English Homework Help
Do the three 1.Module Reflective Writing Assignment Your writings should be: About 400-600 words longRelated to the readings, assignments, and/or discussions from this weekEvidence of critical thinkin
Do the three
1.Module Reflective Writing Assignment
Your writings should be:
- About 400-600 words long
- Related to the readings, assignments, and/or discussions from this week
- Evidence of critical thinking
2.Body paragraphs (sometimes called “discussion sections”) are the parts of your essay that aren’t the intro or conclusion. Each of these paragraphs will have: a leading topic sentence that states the paragraph’s focus, evidence (quotes, examples, or research), and analysis (your explanation of how the evidence supports the paragraph’s main idea.
Prepare
- Choose a story or poem from this Module to focus on.
- Decide what aspect or element of the story to focus your paragraph on. (For instance: how the setting emphasizes the story’s meaning, or how a character changes in the story)
- Re-read or scan through the story or poem to find quotes to use in your paragraph
- Be sure you’ve read Chapter 30, pages 1914-1918
- Use these reference guides to help you understand paragraph composition:
- Writing Toolkit: Paragraphs / Discussion Sections
- Writing Toolkit: Formatting Your Paper For Submission
- Writing Toolkit: Direct Quoting, Partially Quoting, Paraphrasing
- Writing Toolkit: What is literary analysis?
Write
A paragraph that includes:
- Topic sentence
- Explanation
- Example from selected story or poem (Summary and Paraphrase)
- Quote from selected story or poem
- Analysis of evidence
- Summary sentences bringing it all together
Check
Your writings should be:
- About 300 words long
- Related to the readings, assignments, and/or discussions from the selected Module
- Evidence of critical thinking
3.Prepare
First, choose which two works you’ll be focusing on for this essay.
- You can choose two short stories, two poems, or one of each
- It is recommended (though not required) that the two works you choose come from the same Module
- The two works should have a topic or theme in common
- The two works must be texts that we have read in this class
Then, re-read the works.
- What do they have in common? What topics, themes, and literary devices are shared?
- How do they differ? Are they expressing the same theme in different ways? Discussing the same topic but expressing different themes?
- What literary elements does each use to illustrate or emphasize its theme?
- Make note of quotes from the texts that you might want to use in your essay.
Review these resources:
- The Spiderman Paper.docx Download The Spiderman Paper.docx: This annotated sample essay points out all the required formatting and organizational components in an essay
- Video guide to literary analysis (Links to an external site.)
- Writing Toolkit: Compare / Contrast
Write
For this essay, you’ll be comparing how two different works explore the same or similar themes in their own ways.
You can choose A or B:
- Write about two works that share theme – which means they both make the same overall point
- Write about two works that share a topic, but have different themes – which means that they each make a different point about the same general topic
For example, if there are two stories about growing up that seem to make the same point, that would be option (a); if there were two stories that each made a different point about growing up, that would be option (b).
Your essay should:
- Be t least 1,000 words long (3+ pages)
- Be organized – it should have an introduction (including your essay’s thesis), at least two discussion sections, and a conclusion
- Focus on supporting its thesis statement
- Include quotes in each body paragraph
- Use MLA format, including internal citations