Name:CP English 10
Period:Lord of the Flies
Lord of the Flies: Multi-paragraph Paper
Due Dates: If you are absent, you are still responsible for all due dates. No late work is accepted for any of the due dates.
Pre-Writing Guide & Thesis Statement Due (10 points): ______
- Literary criticism: article analysis
- Includes web, outline, thesis, quotes
WRITTEN Draft Due (10 points): ______
- Must be hand written on lined paper
- Includes introduction, conclusion, and all body paragraphs
TYPED Draft Due (10 points): ______
- Typed and double-spaced, TWO full pages minimum
- Includes introduction, conclusion, and all body paragraphs
Final Copy Due (100 points): ______
- Bring proof of prewriting, drafting, revising
- Bring rubric to attach to final copy
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Prompt: Write a 2-4 page essay exploring a literary aspect of Lord of the Flies based on information provided in your assigned critical article. You must have at leasttwo key points to your argument and incorporate ample textual and critical evidenceto support your argument.
- This means you will be creating your own argument (thesis) instead of directly responding to a specific prompt
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Requirements:
- Final paper must be at least TWO FULL pages and no more than FOUR pages
- Paper must be typed and follow MLA standards
- Refer to rubric for specific criterion
Formal Paper Rubric
Focus(5)______
___thesis shows minimal evidence of topic
___thesis is off-topic/lacks awareness of specific task
Content (40)______
___superficial and/or minimal content
___lacks sufficient development of points/ideas
___use of repetitive ideas or repetitive evidence
___insufficient use of textual (primary) support
___insufficient use of secondary support
___quotes are missing or are superficial
___quotes are not properly introduced and/or explained, clarified
___introduction needs to be stronger and/or further developed
___conclusion needs to be stronger and/or further developed
___content does not adequately support the thesis
___content lacks academic quality
___works cited page included and accurate
Organization (10)______
___paper does not have an introduction, body, and/or conclusion
___transitions are needed to link paragraphs
___transitions are needed within paragraphs to link ideas
___paper does not follow order of ideas presented in thesis
Style (20)______
___paper fails to consistently use the third person point of view (use of “I, you” etc.)
___paper does not have consistent verb tense
___when discussing literary work, paper fails to use present tense
___need to use strong, descriptive, active verbs (too much “is” etc.)
___need to vary sentence structure (too many simplistic sentences)
___need to use more sophisticated/academic wording (avoid slang, informal terms)
___limited word choice, repetitive wording or phrasing
___paper contains awkwardly or unclearly worded sentences
Conventions (20)______
___contains spelling errors or typos
___contains run-on sentences
___contains sentence fragments
___contains errors in capitalization
___contains comma usage errors
___faulty subject/verb or pronoun agreement
___incorrect citation of quotes* Will lose points if missing evidence
___possessive errorsof the writing process
___use of contractions
Format (5)______
___incorrect MLA heading
___incorrect or missing title___not double spaced
___spacing errors___incorrect margins
Literary Criticism: Article Analysis
Article Title (in quotes):
Author (of article):
Main Idea (state the critic’s overall argument):
Significant Quotes: (from article to support main idea) – Include article author’s last name and page numbers after quote Example: “Critical Quote” (Hepner 23).
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Thesis Statement: List 2-3 possible ideas you could address in your paper’s thesis…
Pre-Writing Guide
Brainstorming: In the space below, create a web, list, or chart to organize your ideas. Be sure to include at least two main points for your argument and numerous specifics from the text to support each main point.
Rough Outline: Based on your brainstorming, create a rough outline for your paper below. Be sure to have at least three supporting ideas for each main point.
Textual Support: Locate quotations in the textbook that illustrate your points. Have a balance of quotes for each main point in your argument – you may choose to include more than just four…this is only pre-writing. Include author’s last name and page number(s) for each quote.
Example: “Ralph looked over and Piggy was gone” (Golding10-11).
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