Let me share some general comments on Paper #1.
Overall? This was an excellent set of papers! You started with a strong thesis – and an excellent set of notes. The best papers added:
- A compelling introduction
- Strong examples and analysis that help deliver the thesis
- Strong topic sentences to each ¶
- A strong organization to each ¶
- Clear, direct – even lively – writing
- And an interesting conclusion that goes beyond summary
Small errors
- See the Sample Paper for simple format issues.
- Newspaper titles should be in italics, book titles in italics, article titles in quotation marks (The New York Herald, “Manufacturing Consent”)
- Use the full name on first reference to a person – after that you typically use the last name
- A quotation of four lines or more, format as a block quotation. Indent, single space, no quotation marks
- Put periods inside of quotation marks
- Use double quotation marks for quotations – single quotation marks only for quotations within your quotations
- Use the past tense for events in the past
Citations
- You must cite your sources!
- And for this kind of assignment – and history papers – you need to cite them with footnotes
- Footnotes show how you know what you know
- They must include the precise page number – unless you are referring to the entire work
- See the Sample Paper for examples
The use of quotations
- Always introduce your quotations – don’t just drop them into a sentence or a ¶. They need to make sense to the reader coming to them cold
- Don’t start a ¶ w/ a quotation
- Cut them down to the essence to support your point
- Usually quotations need some explanation. Don’t end ¶ w/ a quotation
Use of sources
- If you are using more than three words in a row from another source, you need to put them in quotation marks – otherwise, you are at risk of plagiarism
- And don’t paraphrase in a way that closely follows the original. This, too, is plagiarism
Paragraph (¶) Organization – this is a big one
- The paragraph is the unit of composition
- Each ¶ should have one point! That should be clear in a topic sentence.
- Develop your point with evidence & analysis
- Give your ¶ a clear organization
Most important? Clear, direct prose
- Read aloud
- Eliminate unnecessary words & cut the fluff
- Make your writing as concrete as you can, with descriptive nouns and lively verbs
- Avoid the passive voice
- Make people the subjects of your sentences
- Vary sentence structure
- Take your drafts to the Writing Center