Assignment:
SOURCES:
Essay requires a serious research inquiry and the use of primary and or secondary sources. You will need to consult academic journals and reputable books to come up with a meaningful response to the issues raised in your essay.
Your personal opinions are of less value than critical arguments supported with evidence from research. NO OPINIONS!
You must use at least TWO reading from the textbook as well as at least FIVE direct references to diverse sources including scholarly books and journals to support your thesis. The sources must be recent, i.e. not older than 1996.
TOPICS:
Choose ONE of the following essay questions:
1. Several of the readings in the textbook discuss how media representations, whether they promote themselves as "entertainment" or "educational" affect our perceptions of "reality." Construct an argumentative essay either agreeing or disagreeing with this point of view.
2. Catherine E. Snow writes, "A major challenge to students learning science is the academic language in which science is written" (166). Similarly, "Examining student and instructor task perceptions in a complex engineering design task" argues that students' perceptions of their ability to manage academic tasks depend in large part on their ability to successfully comprehend complex readings. As such, understanding academic conventions is a key component of student success at the post-secondary level. Write an essay that argues for or against this point of view.
3. Much of our national self-perception as Canadians is based on our belief that our international reputation is positive. In "The Ugly Canadian," however, Amir Attaran suggests that reality may entail quite different feelings. Write an essay that argues for or against this point of view.
4. In "Which "Native" history? By whom? For whom?," Jim Miller says that historical study "enriches our understanding of the past by focusing on intercultural processes and their results" (248). Construct an essay which argues for or against this view.
5. "When an individual decides to live in a new country, it is imperative that he/she embrace the new culture, including the language, completely, even if it means giving up the ‘old' culture." Write an essay that argues for or against this statement.
6. Several readings from the text suggest that as Canadians, we tend to be proud of what we consider uniquely "Canadian" values. Write an essay that argues for or against the veracity of that pride.