Your own title, properly capitalized without quotation marks or italicizing
Four paragraphs, including introduction, two body, and conclusion (around 500 words), double-spaced
Introduction should include attention getter (hook), any background information necessary, and blueprint thesis sentence. Your introduction should include story titles and authors and a brief identification of characters upon first reference. Story titles should be placed in quotation marks.
Each body paragraph should have a topic sentence, three subtopic sentences with developmental sentences for each subtopic sentence. The developmental sentences should include facts and details from the story or stories. Include paraphrases and quotations, and provide parenthetical citations for these. Note that content ratings will be very low if it is not developed with quotations and paraphrases.
Cite each paraphrase or quotation by page if you are using either “The Story of an Hour” or “The Revolt of ‘Mother’.” (This means that each specific reference to the story should point readers to the exact page on which the information appears.) For “A White Heron,” properly citing means that you introduce the material you are bringing in from the text of the story and let the reader know which material is coming from the story.
Conclusion should restate the thesis in different words. It can briefly summarize the major points. It may point to real-life application of the topic or theme of the story.
Formal style: no contractions, no slang (except in quotations to convey sense of person’s personality), and no first or second person (except in quotations).
Don’t forget to use present tense as you discuss the stories.
Include a works cited entry or entries for the story or stories. You will be using the form for anthology for the printed version of “The Story of an Hour.” Check the table of contents in Lesson 4 for information on how to create the entry or entries for both the story in print and the online stories. You’ll find information in both video and text format.
Tip: Since this paper is subject by subject, then paragraph 2 will cover the three points of comparison and/or contrast for the first subject without mentioning the second. The comparison/contrast is drawn in paragraph 3 with the discussion of the second subject. Cover the same three subtopics in the same order, and with each subtopic point, use transitional expressions that refer back to the first subject.
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