"i've written papers before, so why am i here?"
You are here because it is essential that you read and understand all of the information below before setting up and submitting any of your essays to me. If you do not follow the correct format, your papers will not be accepted (they will need to be redone and will be docked the late penalty you read about on the class Home page); if they are not saved properly, then I won't be able to open and read them (which is a problem). If papers are only 2 pages long, then they will not earn points, and so on.
So, yes, I know this is dry stuff; I also know many of you already know this material, but don't just pass it by. You may have written "a paper" before, but it may have not been in standard MLA format or followed the conventions of college writing. There is no sillier way of not succeeding in a class (and in life in general) than by just ignoring simple instructions. That's not going to happen to my students!
General Information about Essays
The shorter (100-point) papers will generally require you to develop papers of 3-5 full typed pages in standard MLA format (see below) to adequately cover the topic. Papers less than three full pages will not be accepted, and if you are trying for a higher score (a "B" or "A"), you will need a minimum of four full pages. You'll want to use specific examples whenever possible. Feel free to draw on personal experience if it is approrpiate, but that is not enough to support your thesis. There should be lots of supporting examples (documented quotations) from the works you are analyzing. Content is most important with these essays, but I will look closely at the form of the essays as well, so you'll need to edit and proofread to eliminate as many of the spelling, punctuation, grammar, syntax errors as possible to earn a high score.
NOTE: these are not just personal opinion papers.
These are, for the most part, argument essays. Even if you write a personal experience paper, you will be supporting a thesis (the central idea/point you are trying to develop/prove) with examples/evidence--that is the essence of an argument.
Be sure to reveiw the entire reading-to-writing process and the sample essays in your textbook.
All essays must be in standard MLA (Modern Language Association) format; this is the format you should have learned in English 101. College and university academic standards require that papers written in the humanities (there is a different format for scientific papers) be submitted in this format.
For complete information on what this format looks like, you can refer to any current writer's handbook, such as Rules for Writers. I have also included a copy of a sample MLA paper with some instructions that you can look at here:
Sample MLA-8 Format Essay in Word
You can also find information on the MLA format and more general information on academic writing on the Purdue OWL site, and I have added a file on MLA Format along with a set-up video in the Files section of Canvas.
How to Submit your Essays
Your essays will be submitted to me as attachments to e-mail. Write the paper in standard MLA format in Word, save your paper on your hard drive or on a floppy disk, and attach the file to an e-mail addressed to me. When sending assignments, YOUR E-MAIL MESSAGE should include your name, the class, and the name of the assignment which is attached (this is in addition to the heading information that you'll have on the attached essay itself). Send your e-mail to me at jrcorbally@gmail.com.
NOTE: If you do not have Microsoft WORD (Word 365 is free; check the LAHC Student Portal) on your computer, you must save your file as either a Word (.doc, .docx) file or as a .pdf file before attaching it.
DO NOT SEND FILES: through Canvas, through Google Docs, via OneDrive, etc. Those often mess up your formatting, and I often cannot access them. So just ATTACH a Word doc to your e-mail and send it to me at my JRCORBALLY@GMAIL.COM address.
Submitting the Research Paper and the Final Project
Both of these longer assignments will require you to first get a Proposal approved (which may take more than one attempt, so try to get the proposals in early. The Research Paper absolultely requires a Works Cited page. The Final Project is a mixture of practical design and creativity and research, and there are some options for submitting it in different formats (you'll see once you look over the assignment).
Late Essays
Try to get all work in on time. Late essays will always (unless there's some problem with my server on the day the work is due) be penalized. A late essay will lose 10% of the total score. NOTE: Any essay that is more than one week late will receive no credit! To avoid a late penalty (or a zero), it's a very good idea to submit work early. Always keep a copy of your work in case it gets lost in transmission.
NOTE: this late penalty applies only to essays. Other work (such as discussions) cannot be turned in late for credit.
Revisions
You have plenty of reading/writing to do this semester. When I write "you" do I mean "I"? So there is not a re-write option for English 102. However, if you get a paper to me really early (not just a day or two; I have a lot of classes), I will be happy to give you some feedback.
Links to ALL of the Assignments
These are all found on the Class Schedule page.