tools, that is just your first line of offense. You should then always perform your own careful proofreading, silently and aloud, asking others to proofread if possible.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 4 Assignment  

Logical Fallacies Presentation: Poking (and Plugging) Holes in Arguments

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 157-173

Lesson

Sample PresentationPreview the document

Instructions

For this assignment, complete the following:

Review from the lesson and textbook readings the types of logical fallacies and examples.

Locate three advertisements online that were posted no later than one year ago. The advertisements may be any of the following types, and they do not need to all be the same type:

Advertisements for products, such as for a beauty product or an automobile

Political campaign ads

Advertisements that pop up on your social media threads, like on Facebook or Instagram

Keep in mind that this assignment requires you to identify logical fallacies, so choose your three advertisements carefully, looking for those in which you do see clear and identifiable logical fallacies at work. Search until you have three advertisements that will work well for this assignment on logical fallacies.

Create a PowerPoint presentation consisting of 11 slides:

An introduction slide with your name, the class, and the title of your presentation- don't be afraid to get creative with your title!

On one slide, show and cite the advertisement.

On another slide, name the fallacy that occurs and define the fallacy. For example, if you see an Ad Hominem fallacy, you will note that there is an Ad Hominem Fallacy and offer a definition of "Ad Hominem" using your own wording. Do not simply copy the definition from the lesson or textbook.

On the next slide, explain how and why a specific portion of the ad represents this specific fallacy. Be thorough and clear.

Repeat the above process with your other two advertisements. You should have three slides for each advertisement, for a total of nine body slides

A References slide in which you provide full APA-correct references for your three advertisements. You should not have additional references because everything else in your presentation should simply represent your learning in this module.

Note: Include everything on your slides visually. If you'd like to use voice-over, that's fine; just note that you will be graded on what is visually on the slides only. You may be as visually creative as you would like!

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 5 Assignment  

Full Draft of the Argument Research Essay

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 293-318 and 337-356

Lesson

Minimum of 5 sources

Instructions

This assignment is a full draft of your Argument Research PaperPreview the document. This draft will demonstrate the argument and writing techniques studied in the course and will build upon the steps you have taken in all the previous weeks toward developing your Argument Research Paper. This draft is expected to meet all of the Argument Research Essay requirements for writing, content, length, and sources.

Writing Requirements for the Argument Research Essay First Draft, Due in Week 5, and for the Argument Essay Final Draft, Due in Week 7

Correct use of APA guidelines for the following:

Headers with pagination

Title Page

Margins, spacing, and paragraph indentation

APA in-text citation and referencing for all sources

Do not divide your essay into sections.

Do not use headings within your paper to indicate changes in topic. While longer APA essays and particular types of APA writing, such as scholarly articles, employ APA-style bolded headings to divide portions of the writing, you are writing a shorter academic essay. Your shift from one paragraph to the next should be signaled through your use of the effective transition and topic sentence rules we have practiced.

6-8 full pages for the essay itself, not including title page or references

Effective structure, including your introduction paragraph, your body paragraphs, and your conclusion paragraph

Use of third-person throughout. Focus on the topic, not on you nor on the essay. In other words: no first-person “I,” and no referring to the essay, such as “In this essay.”

At least 5 scholarly sources visibly used, cited, and referenced

Refer to the full Argument Research Essay Rubric

Your instructor will grade and offer feedback on this draft to help set you up toward additional success with your final draft in Week 7. In Week 6, you will post your draft to your peer review group area in discussion to also receive their feedback.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 6 Assignment  

What Does the Opossum Say? Invent a Scenario Involving a Genre of Argument

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Lesson

One presentation medium such as Prezi, narrated PowerPoint, video, screen capture, or another with which you are familiar and comfortable. Check out the sample presentation for this assignment!

Play media comment.

Your Week 6 assignment is a brief and fun one. It allows you to think "outside the box" about your issue and stance.

The title of the assignment is a bit silly and intriguing, but the idea is that you will consider the impact of your issue, of your supporting arguments and the opposing viewpoints in your paper, on an animal that lives nearby, like an opossum who hangs out by the trash bins behind a hospital. For example, if your argument's goal (say, a change in the definition of "regular" and "hazardous" refuse), leads to a change in the content of trash bins and therefore to a change in what the opossum is exposed to/ingests, that's something you may not have considered to this point. So, via this activity, that opossum can be given a "voice" to express the impact on its life.

This is not just a fun little children's game, though; the intent is to push your brain and expand your understanding of impact, while also demonstrating your understanding of argument genres as discussed in this week's textbook readings and lesson.

You will create a presentation, using a mode of your choice. You may choose narrated PowerPoint, or another medium like Prezi, or even make your own video with visuals, a screen capture if you are skilled in that- it is entirely up to you and what you'd like to try out. The sky is the limit here. In this presentation you will:

State your thesis

Identify a nearby animal that may be impacted by your topic and note the ways in which the animal might be impacted.

Then, give your animal a voice. What does it say about the issue? Let your animal share its thoughts on your stance and on an opposing stance.

Next, respond to the animal by using one of the argument genres discussed in the textbook and the lesson. For example, would some definition help with clarity for the animal? Can you find common values-based ground? Perhaps the animal raises a problem; how can you address solutions? For example, maybe the "stay at home" order handed down in 2020 in response to the COVID pandemic managed to cut pollution so much that certain animals returned to their habitats.

Finally, you will discuss how and if a resolution could be reached and how the exercise helped you to see your topic and essay in new ways.

Presentation Requirements

Depending on the medium you use, you will create the equivalent of a "slide" for each of the following (Some presentation tools, or video, might not be actual "slides"):

Identify your thesis, the animal, and why you chose it.

Using your animal's hypothetical "words," state how your thesis or one of your main supporting points will impact this animal and why.

Respond to your animal by thoroughly addressing these concerns via an argument genre. Name the genre you are using.

Wrap up your conversation with the animal by noting whether a solution is possible and why or why not.

Discuss how this exercise expanded your understanding of your topic.

Length and Content Parameters

The equivalent of four rich "slides" addressing the verbal content written above.

Text and voice for all four "slides." You may narrate in your own voice or have fun with "animal character" voices!

At least two visuals representing your animal. You may use only your own original, owned images in the form of drawings and/or photos taken by you. If you have to draw, don't worry; part of the fun is being silly. If you end up with stick figure of a squirrel holding a nut, for example, that's more "you" than a stock photo of a squirrel from online (which is not allowed). Be as creative as you'd like!

No sources. This little presentation is just a conversation between your animal and you and represents your ability to reason and to consider a "special" point of view.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 7 Assignment  

Final Draft of the Argument Research Paper

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Textbook: pp. 293-318 and 337-356

Lesson

APA Guidelines (Links to an external site.)

This week's assignment is the final, revised draft of your Argument Research Paper. This final copy will demonstrate the argument, writing, and revision techniques studied in the course and will build upon the steps you have taken in previous weeks toward thoroughly and carefully revising your Argument Research Paper Preview the documentoriginally composed and submitted in Week 5.

Writing Requirements for the Argument Research Essay Final Draft:

Correct use of APA guidelines for the following:

Headers with pagination

Title Page

Margins, spacing, and paragraph indentation

APA in-text citation and referencing for all sources

Do not divide your essay into sections.

Do not use headings within your paper to indicate changes in topic. While longer APA essays and particular types of APA writing, such as scholarly articles, employ APA-style bolded headings to divide portions of the writing, you are writing a shorter academic essay. Your shift from one paragraph to the next should be signaled through your use of the effective transition and topic sentence rules we have practiced.

6-8 full pages for the essay itself, not including title page or references

Effective structure, including your introduction paragraph, your body paragraphs, and your conclusion paragraph

At least 5 scholarly sources visibly used, cited, and referenced

 

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 8 Assignment  

Go Forth and Change Lives: Thinking about the Role of Argument and Research in Your Twelve-Month Plan

Required Resources

Read/review the following resources for this activity:

Lesson

Week 8 Assignment 1 TemplatePreview the document

This assignment is an exciting chance for you to address the course outcomes in a new and personalized manner. You will consider the next year in four "chunks" of months. Based on your passions and uses for argument in different areas of your life, you will evaluate possible argument scenarios, considering audience and argument techniques. This assignment will also afford you the exciting prospect of using the source evaluation skills you have learned via searching for books to place on your personal reading list, referencing them in correct APA Style, and explaining what excites you about those books. The assignment template will guide you in expressing your goals, in thinking about argument in different and fun contexts, and in identifying books for your 12-month reading list. The objective of this assignment is to provide you with further application of argument techniques and of information literacy tools.

Please use the template, composing your responses directly on the template. Approach this assignment with an eye toward change and the power you have for impacting the world around you.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 1 Quiz   

Question 1What is the most current edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association?

  5th edition

  6th edition

  7th edition

Question 2What does DOI stand for in a reference page citation?

  Department of Identification

  Database Object Identification

  Digital Object Identifier

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 2 Quiz   

Question 1 Which of the following is a good method for getting started writing?

  See if free essay web sites have any good essays that would work.

  See if someone you know has taken the class before and ask if you could use that person’s work to submit as your own.

  Go to Wikipedia and find a good article on your topic. Copy and paste some paragraphs from that, and change a few of the words to your own.

  None of the above

Question 2 Which of the following is not considered a pre-writing strategy?

  Talking with others

  Listing

  Mapping

  Writing and fine-tuning your full introduction paragraph

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 3 Quiz   

Question 1 When integrating a quotation into your argument paper, which of the following is not a correct approach:

  In fact, according to Msuku (2018), “We are unaware of most of the communicable diseases that will impact humanity in the next ten years” (p. 34).

  Most experts do feel that holistic medication has some benefits of varying degrees; however, a few outliers hold the opinion that “all holistic medicines should be banned pending further research and approvals” (Jones, 2020, p. 297).

  Martinez goes on to assert: “We should never look at just one factor when making blanket decisions about a field of medicine” (2019, p. 876).

  Smith, however, disagrees. “It is indeed blanket decisions that will save lives until we have more information” (2020, p. 37).

Question 2When paraphrasing a source in an argument paper, you should:

  Use a good lead-in, completely rephrase the passage into your own wording, and use only an end reference vs. in-text citation.

  Just be sure to change the wording significantly; if you do this, you do not have to introduce or cite the source.

  Change some of the words, use a good lead-in, and include the page number in the in-text citation.

  Use a good lead-in, completely rephrase the passage into your own wording, and provide author and year in the lead-in or in-text following the paraphrase.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 4 Quiz   

Question 1 Match the following Fallacies to their examples

Overstatement

Ad Populum

False Dilemma

Bandwagon

Slippery Slope

Red Herring

False Analogy

Begging the question

Ad Hominem

Straw Man

 

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 5 Quiz   

Question 1Which of the following is not a viable “checklist” item for making your voice be the driving force of your draft?

  Making sure you are synthesizing source ideas by inserting your own voice to show the logic and relevance of source information as applied to your own point

  Using your own language in each topic sentence to transition, to let the reader know the point of the paragraph, and to offer a preview of the support to come

  Spending adequate space and time after using support to explain the logic behind the support and to connect it to your stance, to show how and why it proves your point

  Using “I” and “me” every time you are expressing your own thoughts and opinions so your reader knows it is you “speaking” 

Question 2Which of the following is an effective final sentence of your entire essay?

  Now that I have told you why we need local clinics, you should also think about why we need to encourage vaccinations in the U.S.

  Do you want to support local clinics, or do you want to be responsible for possibly losing a life, a life that could be the next President or the next Albert Einstein?

  Consider the impact that improving access to local clinics will have on the children who most need it; we can save lives, lives that may go on to improve the world in major ways.

  That’s just my opinion; you can take it or leave it.

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 6 Quiz   

Question 1Which of the following would be the most helpful reply to a classmates’ draft during peer review?

 “Sarah, I really liked this essay! You might want to go to the APA website, but otherwise, great work!”

  “Hi Sarah! Please see attached; I used track changes to fix all your grammar errors. Otherwise, super paper!”

 “Hi Sarah! Please see attached; I have thoroughly filled out the required peer review sheet for you with many comments and ideas regarding structure, flow, voice, and balance. Don’t hesitate to discuss further!”

  “Sarah, you really didn’t follow directions and I really don’t know what I can say to help.”

 Question 2Which of the following is the most reasonable goal for peer review?

Having all of your errors fixed

 Giving enough feedback to get a good grade

 Being an “extra set of eyes” for your classmates and getting “extra sets of eyes” from them toward a strong, more effective argument research essay  

Finding other students who wrote about a similar topic and using their paragraphs in your essay, just changing some words so it isn’t plagiarism

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 7 Quiz   

Question 1Please choose the action that best represents a step you would take in each level of revision:

Global Level             

Section Level             

Paragraph Level             

Sentence Level             

Word Level             

Proofreading and Editing

 

ENGL147 Advanced English Composition

Week 8 Quiz   

Paragraph 1: Define and Explain

This paragraph is not presented to the jury. This paragraph simply explains your celebration plans in detail.

Requirements:

In one rich paragraph, describe how you will celebrate finishing this class. Employ very specific details to create a full paragraph. You may richly describe one specific celebration, like a party or a trip, or you may describe several celebratory actions you will be taking in the coming week or weeks.

Paragraphs 2 and 3: Defend Your Choice with Argument Technique

Paragraphs 2 and 3 will be presented by you to the jury. So, for your final 2 paragraphs, imagine that you are indeed presenting and defending your plan for celebration to this jury, and that they (remember: a seasoned and tough jury) will ultimately give your plan a “thumbs up” or a “thumbs down.” In these paragraphs, be as creative and unique as you’d like, as long as you are meeting the requirements for each paragraph. Your goal is to present the most solid and powerful argument possible; you want that well-deserved stamp of approval!

Paragraph 2: Apply Aristotle

Requirements:

In a rich, detailed, paragraph, employ the argument appeals we have studied and practiced: logos, ethos, pathos, and kairos. This paragraph should present “your case” to the jury in detail and should demonstrate the sound use of all four of these appeals.

 

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