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* [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc8USJrOIFSMqq1Wy0Bpg1NtkTq7no9-XGLZhhmf8jbQ46ORg/viewform?usp=sf_link Pre-midterm GF] | * [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc8USJrOIFSMqq1Wy0Bpg1NtkTq7no9-XGLZhhmf8jbQ46ORg/viewform?usp=sf_link Pre-midterm GF] | ||
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====Project types ==== | ====Project types ==== | ||
− | The | + | The Neptune Foundation is accepting applications for various research, community service, and business development projects.<ref> Dozens of research grants have been awarded by this foundation to students at Hogwarts, Gotham City University, Metropolis University, Monsters University, Mars University, Wossamotta University, and Starfleet Academy.</ref> The Foundation offers the following three options that you can apply for. These applications can be directed toward the Foundation, or to other entities. See the page on [[Proposals_(writing)]] for examples. |
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ;1a. Academic Research Project: | ||
+ | This is for those who wish to undertake a special research project in their senior year of college, or in a Master’s program. The senior research project involves an original research project in a special studies course under the direction of a professor, and this will lead to a full-length paper (or bachelor’s thesis) for the course. The Master’s project will be directed by the student’s academic advisor / professor, and this will of course lead to the standard Master’s thesis [석사논문] that is a typical requirement for an M.A. degree (in a humanities or social science field) or an M.S. degree (in science and engineering fields). You can write this to apply for a grant from your university, or it can be addressed to the Foundation. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Amount: €1000—10,000 / $1000—10,000 / ₩1,000,000 — ₩10,000,000 | ||
− | ; | + | ;1b. Business Research Project: |
− | This is for those who wish to undertake a | + | This is for those who wish to undertake a research project in their senior year of college, or in a Master’s program, on a business related topic. The general requirements are the same as for the academic research project. The topic would be academic research on a business related topic, including marketing, finance, a case study of a business, or other original research. This would be for a bachelor's program in business or related fields, or an MBA (master's of business administration) or similar MA degree. You can write this to apply for a grant from your university, or it can be addressed to the Foundation. |
Amount: €1000—10,000 / $1000—10,000 / ₩1,000,000 — ₩10,000,000 | Amount: €1000—10,000 / $1000—10,000 / ₩1,000,000 — ₩10,000,000 | ||
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;2. Community Service Project: | ;2. Community Service Project: | ||
− | For this, you will propose a project that will benefit a community in some manner. This can be an area of Busan, a rural community or area of Korea, or a community or small area in another country (a country and local area that you are familiar with). This can be any kind of community project. You will need to explain a specific need, a specific plan for a project to address the need, and your ability to direct a project to help with that need. You can apply to the | + | For this, you will propose a project that will benefit a community in some manner. This can be an area of Busan, a rural community or area of Korea, or a community or small area in another country (a country and local area that you are familiar with). This can be any kind of community project. You will need to explain a specific need, a specific plan for a project to address the need, and your ability to direct a project to help with that need. You can apply to the Foundation, or to a local or national government. (There should be a suitable professor or business leader in the community who can help as an advisor for your project, and as a contact person for the Foundation or government that provides the grant money.) See the page on [[Proposals_(writing)]] for an example. |
Amount: €1000—10,000 / $1000—10,000 / ₩1,000,000 — ₩10,000,000 | Amount: €1000—10,000 / $1000—10,000 / ₩1,000,000 — ₩10,000,000 | ||
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;3. Business Project Proposal: | ;3. Business Project Proposal: | ||
− | This is for those who need funding for a particular business project. This can be starting a new business, and/or researching, developing, and marketing a new invention, product or service. For this, you will need to identify and explain a specific need or market for your company or idea, a specific plan for developing it, and your ability to direct the project and successfully complete it. You can apply for a grant from the | + | This is for those who need funding for a particular business project. This can be starting a new business, and/or researching, developing, and marketing a new invention, product or service. For this, you will need to identify and explain a specific need or market for your company or idea, a specific plan for developing it, and your ability to direct the project and successfully complete it. You can apply for a grant from the Foundation or from another organization. (There should be a suitable professor or business leader in the community who can help as an advisor for your project, and as a contact person for the Foundation or government that provides the grant money.) |
Amount: €5000—20,000 / $5000—20,000 / ₩5,000,000 — ₩20,000,000 | Amount: €5000—20,000 / $5000—20,000 / ₩5,000,000 — ₩20,000,000 | ||
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Imagine you are an executive or manager of a company (or an entrepreneur or independent business person), and would like to make a proposal to another company. This could be a proposal for both companies to enter into some type of business arrangement, or for one company to offer its services or products to another company. One company might need a particular service (e.g., managing a company website) or product (e.g., computer hardware) in order to function. You can imagine you are a manager or executive with the authority to make such a proposal to another company, where your company would like to offer its products or services to another. | Imagine you are an executive or manager of a company (or an entrepreneur or independent business person), and would like to make a proposal to another company. This could be a proposal for both companies to enter into some type of business arrangement, or for one company to offer its services or products to another company. One company might need a particular service (e.g., managing a company website) or product (e.g., computer hardware) in order to function. You can imagine you are a manager or executive with the authority to make such a proposal to another company, where your company would like to offer its products or services to another. | ||
− | Amount: Not directly applicable, as you are not asking for money in this assignment option. In this case, you could offer an estimate (or a quote to another company) for the potential value of the deal or services involved, as long as the amount is reasonable. | + | Amount: Not directly applicable, as you are not asking for money from a foundation in this assignment option. In this case, you could offer an estimate (or a quote to another company) for the potential value of the deal or services involved, as long as the amount is reasonable. |
# Clarify pricing options, your terms and conditions | # Clarify pricing options, your terms and conditions | ||
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;General requirements for all papers: | ;General requirements for all papers: | ||
# At least 600 words / 1.5 pages (about 1.5-2 pages, if single-spaced, not counting cover page); no more than 5 pages. | # At least 600 words / 1.5 pages (about 1.5-2 pages, if single-spaced, not counting cover page); no more than 5 pages. | ||
− | # | + | # For a research project (options 1a or 1b), at least two sources should be cited and used meaningfully (such as academic or business / professional quality sources) |
# Submitted in the LMS by the end of the midterm period | # Submitted in the LMS by the end of the midterm period | ||
− | ;Academic Research Project: | + | ;Academic / Business Research Project: |
# Research question or problem | # Research question or problem | ||
# Research plan and methods, details, and rationale for your choices | # Research plan and methods, details, and rationale for your choices | ||
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Requirements: | Requirements: | ||
− | * | + | * There is a suggested minimum of at least 700 words (per person), not counting the cover page, references, tables, charts, quotations, appendices, etc. |
− | * Two or more people can do a project together and submit a single paper with multiple authors. In that case, the word count is | + | * Two or more people can do a project together and submit a single paper with multiple authors. In that case, the word count is 700+ words per person. |
* At least four sources that are cited and used meaningfully, including at least two sources in English. | * At least four sources that are cited and used meaningfully, including at least two sources in English. | ||
* Extra materials that you use, like interview or survey questions that you used, should be included as an appendix. | * Extra materials that you use, like interview or survey questions that you used, should be included as an appendix. |
Revision as of 09:08, 26 December 2023
Intermediate Writing (Higher Intermediate / Intermediate Writing / Composition 2)
- Pukyong National University (Daeyeon Campus)
- Course # 109820-104,월2 수2,3, i.e., section 104, M10.00-10.50 (2), W 10.00-11.50 (2/3)
- Room: C25-522
- Instructional medium: This course will be a live in-person course, taught by me or one of my clones.
Prof. Kent Lee
- Office: C25-1103
- Office hours: Mon. 11am or by appointment
Contents
1 Course description
This course is designed mainly for second-year to third-year students in social science and humanities fields. The goals of the course consist of improving your academic English writing skills, and expressing yourselves better in English. This includes specific skills like:
- Writing different types of paragraphs (definition, classification, narrative, etc.)
- Business, professional, and academic writing
- Prewriting techniques
- Using basic sentence types effectively; this includes common second-language issues such as essay structure, style, wording, and grammar issues.
- Developing main ideas, topic sentences, and body paragraphs
1.1 Grading
Here is the general grading scheme. You can refer to the syllabus and the textbook for more information.
Attendance | 10% |
Homework & other assignments | 40% |
Midterm paper | 20% |
Final paper | 30% |
2 Assignments
2.1 Minor homework assignments
There are minor homework assignments, including Google Forms, which are generally worth 10-20 points; and major multi-paragraph assignments, worth 100 points.
2.2 Professional writing assignments
Click on the 'Expand' applet on the right to see or collapse past and future assignments and materials. For these assignments, please see the grading criteria for shorter assignments in the book (most or all those criteria will be relevant).
2.2.4 Final project description
2.3 Midterm: Proposal
A proposal is a formal document to apply for funds for a project, or to propose a business agreement. It can be a letter or short essay, and can be used to apply for a number of different things. In this assignment, you can choose a more business oriented topic or a more academic topic. See examples created for this course at this page: Proposals (writing).
2.4 Final paper: Case study
For this assignment, you will write a case study of a particular company, entity, or program. You may want to look at the guide on doing case studies and case study examples.
- a company or business (of any country), or one of its activities (e.g., a merger, acquisition, expansion into a new market, marketing strategy)
- an organization, institute, or institution
- a non-governmental organization (NGO), charity, non-profit organization, or community service organization
- a governmental / intergovernmental organization (such as UNESCO, the UN, World Bank)
- a government agency
- a government program
- a school, university, or educational institution
- a department or major of a particular university
- an educational program (at a particular school or educational institution, or from a particular organization or agency)
- a community service program
- an individual subject, e.g., a teacher or learner (educational study), an employee or manager (business study) or a patient (health study) - Note: This requires sufficient academic training and expertise, such as advanced research-oriented students who are familiar with qualitative research
- A particular teaching method or approach in a particular context (e.g., a particular EFL/ESL teaching method; how a particular type of literature is taught)
- The learning experiences of a particular group of students / learners (in a progam, major, department, or such a context)
- The experiences of a particular teacher / group of teachers at a particular educational institution
- The opinions or experiences of a particular group of consumers / users of a product, service, or company
Your analysis might focus on one or more of the following types.
- an evaluation (e.g., the effectiveness of a company, program, or activity)
- a problem / solution or analysis of a problem or challenge that the entity has faced, is facing, or will likely face
- a challenge (past, present, or likely future challenge) for this entity / program
- an analysis, evaluation, or problem-solution paper based on a model (like the STAR model), theory, or framework in your field
- reasons for an entity's success or failure (past or present)
- the likely prospects of an entity or program, e.g., its potential for failure or success
- suggestions for what a company or entity should do (e.g., for a specific challenge, or for its future)
- an interview, survey or questionnaire study of a particular group of persons (e.g., students, teachers, stakeholders)
Some suggestions:
- Evaluating a company's performance and/or future prospects; evaluating one of its product lines, its marketing strategies, its management practices, or any particualr aspect of the company. You will probably need to use trade journals, business magazines, official company websites, official reports, government data, etc. as sources.
- Evaluating an NGO, community service program, government service, government agency, intergovernmental program (e.g., WHO, UNESCO...), educational program, etc. * Evaluating a specific university, college, public school, educational program, degree program, department, or such; or how a particular subject is taught, say, at universities in a particular country.
- A specific government policy, educational policy, or such.
- For such topics, as sources you will need to use some of the following: official websites (company or instituional sites), official publications (from relevant entities), official reports, white papers, official documents, government data, business news articles, official data / statistics, data from government agencies / websites, articles from professional publications, and maybe relevant academic studies, among others.
- Qualitative research, such as interview, survey or questionnaire studies, require some knowledge of a relevant model, theory, or research methods, and/or enough knowledge of a particular field that you know what you are doing.
Some ideas:
- Company X's rise and grown in a particualr market; Company X's current strategy or peformance in a particular market; the success (and future) of product line X from Company Y
- Business, management or leadership practices at Company / Entity X; the leadership and management style of Company X / Organization X
- A particular degree program at a particular university
- Problems with a community project in City X
- Needs or problems of a particular agency (governmental / intergovernmental) or NGO
- English-medium instruction program(s) at a particular university, or at universities in a particular country
- How literature is taught in language departments at Korean universities
- The life of a famous author (poet, novelist, etc.) and how his/her life shaped his/her writings
- How Busan can better promote itself, e.g., by attracting more tourism or businesses
- How a particular university can improve its image, or attract more international students, or promote itself, or attract more research funds
- How a particular university (or universities in one area or country) can better prepare students for the job market
- A specific governmental policy or program
- Focused interviews (e.g., consumers of a product, students in a school or program)
- A group project of two or more people (in that case, the length requirement for the paper is per person)
Please see the pages on case studies, case study examples, and doing case studies.
Requirements:
- There is a suggested minimum of at least 700 words (per person), not counting the cover page, references, tables, charts, quotations, appendices, etc.
- Two or more people can do a project together and submit a single paper with multiple authors. In that case, the word count is 700+ words per person.
- At least four sources that are cited and used meaningfully, including at least two sources in English.
- Extra materials that you use, like interview or survey questions that you used, should be included as an appendix.
- This can overlap with a paper that you are doing in another course (if you are doing this project alone) - in that case, you may want to be careful about submitting both version of a paper in the LMS, as it might be incorrectly flagged as plagiarism / self-plagiarism (in that case, you can email it to me).
- This can overlap or be based on your midterm paper.
- See the grading criteria in the book, and the format for major papers.
Format & citations:
Please see the following pages for examples and guideliness for sources and citing sources.
- https://www.enwiki.org/w/Professional_sources
- https://www.enwiki.org/w/Chicago_Manual_(parenthetical)
3 Evaluating sources
3.1 News sites
There are the top news outlets, sites and publications for general world news, political news, original reporting, investigative journalism, commentary and analysis. Many of these predate the Internet, so here, format includes its original format before going online.
3.1.1 General news
Name / site | Format & scope | Location |
---|---|---|
ABC News (US) | Traditional nightly TV news | US |
ABC News (Australia) | Traditional TV news | Australia |
Al Jazeera | TV news | Qatar |
The Associated Press | Wire service | US |
The Atlantic | Magazine; commentary & analysis of news, culture and society | US |
BBC News | Traditional TV news | UK |
CBS News | Traditional TV news | US |
CNN | TV news; general news | US |
Deutsche Welle | Radio & TV news / TV news | Germany |
Foreign Affairs | Magazine; in-depth analysis of global affairs | US (published by a famous thinktank, the Council on Foreign Relations) |
The Globe and Mail | Newspaper | Canada |
The Guardian | Newspaper | UK |
The Hill | US political news & commentary | US |
Huffingtonpost | Magazine format; commentary and analysis of US & international news, politics, society, and culture | US |
NBC News | Traditional TV news | US |
The New Yorker | Magazine; commentary & analysis of news, culture and society | US |
National Public Radio | Radio news | US |
New York Times | Newspaper | US |
Reuters | Wire service | Germany |
Politico | US political news & commentary | US |
South China Morning Post | Newspaper | Hong Kong |
Time magazine | Magazine | US |
The Times of India | Newspaper | India |
The Wall Street Journal | Newspaper; US & international financial & general news | US |
The Washington Post | Newspaper | US |
The following are foreign language news sources from around the world.
- Le Monde (France]
- Sverige Tillskott (Sweden)
- El País (Spain)
- Frankfurter Allgemeine (Germany)
- CNTV (China)
- Deutsche Welle (Germany)
- Der Spiegel (Germany)
- Yomiuri (Japan)
- RT (Russia)
- France24 (France)
- Niews (Netherlands)
- De Telegraaf (Netherlands)
The following are news aggregators, which do not do original reporting, but merely aggregate or collect trending stories from many news outlets.
The following provide commentary and analysis from a specific political perspective. They are not intended as general news sources, but as sources of (generally) intelligent political commentary.
- The New Republic (US; liberal)
- The Nation (US; liberal)
- National Review (US; conservative)
- The Weekly Standard (US; conservative)
3.1.2 Business & financial news
Name / site | Format & scope | Location |
---|---|---|
Bloomberg | TV news | US |
Business Insider | Magazine | US |
Business Standard | Newspaper | India |
CNBC | TV news | US |
The Economist | Magazine | US |
The Financial Times | Newspaper | UK |
Forbes | Magazine | US |
Fortune | Magazine | US |
Market Watch | Magazine | US |
New York Times (business section) | Newspaper | US |
The Wall Street Journal | Newspaper | US |
Harvard Business Review | Academic / professional journal | US |
3.1.3 Technology & IT news
3.1.4 Science news
3.1.5 Suggested journals & professional publications
Here are some professional trade journals, and some easier academic journals, that you might like to look at to find articles for the genre analysis assignment.
3.1.5.1 Professional trade journals
- The Chronicle of Higher Education https://www.chronicle.com
- Inside Higher Ed http://www.insidehighered.com
- Times Higher Education https://www.timeshighereducation.com/
- Observer https://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer (psychology)
- Food Technology http://www.ift.org/food-technology.aspx
- World Landscape Architecture https://worldlandscapearchitect.com/
- Psychology Today https://www.psychologytoday.com
- Harvard Business Review http://www.hbr.org
- Other trade magazines
- Wikipedia list of trade magazines in different fields: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_trade_magazines
3.1.5.2 Academic journals
- International journals
- English Today https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/english-today (applied linguistics, language education)
- Domestic journals from Korea
4 Reference materials
4.1 Citation systems
The following are some commonly used citation systems; you can use any one of these for your papers in this course.
- See also this general introduction to citing and referencing sources.
- Brief Prezi on citing & referencing sources.
Style | Typical field |
---|---|
* Chicago Manual, short & long footnote styles | humanities (This is a more semi-formal citation style; end references are still required with footnotes) |
* Chicago Manual (parenthetical) | humanities (This is a more formal style with Author+Year in parenthetical in-text citations) humanities |
* Chicago Manual (all versions) | complete guide to all versions |
If you have a lot of media sources, you might find Chicago or MLA easier to use.
5 Discourse & style issues
Read the relevant course packet chapters on coherence / transitionals, cohesion, reporting verbs, and word choice. We may go through some of this quickly in class, as this is rather dry. Please look at the examples and bring your questions, as you may or may not understand why some examples are given, or are flagged as problematic.
To revise and improve your midterm paper, first look at these more general guides to style and wording. | Then look at these more specific topics.
|
6 See also
6.1 Links
6.2 Notes
- ↑ Dozens of research grants have been awarded by this foundation to students at Hogwarts, Gotham City University, Metropolis University, Monsters University, Mars University, Wossamotta University, and Starfleet Academy.