Our eventual goal in the class is to
produce a term paper that offers a detailed analysis--and it need not be of
something that is narrowly economic or political--of a particular topic of
interest to you. In preparation for this, our next paper will aim at
producing an analytical summary of a particular policy, issue, or topic. For
this assignment, I want you to design an argumentative paper that explains and
informs a general reader about your particular policy/issue. Do not list
disjointed pieces of information about the subject, but rather make an
informative argument about what people often misunderstand about your issue,
how it is possible to clear up those misperceptions, and what is most important
to know about your issue in order to understand it most accurately. In other
words, you want to explore the argumentative potential of informational modes
of discourse, rather than just list facts.
Do not feel that you are stuck with
whatever topic you choose for the final term paper, however. In fact, I want us
to use this assignment as an opportunity for teaching each other about various
possible topics and the different approaches to them. Feel free to be creative
and take risks: the ideal topic is one that interests you without being overly
sensationalistic or controversial and that you can explore in a detailed,
complex way.
We will briefly share our findings
with the class through short, informal, 5-10 minute presentations. Please
prepare a small handout that distills your findings and then present it to the
class. Hopefully, this will serve as a kind of "topics fair" that
allows the class to explore a wide variety of different subjects that might be
of interest to them as we lead up to the final paper.
For this paper, I ask that you
include at least two academic sources (books or scholarly journal articles).
You can use other sources--readings from earlier in the semester, substantive
newspapers or periodicals found using the library database--but you must use at
least two examples of academic writing. Do not cite encyclopedias (whether
online or not), informational websites (about.com, for example), or other
websites found using standard web searches. You can read these for background
information, but don't cite them as sources. The paper should be in the
neighborhood of 4-5 pages, double spaced, in 12 point Times New Roman Font,
with one inch margins all around.
Finally, remember that the more specific you can
be, the better. Medicare is a better topic than health insurance in general;
the Medicare Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) is a better topic than
Medicare in general; and a comparison of two specific cost-reduction schemes
associated with IPAB is a better topic than IPAB in general.
Bring a rough draft (at least 3 pages) to class for peer editing this
Thursday, October 3rd. We will start our informal presentations Tuesday,
October 8th. The final draft of this paper will be due Wednesday, October 9th
by 12pm.
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