Order Number |
80905045623 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
Project 3: Community Profile
Total Points: 150 – 25% of Final Course Grade
Guidelines and Checklist
Context
As a student at the University of Arizona, you have a variety of opportunities to publish your writing for the UA community, including The Daily Wildcat , UA News, Arizona Alumni Magazine, and countless organizational newsletters. For this project, you will take on the persona of a reporter for one of these UA-based publications, and you will write a profile article that explores and discusses the values, goals, & communication practices of a community that you belong to or wish to join.
The goal of this course is to help you improve as a writer, researcher, critical thinker, and academic student. We work toward that goal in part by helping you to examine your own language use and literacy practices AND also by exploring the communities you belong to or want to join. So, where Project 1 focused on you, Project 2 & 3 focus on community, on how the communication practices (discourse) in your communities reflect their values & meet their goals.
Purpose
To create an in-depth profile article of a specific community that you belong to or want to join. This profile article should:
Rationale
One way we are identified as a member of a group is by what we do and how we communicate with other members. Communication is prompted by a specific purpose, to a specific audience, and to complete specific actions, and genres emerge as communities accomplish these needs. Researching the literacy practices and genres of a specific community will help provide you with insights into a community with which you are a new or a longtime member. As you research, you will learn more about these key terms:
The Research
The Profile
After conducting your research, you will take on the persona of a reporter for one of the one of the UA-based publications listed above and write a profile article that explores and discusses the values, goals, & communication practices of a community. Your profile article should have the look and feel of an online article , much like you see in the sample The Daily Wildcat , UA News , Arizona Alumni Magazine ,
In this profile article, you should consider the following questions (but you do not necessarily need to answer EVERY question—these are here to guide you):
Language and Voice
In a profile article, the focus is on the group being profiled, so third-person pronouns (He/She/It/They) are expected. However, writers often have personal connections to the profile group, which means first-person pronouns (I, We) can be used strategically. Continue to develop your own style and voice as a writer, but also make sure that the language and ‘voice’ that you use is appropriate for the online article genre.
Format Requirements
Course Objectives
After completing this project you will have made progress towards the following student learning objectives:
1A. analyze a text’s genre and how that influences and guides reading and composing practices. 1B. analyze how genres shape reading and composing practices.
1C. apply knowledge of rhetorical options in reading practices.
2A. integrate evidence through methods such as summaries, paraphrases, quotations, and visuals.
2B. support ideas or positions by discussing evidence from multiple sources.
3A. follow contextually appropriate conventions for language use related to areas such as grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
3B. apply contextually appropriate citation conventions.
4A. adapt composing and revision processes for a variety of technologies and modalities. 4B. produce multiple revisions on global and local levels.
4C. suggest useful global and local revisions to other writers.
4D. identify the collaborative and social aspects of writing processes.
Final Draft of the Community Profile Article: 150 points / 25% of the Course Grade
Trait | Percentage of Grade | Description |
Audience and Purpose | 25% | Through careful and original analysis, the writer profiles the purposes, audiences, forms, and processes that define a specific community. The profile has a strong sense of purpose and is appropriate and contextualized for a general academic audience who may not be familiar with the community. |
Genre Awareness | 25% | The profile is engaging and insightful, guided by a clear main idea that provides unique insight into the discourse and the practices of the community. The analysis demonstrates a very strong understanding of a community’s genre functions, purposes and rhetorical options that writers have. |
Development and Support | 30% | The writer develops a clear main idea with new insight about the community through exemplary structure and engaging analysis. Compelling examples provide rich and persuasive support for claims. The writer demonstrates strong facility in incorporating support through text excerpts; interview summaries, paraphrases, quotations; observational insights; and/or visuals.
The profile develops in a logical, purposeful, and engaging way. |
Genre Conventions | 20% | The profile uses conventions–such as language style, formality and tone, sentence structures, organization, and design–in ways that are interesting and appropriate for a profile article. If applicable, citation conventions are applied systematically. Writing shows evidence of revision. Minor errors may be present but do not detract from content. |