Essay #4 Part 1: First Draft For this essay, you will synthesize at least three of the texts in the following list to answer the question “What does it mean to be happy?” You will need to include opinions and ideas from each of your three authors to help you support your own opinion. You should also use other outside sources to support specific claims, though how many outside texts will be based on your own necessity; a set number of outside sources will not be required by me (see #5 in the advice list below for more information). Texts: “Why Don’t We Complain?” by William F. Buckley Jr. “Just Be Nice” by Stephen L. Carter “This is Water” by David Foster Wallace “New Hope, New Pain, Same Old Divorce” by Cameron Esposito “Improving Ourselves to Death” by Alexandra Schwartz “Laugh Kookaburra” by David Sedaris Recommended reading: ‘How Millennials Replaced Religion with Astrology and Crystals” by Jessica Roy. This reading can be used, but it is not required. Objectives: Support a specific interpretive thesis statement with evidence from a variety of texts read in class and outside sources. Balance directly quoted material with paraphrases and summaries that advance your discussion. Identify details in support of explicit and implicit themes in non-fiction and literature. Advice and questions to ask yourself Annotate each reading before making your decision. Which readings do you have the biggest response to? How do those pieces make you feel? Who is the writer/speaker? What motivated them to write on this topic? Things to consider when approaching this analysis: What are the different elements or aspects of happiness? Which ones do you want to focus on? What is some common wisdom shared among the texts? What re-occuring themes come up among the pieces? Is happiness perfection or something different? What kind of information do you need to research? How do other countries measure happiness and how happy are they? What do philosophers say about happiness and which point of view do you agree with? Deepen your opinion not just on how the provided texts influence you, but by reading around the topic more than I am specifically requiring. Brainstorm for each article to answer the above questions before officially choosing. Note: Fully participating in all of the synthesis activities and really listening to other people’s perspectives will broaden your thinking on the different aspects of this topic. Part 1: First Draft –100 points After completing your synthesis activity discussion boards, you will need to choose the main readings you wish to deal with and write a preliminary draft. This draft needs to include your chosen textual sources to support your own definition of happiness. You can begin to include outside research here, though it is not required at this stage. Keep in mind you are expected to thoroughly revise this draft for the final submission. Part 1 Requirements The essay must be between 4-5 pages, typed, double spaced, one-inch margins, Times New Roman or Arial font. You will need to cite the texts you have chosen both in the body of your work and the works cited page (not included in the page count). Cite any research you have chosen to use at this stage.
Science is the pursuit and application of knowledge and understanding of the natural and social…
Clearly stating the definition, the values, the meaning of such values and the type of…
All answered must be typed using Times New Roman (size 12, double-spaced) font. No pictures…
All answered must be typed using Times New Roman (size 12, double-spaced) font. No pictures…
https://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2018/04/25/605092520/high-paying-trade-jobs-sit-empty-while-high-school-grads-line-up-for-university Click on the link above. Read the entire link and answer the questions below…
All answered must be typed using Times New Roman (size 12, double-spaced) font. No pictures…