This is an A
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Here's the introduction and a selection from an A paper. The student
is responding to David Abram's essay on shamanism, Peter Drucker's discussion
of the rise of the knowledge society, and Petrosky's analysis of the role
of failure in the design process.
The Balance of the Western Society
Magic is something that Western society does
not place much emphasis or importance on. In tribal cultures, such as
those visited by David Abram, shamans control magic and keep a balance
between the tribal society and nature. The balance that exists is vital
to the functioning of their society. David Abram discusses the idea of
magic in his work, "The Ecology Of Magic". Abram speaks of the
purpose of shamans and their power to keep the balance within the tribal
society. Peter Drucker in his work, "The Age of Social Transformation",
discusses the rise of the knowledge society and the function of the knowledge
workers. Drucker also addresses the need for a balance within this society.
Henry Petroski discusses the idea of failure and how almost everything
is subject to failure in his work, To Engineer is Human. The imbalance
that Abram views in the Western society is due to the uprise of knowledge
workers and their susceptibility to various failures. Thus, the Western
society is in need for a sector, such as the social sector, to provide
a balance much like the shamans provide for the tribal culture.
If our society rejects ideas proposed by tribal
cultures, one could ask how will society find its balance? Abram sees
the imbalance of the Western society as a problem. Abram says, "Caught
up in a mass of abstractions, our attention hypnotized by a host of
human - made technologies that only reflect us back to ourselves, it
is all too easy for us to forget our carnal inherence in a more-than-human
matrix of sensations and sensibilities"(Abram 15). The one hope
that our society has to maintaining a balance within society lies in
the social sector. Drucker speaks of the idea of the balance within
society coming from the social sector. Drucker says,
The new pluralism has a new problem: how
to maintain the performance capacity of the new institutions and yet
maintain the cohesion of society. This makes doubly important the
emergence of a strong and functioning social sector. It is an additional
reason why the social sector will increasingly be crucial to the performance,
if not to the cohesion, of the knowledge society (Drucker 269)
Our society is "caught up in a mass of
abstractions" but the social sector will provide "cohesion"
to the broken apart and dysfunctions of society. The social sector may
not use magic tactics as the shamans do, but for the functioning of
our failing society, the social sector will help keep a balance.
Here's how we read this paper:
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The introduction: While the prose is stilted in this opening
paragraph, the writer establishes that she is in control of a conceptually
demanding project: she aims to show that Drucker's social sector must
act as the shaman does in Abram's essay for contemporary society to
achieve "balance." This is a big claim, but it is the kind
of big gesture that immediately separates this paper from work at
the lower levels.
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The body: In this paragraph, which comes just before the conclusion
of the paper, the student writer begins to consider the the consequences
of the West's likely continued rejection of the "ideas proposed
by tribal cultures." Structurally and conceptually, this is a
striking move, for it comes after the student writer has spent three
pages presenting the virtues and the appeals of tribal culture. Where
papers at the lower levels are content to provide an appealing alternative,
this paper, as is characteristic of work at this level, includes a
moment where the student writer reflects on the possible consequences
of the alternate position that has been staked out. Here, the student
writer acknowledges that it is quite unlikely that the West will re-embrace
shamanism and then makes the remarkable and surprising argument that
the role of the shaman must now be filled by the social sector.
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Other observations: This paper is also distinctive because
it documents the student writer's persistent efforts to make connections
by thinking about differences rather than similarities. So, for example,
after discussing Abram early on in the paper, the student then moves
to consider the relationship between the world that knowledge workers
have created and the sensuous world that Abram describes. Thus, the
connections is not between like ideas, but is made by way of establishing
a causal relationship: "It is the rise of the knowledge society
and the increase in knowledge workers that are responsible for the
desensitization of humans to nature, which has the effect of an unbalanced
society."
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It is also important to acknowledge that the prose remains awkward
throughout the paper. While the infelicities in phrasing are many
in number, they do not prevent one from understanding the author's
intentions.
Applying the grading criteria:
In order to better understand the following final assessment
of this paper, please refer to the section of the grading
criteria that discusses A papers.
Despite the awkward phrasings, this paper qualifies as an
A because:
-
it generates "new questions and answers out of the source texts
and its own earlier
positions throughout the paper," using the assigned materials
to advance and challenge the student writer's own evolving position.
-
"the connective thinking is student-centered" and "because
of the sustained development and effective articulation of a position
that is related to ideas in the readings while not reducible to relationships
readily identifiable in the readings."
It is always the case that one could ask for the student
writer to be more explicit and to follow out the ideas even further. And,
in this case, we would have liked to see the student say more about what
duties and responsibilities the social sector is meant to take on in order
to fill the role the student has defined for it. That said, we see this
paper as exemplifying the kind of thinking and writing we hope
to come out of The New Humanities Reader: the student has demonstrated
her command of the assigned readings by using them to formulate her own
position on the issues raised by the readings and, in so doing, given
herself the opportunity to gauge the quality of her own thoughts about
how society might be shaped in the 21st century.
So, an A, then, has a strong command of connection in its ability to
move in and between the various essays. But what's more it has a confident
sense of project. The student's voice is at moments as strong as any of
the essayists.
Now that you have some sense of what makes each grade, it's your turn
to try and apply what you've seen in these papers to a "mystery"
paper. It's your turn to grade.
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