How Did You Do?
Here's how we would describe the work that the student has done in this
paper:
The student writer has a clear project. She has identified points of
agreement with the three assigned authors--de Waal, Guinier, and Kaldor--and
she wants to establish what she sees as the limit to their arguments.
The organizational structure for the paper is straightforward and easy
to follow: each author is allocated two paragraphs, one charting out ideas
the student writer agrees with, the next pointing out the ideas the student
writer has more difficulty accepting. Finally, the paper has "several
moments of solid work with text:" each author is allowed one representative
quote that the student writer then incorporates into her project of identifying
points where she can agree with the assigned authors.
Thus, this paper is better than a C paper for the following three reasons:
the student writer consistently establishes her position throughout the
paper; the paper is coherently organized from beginning to end; and the
student's work with text goes beyond establishing connections between
the readings to illustrating the student writer's own project.
This paper does not approach the B-level because the position the student
has chosen to stake out involves nothing more than accurately representing
the arguments of the assigned authors and noting her reservations about
these arguments. Consequently, this paper does not build towards any insight
beyond observing that all these ideas are appealing "to a point."
The quickest way for this student writer to move her writing up to the
next level is for her to begin to consider how de Waal, Guinier, and Kaldor
might respond to her objections. How might Kaldor, for example, counter
her concerns about world courts? What might Guinier say to the charge
that she has set out to "completely scrap[] the majority rule model"?
The way of arguing represented in this paper captures the most common
attribute of papers in the C-range: a point of disagreement is identified
by the student writer and the discussion is brought to a close. In papers
at the B-level and above, these moments of disagreement come to serve
as opportunities for thinking further about the issues at hand: if not
a world court, then what? If not propotional voting, then what? This move
to consider the implications of one's own position is a move to explore
what we term "the action horizon"--that place where the ideas
in the paper are understood to have some potential impact or influence
on the world outside the classroom.
We think venturing out on to the action horizon is the best way to make
education more than the rote activity of fulfilling requirements towards
a degree. What difference does it make whether someone thinks X or Y?
The strongest papers, we believe, find ways to consider the consequences
of thinking about the world one way rather than another--find someway,
in other words, to show that it does matter how one thinks about the conflicting
ideas expressed in The New Humanities Reader, by our colleagues
and peers, and by the instituions we inhabit. So what do the best papers
do? They value their own ways of thinking and they make a credible case
that others should value those ways of thinking as well.
We hope you agree that it's worth giving this kind of thinking a try.
Good luck!
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