Sociology 201
Paper Guidelines
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The course paper must double spaced
type with one-inch margins in APA, MLA, or ASA format. The paper should be
designed so that you can demonstrate your understanding of statistical concepts
as applied to social research and should include at least one chart and one
graph. You must cite within the body of
your paper, at least 5 sources (journal articles, books, etc.) and include a reference
or bibliography. Your text provides a
wealth of information and ideas to get you started and is
a good source to use in your 'initial' search for references. You may use the articles in your text as
references if appropriate. Please refer
to your syllabus and the notes taken during our in class paper discussion for
additional information.
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Grading Criteria:
The grade "A" represents an outstanding essay that:
develops and presents creative, perceptive,
thoughtful and well-organized ideas;
develops and presents well-chosen and
sociologically/psychologically appropriate concepts, explanations, and
supporting evidence for the ideas and theme(s) of the report;
creates an essay that contains no
mechanical errors, is written in clear, smooth language and is free of
colloquial phrases, slang and incomplete sentences.
The grade "B" represents a very good essay that:
develops and presents a perceptive,
thoughtful, and well organized set of ideas;
has clear, smooth writing which is
mostly free of colloquial slang, incomplete sentences and
mechanical/punctuation errors;
is developed with better-than-average
choice and development of sociologically /psychologically relevant/applicable
concepts, themes and supporting ideas.
The grade "C' represents an adequate essay that:
responds to a topic in a routine way; does
the minimum requirements;
shows some evidence of thought and
planning;
is developed with adequate, supporting
material, sociologically /psychologically relevant concepts and organization of
thought;
has average writing with few colloquial
phrases or slang;
contains few distracting errors in usage,
logic or mechanics (complete sentences, etc.).
The grade "D" represents a less than adequate essay
that:
responds to a topic in a routine, superficial
way;
shows some evidence of thought and planning;
is developed with less than adequate
supporting material, choice of concepts and application/organization of
thought;
has writing which is not vigorous and contains colloquial
phrases or slang and, incomplete, poorly punctuated sentences;
contains several distracting errors in usage
or mechanics.
The grade of "F" represents an inferior and weak essay
that:
responds to a topic in a routine, superficial
way;
can only be followed and understood with
some difficulty;
may contain platitudes or mistakes in
word choice, application of concepts and organization of thought;
contains major distracting errors;
does not state a topic or main idea or
show evidence of thought, organization or planning;
has enough errors in mechanics and
choice/application of concepts to seriously distract the reader;
contains vague, ambiguous diction and
phrasing;
contains incomplete sentences that make it
difficult to understand the content.
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