(Note: This is
the latest in an evolving “Paper Portfolio” writing system being developed with
Dr. Jacob Held of the UCA Philosophy and Religion Department. Feel free to
provide me with feedback regarding what is or isn’t working, possible
modifications, etc. Ron Novy)
Marx Seminar Paper Portfolio
Introduction:
Why a portfolio?
The value of writing a sustained
research paper is not to be found in the final product, but the process through
which one goes in crafting the paper, from conception to completion. This
portfolio project has been developed as a way of tracking and evaluating a
student’s progress through the course of a sustained research project.
Your portfolio will be comprised
of five distinct parts each worth a portion of the portfolio’s final grade.
Each portion will be due at an assigned date. Please review the guidelines so
you are not caught off guard.
The paper produced by this process
will be about 10 pages in length (roughly 2500 words) and should be of a
quality appropriate for presentation at an undergraduate philosophy conference.
Elements
of the Portfolio:
Bibliography
and Abstract 10%
Review
of Sources 20%
Initial
Draft & Comments 30%
Revised
Draft 20%
Full
Portfolio 20%
Schedule:
Feb.
6th: Choose Topic
Feb.
16th: Bibliography and Abstract
March
6: Review of Sources
March
20: Initial Draft
March
30: Comments Due
April
10: Revised Draft
April
29: Full Portfolio
Choosing a Topic:
Keeping in mind that the
philosophical thought of Karl Marx is at the heart of this course (and so also
of your paper), a wide range of paper topics are available. By February 6th,
students must indicate to me in writing a topic area and a general thesis upon
which they intend to write. Once the topic is chosen it cannot be changed.
Bibliography/Abstract:
By February 16th, I
will require that each student to turn in a bibliography and abstract. This is
a working bibliography listing which works you have looked at, are looking at,
or are planning on looking at. This bibliography must include at least three
sources external to the course. Your abstract should be one page in length
(about 250 words) and include your thesis statement, that is, the point of your
paper and how you plan to pursue this point, indicating what relevant major
sources you plan to reference.
Review
of Sources:
Over the course of researching the
paper you will inevitably read a book or several journal articles on your
topic. In fact, the bibliography guarantees that you will. No later than March
6th, you will turn in a brief review of some of the materials you
have read.
Chose either a major book you have
read on the topic or three journal articles related to the topic and write a
3-4 page review of the material. Assess them with respect to merit. Do they
speak to the issue you are addressing? How do they do so? What in the works did
you find important/negligible? How do you see them promoting your research
project? The review should assess the works for how they address the topic and
how you envision them fitting into your overall program.
Show me that you have been doing
research and that you understand how the research you are doing is relevant to
the completion of your chosen project.
Initial
Draft and Comments:
Submitting a draft of work in
progress for comment provides the author with important feedback on her
project. Your initial draft is due no later than March 20st (the
last day before Spring Holiday). The paper at this stage is in draft form, and
not expected to be a completed paper. Nonetheless, it should be substantial (at
least 5 coherent pages including: a thesis, basic argumentation/research and
reference to secondary sources).
The student will provide two
copies of the draft: one to be read by the professor, the other by a
randomly-selected member of the class. Both the professor and the
student-reader will provide a critical review of the paper.
Student-readers are to write a 2-3
page critique of the draft received. This critique should focus on how
successfully the material fulfills the thesis as well as recommending changes
and providing suggestions in this regard. The student-reader will provide two
copies of her critique: one for the professor, the other for the author of the
draft.
The student’s draft and her
critique will count equally toward the grade for this portion of the portfolio.
The critique is due no later than March 30th (the first class day
following Spring Holiday).
Revised
Draft:
No later than April 10th,
students will have submitted their papers. This paper should reflect
corrections made in light of the comments provided by both the professor and
the student-reader. This paper should be complete or nearly so at this point.
Minimally, it should consist of at least 80% of the length of the final paper
complete with all relevant sources, full citations and proper formatting. Short
of minor revisions and emendations, this should be the final paper.
The grade for this portion of the
portfolio will be based entirely on how close to a finished paper this revised
draft appears to be. Has it been revised in a meaningful way in light of comments received on the initial
draft? Is it almost a finished paper?
Full
Portfolio:
On the final regular class meeting
– April 29th – students will submit their completed portfolio,
preferably in a folder or some other organized fashion.
The full portfolio will consist
of: the final version of the paper as well as all the draft work (your
bibliography and abstract, your review of sources, your initial draft with
comments from both the student-reader and the professor, and the revised
draft).
Each part must be present in order
to receive full credit for this portion of your portfolio grade. This grade
will be determined primarily by the quality of the final paper, although
failing to provide the draft work will significantly impact your grade.