Open with an introduction that gets the reader’s attention, establishes your
credibility, and establishes the context and exigency for the problem so
your reader understands the significance of the issue your paper presents.
• Present a clear thesis statement that announces your purpose in writing (the problem and solution).
• Provide reasonable support—with both evidence and analysis—for every claim you make in the essay.
• Include paraphrases and/or quotations from 8-10 credible sources (see the info box to the right) that support the claims you make. Give appropriate credit to your sources for the words and ideas of others that you use in your essay to avoid plagiarism. Cite sources with stable page numbers, such as PDFs, by page number (#) and sources with unstable page numbers, such as web sources, by paragraph number (par. #).
• End with a conclusion that summarizes/synthesizes your essay and explains “so what” (the significance of your proposal) to the reader.
• This is a formal essay; you should use Standard English grammar. First-person POV is acceptable, but if you use second person POV, “you” must refer to your specific reader.
• The essay must be 1500-2000 words, not including the Works Cited page (see the Word Count policy in the syllabus).
The paper should be typed in 12-point Times New Roman or Calibri font, be double-spaced, and have 1-inch margins.
You must follow MLA format for the heading, pagination, internal (parenthetical) documentation, and the Works Cited