| A
An A paper
is extraordinary work that more than fulfills the
requirements of the assignment. This essay tackles the
topic in an innovative way, with a clear sense of
audience and purpose, an insightful thesis, and an
appropriate and effective organization. The structure is
carefully planned; each section of the essay develops
the thesis with logical arguments and specific,
conclusive evidence which has been interpreted and
clearly related to the writer's point. The style is
energetic and precise: the sentence structure is varied
and the words are carefully chosen. How the
writer says things is as excellent as what the
writer says. There is evidence of careful editing since
the essay contains few grammatical and/or mechanical
errors and, if necessary, is correctly documented using
MLA format, according to "The Correct
Use of Borrowed Information." B A B paper is clearly
above-average and more than meets the requirements of
the assignment. Like the "A" paper, it has a clear
thesis and organizational strategy; and each paragraph
provides unified, coherent, and developed support for
its thesis and subordinate assertions. If necessary, it
properly documents sources, according
to "The Correct Use of Borrowed Information."
While the essay takes some
"risks," attempts complex strategies of development, and
pays attention to audience, it falls short of the "A"
essay in one or more of the following ways: the thesis
may not be as interesting or insightful; there may be
weaknesses in organizational strategy or its execution;
the support may not be uniformly conclusive and
convincing; and the style may not be as energetic or the
diction as thoughtful. The essay shows strong evidence
of editing since there are relatively few grammatical
and/or mechanical errors.
C
A C paper
is average work that solidly meets the requirements of
the assignment. The essay has a thesis and
organizational plan which demonstrate thought on the
writer's part, a generally clear style, and adequate
documentation, if required, according
to "The Correct Use of Borrowed Information." Paragraphs contribute
unified and coherent support, but the writer may have
difficulty with any of the following: the thesis may be
too general; the evidence may be predictable, may not be
thoroughly interpreted, or may not be clearly
related to the writer's point; the paragraphs may be
uneven in development and transition. Even in the "C"
essay, there should be relatively few grammatical or
mechanical errors--not enough to interfere with
readability; the student has done some editing, even
though it may be superficial.
D A
D paper is below average work that demonstrates a
serious attempt to fulfill the assignment and shows some
promise but does not fully meet the requirements of the
assignment. The essay may have one or several of
the following weaknesses. It may have a general or
implied thesis; but the idea may be too broad, vague, or
obvious. The organizational plan may be inappropriate or
inconsistently carried out. Evidence may be too general,
missing, not interpreted, irrelevant to the thesis, or
inappropriately repetitive. Documentation may be
incomplete or inaccurate, according
to "The Correct Use of Borrowed Information." The style may be compromised
by repetitive or flawed sentence patterns and/or
inappropriate diction and confusing syntax. Grammatical
and mechanical errors may interfere with readability and
indicate a less-than-adequate attempt at editing or an
unfamiliarity with some aspects of Standard Written
English.
F An F paper is substantially below
average for the assignment. It exhibits one or
several of the following. It may be off-topic. It may be
an attempt to meet the requirements of the assignment,
but it may have no apparent thesis or a
self-contradictory one, or the essay's point is so
general or obvious as to suggest little thinking-through
of the topic. It may display little or no apparent sense
of organization; it may lack development; evidence may
be inappropriate and/or off-topic or may consist of
generalizations, faulty assumptions, or errors of fact.
This essay may fail to handle borrowed material
responsibly and/or to document appropriately,
according to "The Correct Use of Borrowed Information." The style
suggests serious difficulties with fluency which may be
revealed in short, simple sentences and ineffective
diction. Grammatical/mechanical errors may interfere
with reader comprehension or indicate problems with
basic literacy or a lack of understanding of Standard
English usage.
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Last updated
08/20/06
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Gloria Jones, Co-Chair. Page maintained by Dr. Jo
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