Essay #1: Literary Narrative

Write a short literacy narrative about yourself.  Literacy narratives can often have slightly different focuses, so you have a small amount of room for creativity, but they primarily deal with detailing a persons path to reading and writing (education and experiences as a reader) and/or the impact that reading and writing has on their lives.  Keep in mind that the focus here is on literacy (the act of reading and/or writing) and not as much on literature (which well be talking about in class).  Your literacy narrative can involve your experiences with various great books, but it will more likely encompass your experiences with a variety of texts, from internet reading, to newspapers, to comic books, to whatever you tend to read or even write in your spare time.

The organization of your paper will depend on the focus you want the essay to take.  If you are writing about your experience becoming literate (learning to read and write), you will probably take a narrative approach, detailing your first experiences in school or your first memories of books or the first time reading or writing seemed to make a big impact on your life.  In writing from this perspective, you will want a clear introduction that establishes the story you plan on telling, strong transitions and paragraphs (probably chronologically organized) that put that overall story together, and a conclusion that goes beyond simple summary to address the large context of what youve just written about.  What ultimate impact did those early experiences have on the reader/writer you are today?

If you focus more on particular texts or experiences of reading and writing and how they have impacted your life, you would structure your essay in a more subject-by-subject fashion.  Your introduction would establish that you are writing about significant moments where literacy or particular texts impacted your life and give a sense of why those moments or texts are important.  Your body paragraphs would be organized around each of those texts or moments, explaining what they were and narrating why they mattered.  In this structure, your conclusion would again go beyond simple summary to put the discussion in a larger context.  Have those particular moments or texts changed the way you read or address writing now?  How might those experiences be similar to or different from those of other individuals?

New Manager Introduction

2-3 PAGES At least two viable reference.

You have been named the new manager of a health organization of a Public Health Agency.  What would you do (what steps would you take) in the first month as a new manager to improve your chances of success. Why would you take these actions? Whom would you meet with? What documents would you read?

What would you say to your superiors and to the people who report to you about your management style?

What Is Literacy?

 

In a minimum 250 words, write a paragraph that answers the following questions:

What does the word “literacy” mean to you?

How does Gee define discourse?

What is a discourse “identity kit”?

Why does Gee believe that discourses are “inherently ideological”?

Do you agree with him? Disagree? Both? Why? (Use examples and explain)

Proposal For Change – US English Proficiency Required – Need Within 7 Hours

 

Proposal for Social Change Assignment    (See Calendar for Draft Due Dates)

Writing for Social Change is based on the longstanding tradition in Western culture of using 

literature as a tool for social critique, as a means of calling for social change and justice, and as a 

tool for social transformation (hecua.org). We have already read examples of calls for large 

scale change (The Declaration of Independence).

The goal of this research-based persuasive proposal is to help you identify one specific, concrete 

area of personal interest (and narrow a topic), develop your skills as a writer and encourage you 

to share your voice and participate in a democratic society by examining the role of literature and 

literary production in creating social transformation.

Objective: Write a 4-5 page proposal for social change using MLA documentation. 

Narrow the topic (propose a specific change in your neighborhood, community, school and/or 

workplace). Be specific in your problem statement (thesis). Write as much as you can from your 

own knowledge and experience. Then, use research to support your ideas. Include a personal 

interview and a local news article.  You will need to paraphrase from outside sources which 

support your own ideas. Quote any exact phrases or sentences you utilize in your paper. Make 

sure to add in-text citations after any ideas you have brought into your paper from outside 

sources. Read the section on plagiarism in the syllabus. This will emphasize the importance of 

documenting information.

Format:  Fit your proposal in this outline, so you can visually see how the components fit 

together and help you trim your paper. Break your paper into the following sections:

Background

Problem Statement (thesis)

What is Being Done

What Needs to Be Done

Implications for the Future

http://http/virginialynne.hubpages.com/hub/How-to-Write-a-Propose-a-Solution-Essay

Thesis and Topic:   

Businesses located within the Houston Medical Center should cover the cost of parking for their employees because employees lose part of their salary when paying for parking and some employees struggle with being able to afford rising parking costs. 

* Example paper attached