EN 105 Week 1 Assignment Help | Park University | Assignment Help
- Park University / EN 105
- 18 May 2021
- Price: $6
- Humanities Assignment Help / Linguistics Assignment Help
EN 105 Week 1 Assignment Help | Park University | Assignment Help
Unit
1: Major Writing Assignment 1
Writing About Learning
Learning Goals
By completing this assignment, you will:
·
develop a control
idea/thesis for a personal narrative essay
·
use anecdotes from your
personal experience to support, develop, clarify, or extend the focus
of your essay
·
practice using common
formats and conventions (e.g., structure, tone, mechanics) for a personal
narrative essay
Task
This unit, you read, analyzed, and discussed three
narratives about learning: David Sedaris's humorous essay "Me Talk Pretty
One Day;" an excerpt from The Autobiography of Malcolm X,
entitled "Learning to Read;" and Plato's famous "The Allegory of
the Cave." All three narratives tell a story about the nature of learning.
To complete this writing assignment, you will add to this genre by
creating a learning narrative of your own.
Create an essay, between 500 and 1,000 words, that
illustrates your perspective on learning by telling a true story from your
experience. Your learning narrative should be aimed at a general audience.
Assume that your readers are interested in your ideas about
learning, and are hoping to read
an engaging, personal, thought-provoking essay.
You may choose from many acceptable approaches to
this assignment, including:
·
Telling a story about a
particular time that you learned an important lesson
·
Describing a relationship
you had with an important teacher or mentor
·
Discussing an experience
in which you overcame significant challenges to learning
·
Developing an analogy,
metaphor, or allegory that illustrates your beliefs about learning
Whatever approach you choose, remember that your goal is
to teach your readers about your experiences with learning. Keep
the focus on your own experiences and ideas, while also telling a story. If you
would like, you may emulate some of the development strategies used by
David Sedaris, Malcolm X, and Plato. In addition to development,
your assignment should show signs of revision, editing, and proofreading.
Remember that you may use any of the material from your Writer's
Journal as a starting point for this assignment.
Cover Letter
When you submit this assignment, include a
brief cover letter (no more than 300 words) that answers the following
questions:
·
What
is your purpose in this assignment? What is it you are trying to do
or say in this piece of writing?
·
What are you proud
of about this assignment?
·
What challenges did you
face while completing this assignment?
·
What sorts of feedback do
you want from your instructor on this assignment?
Include your cover letter as a comment on your
uploaded document -- not as a separate file. Your cover
letter will not count for or against your grade, but will help your
instructor respond best to your writing.
Length, Design, & Formatting
Your learning narrative should be between 500 and 1,000
words. More important than length is quality. Make sure to
fully tell your story, using development strategies that help you support,
clarify, or extend your focus.
Use MLA guidelines for document design. This includes
using 1-inch margins, double-spaced type, a page number in the upper right
corner, and a Works Cited page (if applicable). For details on designing
documents according to MLA guidelines, see Chapter 41 in Easy Writer,
especially the section labeled "Following MLA manuscript format."
Give your work a unique title -- not "Assignment
1."
To allow your instructor the ability to post marginal
commentary, you must submit this assignment as a .doc, .docx, or .pdf
file. You can save files in these formats with most word processors, including
Web-based programs like Google
Docs, Word Online, and Open
Office. If
you are using a web-based file storage system like Google Drive or Dropbox, be sure to learn
exactly how to transfer files from your storage system to Canvas.
A Note About Sources
Your major "source" for this assignment should
be your own experience. For this assignment, do not conduct outside research.
If you feel that quoting our class readings would help you achieve
your goal in this assignment, please cite them using MLA in-text and
end-of-text citations. This includes placing the quoted material in
quotation marks, clearly indicating the author of the work, and providing
a page number for the quotation, if applicable. For each source that you quote
or discuss in your writing, include an end-of-text citation that follows
MLA guidelines. For examples and discussion of how to work with
sources in writing, see the Easy Writer chapters on
"Quotation Marks" and "Integrating Sources and Avoiding
Plagiarism." You will also begin to practice using sources later in the
course.
Instructor Response & Grading
You can expect your instructor to
provide substantive response and feedback to your
assignment within 6 days of the deadline. Please review all instructor
feedback, including marginal commentary, which you can access by clicking
"View Feedback" once your assignment has been graded. You should use
your instructor's feedback to as a guide to revision and improvement for
your future writing assignments.
Your assignment will be graded using a rubric
derived from the rubric used to grade your final portfolio. Please note
that the rubric for this assignment places importance on thoughtfulness,
insight, focus, and development.