Monday, December 9, 2013

Directing your writing for the final essay

What I will be looking for in the final essay: a introductory paragraph that includes author, title of the novel (underlined, if hand-written; italicized, if typed) with a thesis statement; the body of the paper should consist of specific examples from the novel that are explained and related to the thesis statement. Consider this example:

Thesis [that would follow near the end of the introductory paragraph]:  Tim O’Brien’s novel, The Things They Carried, presents characters who are admirable, even noble at times; these include Norman Bowker, Henry Dobbins, Rat Kiley and Kiowa. These men are juxtaposed with soldiers like the sadistic Azar, the fearful, the drug-using Ted Lavendar, and Curt Lemon, whose bravado does not mitigate his fear of the dentist. The reader can better appreciate the men to whom the book is dedicated because of the actions of these characters.

Body Paragraph One: The reader is first introduced to Azar in the short chapter titled, “Spin,” when the narrator relates the episode of Azar blowing up Ted Lavendar puppy. When he is chastised by the other men, his response is that he is “just a boy.” He, like the other soldiers is roughly nineteen, and might truly be considered “boys,” but he is not only young; he is immature. Like the other soldiers, he witnesses war for the first time; his means of coping with war seems striking in contrast to soldiers like Henry Dobbins, however.  When Alpha Company comes across a young Vietnamese girl doing what seems to be a ritual dance after her parents have been killed, Azar mocks  and ridicules her mercilessly; he stops, though, when the Henry Dobbins picks him up and threatens to drop Azar into the well. The reader is keenly aware that Azar has no real mechanism for dealing with this kind of death or grief. His cruelty is evident, too, when he chooses to help Tim O’Brien play a mean prank on Bobby Jorgensen, the new medic who replaced Rat Kiley. Mitchell Sanders had declined to help O’Brien because the joke was too malicious and undeserved. Azar, however, is without scruples and finds it humorous. It is not until Azar is sent with Norman Bowker and Mitchell Sanders to retrieve Kiowa’s body from sewage that the reader sees Azar with his defenses down and even apologetic. This speaks volumes about Kiowa as well as Azar.

NOTES: This is not a plot summary. This is an analysis that provides evidence which supports the thesis.

THESIS:  The reader can better appreciate the men to whom the book is dedicated [Henry Dobbins, Norman Bowker, Rat Kiley, Kiowa, et.al.] because of the actions of these characters [Azar, Ted Lavendar, Rat Kiley]

Evidence in Paragraph One: focus is on Azar—cruelty in blowing up puppy; compared to Henry Dobbins re. the dancing girl; compared to Mitch Sanders—each episode is from the novel and briefly explained, but related to the thesis; it uses a combination of writing methods: comparing Azar to another soldier and giving a specific example. Each example is directly related to the thesis of the paper.






Thursday, December 5, 2013

Topics for Your Consideration

The following are not EXACT topics that could appear for you to select on the final essay, but could be similar to what you might see:

  • Who are the storytellers of Alpha Company? What do they have in common? What stories do they tell? Why do use exaggeration? What is they want from their audience/readers? 
    • Stories that might help: "How to Tell a True War Story," "The Sweetheart of the Song Tra Bong," "Good Form," "Lives of the Dead"
  • Tim O'Brien says that stories can "save us." What does he mean? He also says stories can bring the dead back to life? Use examples from the book to illustrate what he means. How does this even connect the story of Linda to the men who were lost in Alpha Company?
    •  "Good Form," "Lives of the Dead" 
  • Paradox and irony are close companions in this novel. For example, in the story "How to Tell a True War Story," Tim O'Brien says the truths are "contradictory." He notes for example, that war is indeed "hell" and that it "makes the stomach believe." He tells the story of the baby water buffalo that is killed slowly and cruelly as evidence; yet he adds that for all its ugliness, war is also beautiful. What does evidence goes he give from the story to support this statement? Ultimately, at the conclusion of the story he says that the stories he tells are "not war stories," they're "love stories." What does he mean by that? [It is by the way, another paradox.] In what paradoxical [and ironic] way does cowardice lead these young men to perform courageous deeds?
    • "How to Tell a True War Story," "On the Rainy River," "Enemies" and "Friends"
  • Explain the difference between "happening-truth" and "story-truth," as O'Brien distinguishes it. What does story-truth do that happening-truth cannot? In what way does the fiction of Tim O'Brien become more believable and truer than happening-truth. Give examples from the book to support your answer.
    • "Good Form," "Notes" --other stories as well
  • IF there are any questions about character in this novel that could develop into an essay topic, it might be this: Which two soldiers are the most important to Alpha Company and in what way? -- Needless to say, support with evidence.
    • Depends on who you choose

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Last Week Before Finals

1. The "back story" and "outlook" for your character is NOT due today; it is due THURSDAY - 12/5/2013

2.  Make sure you're aware of when your class will have its final exam

3. They haven't disappeared, and yes, you will get them back.  (Vague pronouns used deliberately.)

4. We need to finish up character analysis today (as much as possible)

5. We need to focus on theme in The Things They Carried on Wednesday.

To explain . . . one more patient time . . . THEME in literature refers to the main idea about life that the book/short story/poem reveals. Theme is usually indirect and while it permeates the book, it is not something that one can simply "pull out" and place in a "fill in the blank" quiz. As Tim O'Brien says, theme is like a "thread" that runs through the work; you can't "tease" it out. The characters and their actions reveal the various themes in this novel. It is a character-driven novel, not a plot-driven novel. The focus is not what will happen next; rather, the focus is who are these men, how do they react to these circumstances and what happens to them. 

Themes . . . will most likely be the focus of the essay topics for the final--but to illustrate how theme is revealed, you MUST be familiar with the men of Alpha Company.

For example . . . why is storytelling important? What do stories do, according to Tim O'Brien? Who are the storytellers? What do all the storytellers have in common? What's the difference between "happening truth" and "story truth"?

For example . . . O'Brien, Norman Bowker, and Jimmy Cross are all haunted by memories. Bowker and O'Brien are especially guilt ridden by memory--but there are other soldiers who cannot forget, as well. What do they remember? How is truth different from memory? How do stories connect memory to the present?

For example . . . For all its horror, cruelty, and brutality, war is equally beautiful, according to the narrator of "How to Tell a True War Story." In fact, paradox run through this novel, not just this story, though there are abundant examples in this particular story. What are they? What are other paradoxes that exist in the story--for instance, in the midst of chaos and misery, random death and violence, how common is it to find men playing--and enjoying--a nightly game of checkers? Why is this a fitting paradox. How paradoxical is it, too, to find 19 year-old men who are more afraid to be seen a coward than to be seen dead? Remember Curt Lemon and the dentist.

For example . . . How paradoxical is it that courage and cowardice go hand and hand? How ironic, true, and paradoxical (yep, all three) that Tim O'Brien, soldier, considers himself a coward for going to war?  Why do the men of Alpha Company understand Rat Kiley's decision to shoot himself in the foot and choose not to deride him for his action?

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Looking Ahead to the Novel


Major Themes:
  1. Storytelling
  2. Paradox
  3. Courage & Cowardice
  4. Truth & Memory
BE AWARE: Themes involve all characters, not just one or two, and are usually true for the reading audience, not just those characters in the story. Themes often allow the reading audience to relate to the story.  The theme of a story, novel, poem or drama reveals a truth about life IN GENERAL, a truth that is revealed through the story and the people who are involved. The character you are assigned may or may not be closely related to the theme you are to analyze. Do not make the assumption that there is a close tie between the two.
Major Characters:
1.    Jimmy Cross
2.    Norman Bowker
3.    Rat Kiley
4.    Mitchell Sanders
5.    Henry Dobbins
6.    Kiowa
7.    Azar
8.    Tim O'Brien (the soldier, not the author)
You will have ONE character to fully analyze.
Be able to discuss the following 4 questions regarding your character beginning on 11/19/13
1. Who IS this person? What is his job in Alpha Co.?
2. What does he carry--physically and metaphorically? Into Vietnam? Out of Vietnam?
3. In which stories is this character significant and in what way?
4. How does this man relate to the other men in Alpha Co.? Be specific. Give Details.
The two following questions will be your “quiz” grade on the novel – Due 12/03/13
Length: not over 3 pages – preferably 1.5 on each
*5. What is this character's back story? Use details, observations, inferences you make along with your imagination to create a PLAUSIBLE back story for your character. (This will count as 50% of the quiz grade for the novel.)
* 6. What is this character's future? AGAIN, this must be plausible and logical. If the man does not return home, what impact does his death have on the remainder of the men? Discuss thoughtfully. (This will count as 50% of the quiz grade for the novel.)

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Assignment for Tuesday, Nov. 12th

Class will NOT meet on Thursday,
Nov. 7, 2013.

Assignment for Tuesday, 11/12/13:

Read pages 489-495 - Information on the Definition Essay

"Fame-iness" pages 511-513

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Study Guide for Composition Quiz

Happy Halloween


A brief  study guide for the quiz:

1.    Transitions                                     
2.    Purpose                                                   
3.    Works Cited Page
4.   Internal Citations                                     
4.    Coherent                                        
5.    Active/critical reading                       
6.    Exemplification                                 
7.    Audience                                                   
8.    Annotations                                      
9.    Thesis                                          
10. Plagiarism    
11. Galileo vs. wikipedia
12. signal phrase
13. Argumentative vs. persuasive essay
14. Qualities that an argument should have
15. Why it pays to be a Vulcan: importance of reason/logic over emotions
16. Exemplification essay
17. Concrete examples/details vs. abstract/hypothetical examples/details
18. How examples can be used to support all types of essays
19. The comparison/contrast essay
20. Two different ways of constructing C/C essays (whole-whole or pt.-pt.)

AND MORE 

There will be matching, multiple choice, POSSIBLE modified true/false (explanation: If a statement is true, do nothing; if any part of the statement is false, correct the statement to read correctly; example: 
 The thesis statement is often best located and used as the opening sentence of an essay., a couple of paragraphs for you to read, with questions to follow--and POSSIBLY  short discussion


Research paper Rubric

Criteria
10 pts. - Point and position of argument is clearly stated in deliberate, thoughtful thesis statement  presented in the introduction
10 pts. - MLA format is correct and maintained from the first page to the last, including:
·       Margins
·       Fonts
·       Header
·       Headings
·       Spacing
20 pts. -Development and Organization: Evidence is logical, organized, relevant, representative, and sufficient; evidence includes details, examples and research; development flows smoothly with appropriate transitions
20 pts. - Conventions of Language: Paper is largely free of major grammatical or mechanical errors that would otherwise disrupt fluency and coherence, including, but not limited to:
·       Illogical or incoherent sentences
·       Incorrect wording
·       Fragments
·       Run-on sentences
·       Vague or incorrect pronoun
20 pts. - No Internal Citations = Failure
·       Use of signal phrase indicates quoted material
·       Research is explained and related directly to point it supports
·       In-text research incorporates each reference in works cited
·       Research supports points previously established in paper
·       Research, whether paraphrased or quoted, is incorporated smoothly into paper
·       ALL research is accompanied by correctly cited reference
 

20 pts. - No Works Cited Page = Failure
·       Name & number, upper right
·       Titled
·       Spacing
·       MLA format of references
·       Alphabetical order

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Internal Citations - a.k.a. In-text citations - a.k.a. Parenthetical References

Internal Citations (also referred to as Parenthetical References)

IDEALLY--(ha)--you have  at least 3-4 POTENTIAL references that you might use in your paper, and have already gone to Easybib to begin your Works Cited Page

Internal citations and works cited work together. A works cited page is insufficient to avoid plagiarism by itself. The writer of a research paper, whether it is three and a half pages or seventy-three pages,  MUST incorporate research smoothly within the context of the paper and CITE the information--that is, indicate the exact page or source of the information. Failure to do so results in plagiarism. In other words:

No parenthetical citations = FAILURE

Period.

There is a great deal of available information on "how to" correctly include citations within the paper--but like all else, it doesn't become important or "real" to you until you are actually writing the paper. Then, the writer MUST know where to look for immediate assistance.

 FOR IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE ON INTERNAL CITATIONS:

The Purdue O.W.L.: In-text citation rules

You Tube: in-text citations
  
Another You Tube video that can be helpful: 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9f49YwDkRc4&noredirect=1

Using internal citations will only become "real" to you when you begin to incorporate research yourself. Until that time, adding information will be hypothetical and abstract.

ADDITIONAL NOTES :

  • Make certain you use a signal phrase to introduce any quote
  • Make sure you follow up the quote with an explanation of its relevancy or explanation of how it adds to the topic under discussion - as an example, see page 1642, page 2 of the sample paper by Groulx, paragraph 2.
  • If a quote is over four lines of typed, double-spaced text, it should be set off from the left margin, as in the above example.

How to Use Easybib - a Tutorial on YouTube

If you've never used Easybib.com this tutorial on Youtube  can help:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6d8fc4_YnM&noredirect=1

There are MANY "how to use easybib" tutorials available on youtube. Find the one that helps you most.

That said, NOTHING will help as much as trying to use it  yourself.

If you make a mistake, get lost or become confused, it's okay. Keep following the cues on the website. Still need help?  Let me know. I can walk you through the steps. As with many things on the computer, it's much easier when you go through the steps together with someone.

DO NOT let Easybib--or anything else on the computer--intimidate you. (Hmmm. I suppose that means that I need to get back to work on D2L.)
It takes TIME more than anything to become comfortable with Easybib. It's just another learning process and YOU CAN DO IT.

The alternate how to:

1. READ. Begin to look for information on your topic; before you can use easybib, you have to have your reference information. This information can come from a website, book, newspaper, journal or any number of other places. The only way to determine if these references are any good is to READ. My suggestion is to go to Galileo, from the MGSC website. (Go to Quick Links and select Galileo. Use your MSGC email name and password to login.)  *More information on Galileo to come.
SO . . . find your information, then go to Easybib.

2.  Easybib is already set up MLA format! All you really need to do is fill in the information. The tabs going across Easybib indicate the type of reference--whether it's a website, a book, newspaper, journal, etc. If you have a type of reference, not listed on one of the light grey tabs going across, select the tab that reads : "All 59 options." Select the TYPE of reference you will be citing. For example, if you're using a Pamphlet, select that one, and you'll be given the screen from Easybib that asks you for information.

3. Fill in the information asked by Easybib. If it is a website, copy and paste the web address, also called the URL.  If we were to look for the URL for this blog draft, it would be: http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=5888907838811654616#editor/target=post;postID=3911220741687048549
The best thing to do is the copy and paste feature on the computer. It prevents your having to meticulously type every individual character, which can lead to errors.
Copy and Paste by highlighting the URL; Ctrl + C = copy; go to Easybib, and Paste: Ctrl + V
Clike "Cite this" on easybib. That will take you to the next screen, where you will fill in additional information.




Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Where Are at Mid-Term? Right Where We Need to Be (GASP!!)

For Tuesday:
Return argumentative essays (C/C are coming, but will be delivered on Thursday)
Discuss topics just a bit
Prep. for research essays -- pain and aggravation - detail - "grunt" work
Easybib.com for Works Cited Page

Assignment for Thursday:
Begin doing MORE reading on your chosen topic; become as well informed as possible; use Galileo, not Wikipedia (duh)
Begin preliminary bibliography using EasyBib
On Thursday, 10/17/- discuss citations--how to do them; how to introduce them into text; review their connection to the WCP (Works Cited Page)

For NEXT Tuesday, 10/22:
Check YOUR WCP - answer questions you have so far on research--whether it is in content, citations or WCP

For Next Thursday, 10/24: YOUR day for questions

Tuesday, October 29th: RESEARCH ESSAY IS DUE!!
  • At least 5 pages, INCLUDING the WCP, which means the content should be approximately 3.5 to 4 pages
  • At least 3 GOOD references, in addition to the original article that served as a springboard on U.S. News and World Report
  • MUST be in MLA format
  • MUST contain internal citations (or it will automatically FAIL)
Study guide in class for quiz on Thursday

Thursday, Oct. 31st - (sorry) QUIZ over composition -- from beginning of the semester - research -- NO--you will not be writing an essay, you'll just have to be knowledgeable about the writing process and the research process