IN-CLASS ESSAY
For our third paper, we will write an essay in class. You will be given the following writing prompt, and you may prepare an outline on a 5" x 8" note card to guide you as you write a formal essay in class. Here is the prompt:
Much like Lubrano defines "straddlers" and Lowen defines the processes of "herofication," you need to coin a term for a group or process related to an educational experience you personally observed during your schooling. You may commandeer a word from existing vocabulary and craft a new, localized meaning relevant to the group or process you are describing, or you may create a new word entirely.
To successfully answer the question, your essay should do the following:
- Offer a clear term for the readers' consideration.
- Provide a definition of the term that excludes other groups or processes.
- Provides clear examples of the major defining characteristics in action.
- Evaluates the effect the group or process had on either the school environment, the educational experience, or specific individuals.
The paper should be structured like a traditional 5-7 paragraph essay. Key features include the following:
- The Introduction
- Starts with a hook to grab the readers' attention while immediately focusing in on the specific topic.
- Clearly identifies the specific school situation in which this term is relevant.
- Presents the term and the definition.
- Provides a plan of development that lists the key characteristics that your examples are going to explore.
- Ends with a final statement on the impact your topic had on the school environment.
- Each Body Paragraph
- Has a topic sentence with a strong transition and a clear link to an element from your term's definition.
- Offers a specific, developed example of the characteristic in action.
- Concludes with a judgement about the characteristic.
- The Conclusion
- Has a strong transition (That is not "in conclusion").
- Restates the definition and the key characteristics.
- Provides a broader discussion of the impact this group or process had on somebody at the school or on the educational experience.
To prepare for this exam, you may prepare a 5" x 8" exam card. This card does not have to be an actual card: you can cut a 5" x 8" piece of paper or even create two 5" x 8" boxes on a sheet of paper. You may use both sides of the card. The card may not use complete sentences: it should be an outline of your paper. The extent of detail you put on the card is up to you, but you may not write out the whole essay on the card. The card will be presented to Dr. Halbert at the start of the in-class essay to verify that you only have an outline on it. You only have the length of the class period in which to complete the essay.
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