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Reading and Writing Successfully in College: Examining a Sample Assignment

Reading and Writing Successfully in College
Examining a Sample Assignment
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Welcome, Students!
  6. Welcome, Instructors!
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Land Acknowledgement
  9. Icons, Textboxes, and Images
  10. Doing Intellectual Work
    1. What Is Intellectual Work?
    2. Understanding Bloom’s Taxonomy
    3. Bloom's and Generative AI
    4. Understanding Writing Assignments as Intellectual Work
    5. Examining Sample Assignment 1: Summary and Analysis
    6. Examining Sample Assignment 2: Position Paper
    7. Examining Sample Assignment 3: Article for a Public Audience
    8. Examining Sample Assignment 4: Reflection
    9. Treating Complex Tasks as Intellectual Work: Why?
  11. Successful College Reading
    1. Why Reading in a College Writing Textbook?
    2. Reading Effectively
    3. Creating an Optimal Setting for Reading
    4. Examining a Sample Assignment
    5. Using Pre-Reading Strategies
    6. Focusing Your Reading
    7. Annotating and Note-Taking
    8. Doing Quick Research
    9. Finding the Main Point
    10. Working Carefully Through Trouble Spots
    11. Rereading
    12. Responding to What You Are Reading
    13. Summarizing and Reflecting on a Text
    14. Reading in College and Elsewhere
  12. Writing Process in College
    1. Why Writing Process in College?
    2. Thinking about Writing Process
    3. Prewriting 1: Understanding the Task
    4. Prewriting 2: Generating Ideas
    5. Drafting 1: Setting Up Your Structure
    6. Drafting 2: Producing Text
    7. Getting Feedback
    8. Revising 1: Revising Globally
    9. Revising 2: Revising Paragraphs
    10. Editing
    11. Proofreading
    12. Owning Your Process
  13. Writing with Sources
    1. How Are Sources Used in College?
    2. Understanding Sources Types
    3. Finding Sources
    4. Evaluating Sources
    5. Summarizing
    6. Paraphrasing
    7. Quoting
    8. Choosing Between Quotations and Paraphrases
    9. Citing Your Sources
    10. Plagiarizing
    11. Integrating Source Material with Your Ideas
    12. Thoughtful Source Use
  14. Glossary
  15. Works Cited
  16. Grant Information
  17. Version History

Examining a Sample Assignment

People often learn better through examples, and even better still if they are doing something active as they learn. So, for this section on reading, we’ll do both.

The example assignment below asks the student to read two texts and write an explanation of how the ideas of one text can be applied to the other. Note that the assignment is incomplete, without length or due date information. For the purposes of this textbook, we’re focusing on reading strategies, so such technical details are not important.

Your instructor will let you know if you will actually do this assignment in your class, but for our purposes, I will use the article by Nicholas Ensley Mitchell throughout this section to demonstrate the strategies that I’m discussing. Then, you can use one of the three articles (or some other reading you are working with) to practice these skills.

Example: An Assignment with Readings

In “The First Battle in the Culture Wars: The Quality of Diversity,” Nicholas Ensley Mitchell argues that we have two options for understanding the quality of diversity: “segregated coexistence” and “living in community.” Using Mitchell’s descriptions of these options, describe how the “quality of diversity” plays a role in the situation described in one of the following three articles:

  • “City Compost Programs Turn Garbage into ‘Black Gold’ That Boosts Food Security and Social Justice” by Kristen DeAngelis, Gwynne Mhuireach, and Sue Ishaq
  • “Sustainable Cities Need More Than Parks, Cafes, and a Riverwalk” by Trina Hamilton and Winifred Curran
  • “How Food Became the Perfect Beachhead for Gentrification” by Pascale Joassart-Marcelli

Consider questions like the following:

  • How has segregated coexistence contributed to the problem described in the article you have chosen?
  • What must be done—either according to the author(s) or according to yourself—to change the situation in that article to a community-based quality of diversity?
  • What might be the outcomes or effects of choosing living in community in that situation?
  • Do you accept Mitchell’s framework (that there are two options: segregation and community)? Why or why not? If not, what alternative framework would you offer and how might that framework apply in this situation?

Finally, your paper must address the following questions:

Do you believe that the option of living in community is viable in the situation described in the article you have chosen? Why or why not? And what does your answer say about the quality of diversity in the United States?

Annotate

Next chapter
Using Pre-Reading Strategies
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College Writing: Guides, Handbooks, and Advice
Reading and Writing Successfully in College: A Guide for Students [Revised Edition] Copyright © 2024 by Patricia Lynne is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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