Final Essay Topics - Revision Guidelines

Due date: Thursday, July 9 (in-class)

Essay length: 600+ words:

For your editing convenience, the essay prompts are also available in the following formats:

Word  |  Adobe PDF:   

Investigate a single topic of literary criticism (pp. 49-55) concerning one or more works in Part II (pp. 283-1543)of the textbook, and write an extended analysis of this topic as a thesis. Make your examples support your thesis. You may compare or contrast two or more stories, poems, or dramas for this single topic.

In addition to the general guidelines presented in Schilb and Clifford's Making Literature Matter (66-68) for writing and revising essays or exercises, follow this triple-edged rule:

  1. Choose a very specific thesis; expand, explain and analyze that thesis in great detail. Every sentence in the essay should explain or reveal or give support to your thesis. Make your thesis (an issue, an element of argument, or topic of literary criticism) or the author the subject of every sentence.
  2. Do not summarize the plot or discuss the content of the story, poem or essay; focus instead on following your support with specific discussion, comments and analysis; do not generalize; be specific.
  3. If you word-process your first drafts or exercises, print out and proofread the text for all typos, mechanics, style and clarity, including "be" verbs, passive voice, and usage with the guidelines below - eliminate inaccurate or informal phrasing. A spellcheck feature can only accomplish some spellchecks - proofread for spelling independently with your eyes from a printout.
Additional Final Exam Instructions:
  1. Write out and revise your final copy by hand on standard (non-perforated) notebook paper. A blue book is acceptable.
  2. Skip a line between each line of writing.
  3. Do not write on the back of the notebook paper.
 

For your editing convenience, the revision guidelines are also available in the following formats:

Word  |  Adobe PDF:   

Before you submit a writing exercise or essay, please proofread and revise for the following items:

[BNCH ..] = The Brief New Century Handbook (4th ed.) references by chapter/section with grading marks in bold soft brackets: { }.

Clarity & Conciseness | Organization & Content | Basic Grammar


 

Clarity & Conciseness

{ PV }: Revise passive voice; revise for active voice:  additional help
[BNCH:  25g ]

{ be }: Omit "be" auxiliary or helping verbs (unless an ongoing action): is / are, was / were, be / being
Revise or replace with active, concise verbs:  additional help
[BNCH:  25c ]

{ U }: usage
Revise and avoid these inexact and ambiguous verbs:
display,   exhibit,   portray,   seem,   show,   use / utilize / employ:  additional help
[BNCH:  32 ]

Revise and avoid these nouns as subjects for sentences:
thing(s),  the reader,  the audience, today
Keep the focus on the author and/or thesis.

Revise and avoid these pronouns:
I, me (my),   one, you (your),   we (us, our)
Keep the focus on the author and/or thesis.
[BNCH:  5d ]


{ logic } : reasoning,
[BNCH:  7f-g, pp. 157-164]

{ phrasing } : informal or vague,
[BNCH:  36c-f ]

 

Organization & Content

{ analysis / develop }: Follow all examples and evidence with a well-developed discussion and analysis.
[BNCH:  7h, pp. 164-6]

{ example }: Introduce appropriate examples and evidence;
also check for plagiarism {PL ). - see course policies (left menu).
[BNCH:  10, 12 ]

{ combine }: Combine and subordinate sentences and ideas.
[BNCH:  41, pp. 753-758]

{ MLA }: Paraphrase and parenthetically document examples and evidence according to the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers - document all textbook references to prose by page number and poetry by line number(s). Avoid quotes (paraphrase and cite), and check for plagiarism.
[BNCH:  10, 12 ]

{ P / ¶ }: Paragraph length (4 to 7 sentences on average)
[BNCH 5f ]

{ PS }: Do not write no plot summaries. Keep the focus on the author and/or thesis, and answer the prompt.
[BNCH:  1, 10 ]

{ PS }: Define the thesis clearly, according to the course prompt.
[BNCH:  6 ]

 

Basic Grammar

{ AGREEMENT }: Subject-verb / pronoun-antecedent.
[BNCH:  26, 24 ]

Sentences:
{ CS }: Comma splices
{ FRAG }: Fragments (incomplete sentences
{ RO }: Run-on sentences (no punctuation)
[BNCH:  28, 29 ]

Punctuation:
{ c / no c }: commas
{ sc / no sc  }: semi-colons
{ p  }: periods
{ a / no a }: apostrophes
{ qm  }: quotation marks
[BNCH:  39-45 ]

{ SENSE }: Basic grammar and sentence structure (subject-predicate , etc.)
[BNCH:  23-25, 30-31 ]

{ sp } : Spelling
[BNCH:  49 ]