Department of English
Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University
Final Paper and Presentation Guidelines
Final Paper
The final paper (1½–2 pp.; MLA format) is a way for you to engage thoughtfully with the issues and questions we have read about and discussed this semester and to bring together skills in reading, critical thinking, and writing that we have worked on these past few months. In groups of three, you will choose a literary work or works from the following list to read carefully and form a panel discussing that work. If you want to study a piece not on this list, please clear it with me first. Each member of the panel will focus on one aspect or element of that short story or play. Taken together the individual examinations should help answer a question that your panel poses about the work. Use the panel topics below as a prompt for developing an argument that you elaborate on in your paper. Give your paper a title. Hand in your work in class on Monday, September 19, 2011 and submit a digital copy on Turnitin.com.
Information for initial login to Turnitin.com:
Literary works list with suggested supplementary
reading:
Cheever, John. "The Swimmer." 1964.
Chopin, Kate.
"The Story
of an Hour." 1894.
Crane, Stephen. "The Open Boat." 1894.
Jin, Ha. "Saboteur."
The Antioch Review 54.4 (1996): 409–19. JSTOR.
Web. [Chula network access]
Lardner, Ring. "Champion."
Lardner, Ring. "Haircut."
1922. Haircut and Other
Stories. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1954.
9–21. Print.
Yamamoto, Hisaye. "The
Legend of Miss Sasagawara." The Kenyon Review
12.1 (1988): 99–115. JSTOR.
Web. [Chula network access]
Possible Panel Topics
What literary forms have each author found to
contain and express the mental processes of the character,
and how are these literary frameworks and devices
appropriate and effective?
This panel will examine the ironies of what Kate
Chopin has called "kind intention" in her short story "The
Story of an Hour."
What do the contrasting lifetimes (short human life vs. long literary life) enable the authors to achieve?
What are the consequences of the crime(s)?
Sample Panel Descriptions and Outline
This panel will examine the ironies of what Kate
Chopin has called "kind intention" in her short story "The
Story of an Hour."
Revision
It is recommended that you have a first draft to give your panel members to read a couple of weeks before your presentation date. Read each other's papers carefully, making constructive comments on the pages, and fill out the workshop sheet for each paper. Then set up a time to meet, return the paper with comments, and discuss each other's contribution to the panel's investigation. Once you have your first draft and feedback sheet back from each of your panel member, consider the comments and rewrite your paper to fix problems and make it more effective. Some things to keep in mind as you proofread and edit your work:
Does my title show that I have a point to make?
Is my thesis sound, clear, and interesting?
Have I supported my thesis with compelling evidence?
Is the organization of my paper logical and appropriate to the arguments I am making?
Is my language clear, consistent, and suited to the subject matter?
Do each of my paragraphs have a clear point and coherence?
Are my sentences varied, interesting, and effective?
Do my verbs agree with their subjects? Pronouns with their nouns?
Is my paper free of spelling mistakes?
Have I cited my sources properly?
Final Presentation
Presentations of your final papers will take place on the last two days of class: Monday, September 19, 2011 and Wednesday, September 21, 2011. Each panel of three papers will have fifteen minutes to present their work (five for each speaker). This will be followed by a ten-minute question and answer session. A moderator will be presiding over the presentations and discussion session of each panel, introducing the speakers, mediating the questions and responses, and making sure things stay on schedule.
A program of the final presentation schedule will be posted on our detailed schedule page once panel and paper titles, speakers and moderators are finalized. You are responsible for e-mailing me your working paper and panel titles and any revisions to them by Friday, September 16, 2011.
Please inform me of any special equipment needs such
as speakers if you are planning to play a video or audio clip.
Otherwise our usual computer (which uses Microsoft Office 2003)
and LCD projector will be provided.
Panels Submitted
Isaraporn Kitcholwiwat, "paper title"
Punnapa Stapornviriyakul, "paper title"
Animmarn Leksawat, "paper title"
Speaker 3, "paper title"
Supamon Rungruangratanakul, "paper title"
Aimratee Sidhikosol, "paper title"
Links
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Last updated September 19, 2011