Week 17 “Signature Assignment” (10 pages) Due May 8th

Content

  • Assignment
    Method Guidelines 
    In this assignment you will write a ten page paper. You may approach the topic of the philosophy of race from multiple positions.  It is best to write on an aspect of race or identity that most interests you. You may choose from your two writing assignments and compare or contrast two different approaches on the idea of race. You may draw on an outside source that argues against the idea that race is a social construction. You may select a concept of race and apply it to a situation in literature, film or personal situations. In the introduction be sure to clearly assert the topic you will research and how you will approach the topic. Be sure to support your ideas by using theory from the readings and ground your work in the readings. This is not an opinion paper.  Be sure to use the style guidelines below.  Here are some other approaches to writing your paper:
    1. provide a comparative examination of two or three different possible responses to your thesis and an explanation of why you have chosen to defend one position over the other  
    2. provide a critical analysis of your own position which identifies potential weaknesses in the position and explains what makes that position nevertheless superior in some ways to the others considered; and
    3. apply your thesis to an everyday situation, work of fiction or film to demonstrate the merit of your position. 
    If you need some additional ideas to spark your imagination, here is a link with some good questions that may jump start your papers. https://essayshark.com/blog/100-unique-racism-topics-for-your-excellent-essay/  
     
    Style Guidelines
    1. The paper must be 8-10 pages long, typed, double-spaced, in an 11- or 12-point font with reasonable margins.
    2. The paper must be written in accord with the conventions of Standard Written English. Your paper will be evaluated in part in terms of spelling, grammar, and overall structure.
    3. You must use direct quotations from the readings assigned in class to support your claims about what the philosophers say and/or believe. Citations should be in either the MLA or Chicago Manual of Style formats (information on both of which is available on the UHD Library website, under the heading, “Citing Sources”), and as such must give full bibliographical information for your sources in either a “works cited” (MLA) or bibliographical footnotes (Chicago). Quotations should be set off from the rest of the paper (typically by quotation marks), and you must cite the page numbers in the relevant text where the quoted passage appears. 
    4. Do not assume that the reader of your paper is familiar with what has been read or discussed in this class. Think of your reader as an educated person who, although they may be familiar with philosophy in general, is not necessarily knowledgeable of the texts (or topics) you are discussing in the paper. As such, you should make every effort to explain the ideas you discuss and the quotations you use in straightforward language that generally conveys meaning to your reader.
    5. You are responsible for ensuring that your paper is free of plagiarism. If you do not know what constitutes plagiarism, please consult the syllabus for this class, the UHD Student Handbook, the Academic Honesty Policy of the University of Houston-Downtown, and/or the UHD Library website (“Plagiarism: Understand and Avoid It!” in the section, “Citing Sources”) . If you are still uncertain, please contact the instructor with any specific questions you might have.
    6. The paper must be submitted online (via Blackboard).
     

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    How to write an argument paper

    Argument paper, Cite your work. Work cited page and page numbers accompanying quotes in your paper. Make sure to use at least two quotes.
    I should know your argument by the third paragraph. Keep it simple. Make one point. The body of your paper should be defending your argument. Do not assume reader is familiar with the literature you are using. Write for a 1st grader. Re-write!!! Key. Most of the time your argument will turn up in your last paragraph. Then you re-write and move it to your first paragraph.
    How to write an argument paper:

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    Guidelines for Writing a Philosophy Paper

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    • File DETAILED GUIDELINE ON HOW TO WRITE A PHILOSOPHY PAPER.docx Click for more options (15.496 KB)