This document provides an agenda for a class discussing essay writing. It outlines the assignment for Essay #4, which asks students to propose a solution to a problem faced by a community or group. It then reviews the basic features of a problem-solution essay, including defining the problem, describing the solution, arguing the point, addressing alternatives, and anticipating objections.
2. AGENDA
Review: Essay #4
The Basic Features of a Problem Solution
Essay
Discussion: O’Malley
In-Class Writing: Finding a Problem to Write
about: De Anza
3. Essay #4
Essay #4: Proposing a Solution : Essay (1000-1500 words) 150 points
Assignment: Write an essay from 4-6pages in length, that addresses the topic
below. Use a minimum of two credible sources to support your argument.
Prompt : Write an essay proposing a solution to a well-defined problem faced
by a community or group to which you may belong. Alternatively, you may
address a well-defined problem faced by one of the districts or communities in
The Hunger Games. Address your proposal to your audience: one or more
members of the group, its leadership, or to outsiders who may be able to
contribute to solving the problem.
4. As you read essays proposing a solution in
this chapter, you will see how different
authors incorporate the basic features of
the genre.
Basic Features
8. An Evaluation of Alternative Solutions
•The writer arguing for a proposal must anticipate objections or
reservations that readers may have about the proposed solution.
• This works in much the same way as a counterargument. Identify
other ways to solve the problem. Then show why or how your
solution is superior.
Here comes your footer Page 8
9.
10. Group Discussion: Look for these basic features
in Patrick O’Malley’s Essay “More Testing, More
Learning”
A Well-Defined Problem
A Clearly Described Solution
A Convincing Argument
An Effective Counterargument
An Evaluation of Alternative Solutions
11. What is O’Malley’s Problem?
Where does he tell the reader?
A Well-Defined Problem
A Well-Defined Problem
12. A Well-Defined Problem
Although this last-minute anxiety about midterm and
final exams is only too familiar to most college
students, many professors may not realize how such
major, infrequent, high-stakes exams work against
the best interests of students both psychologically
and intellectually.
A Clearly Described Solution
13. A Clearly Described Solution: The Thesis
If professors gave additional brief exams
at frequent intervals, students would be
spurred to study more regularly, learn
more, worry less, and perform better on
midterms, finals, and other papers and
projects.
A Convincing Argument
14. A Convincing Argument: Support for the Thesis
A 2006 study reported in Psychological Science journal
concluded that “taking repeated tests on material leads to better long-
term retention than repeated studying,” according to the study’s
coauthors, Henry L. Roediger and Jeff Karpicke.
A Harvard study notes students’ “strong preference for frequent
evaluation in a course.”
In a review of a number of studies of student learning,
Frederiksen (1984) reports that students who take weekly quizzes
achieve higher scores on final exams than students who take only a
midterm exam and that testing increases retention of material tested.
Researchers at the University of Vermont found a strong
relationship among procrastination, anxiety, and achievement.
An Effective Counterargument
15. An Effective Counterargument: An Anticipation of
Readers’ Objections and Questions
Some believe that such exams take up too
much of the limited class time available to
cover the material in the course.
Another objection professors have to
frequent exams is that they take too much
time to read and grade.
An Evaluation of Alternative Solutions
16. An Evaluation of Alternative Solutions
It is reasonable to consider alternative ways to achieve
the same goals. One alternative solution is to implement a
program that would improve study skills.
Still another solution might be to provide frequent study
questions for students to answer.
Another possible solution would be to help students
prepare for midterm and final exams by providing sets of
questions from which the exam questions will be selected or
announcing possible exam topics at the beginning of the
course.
17. Your Chart
Groups and organizations Problems
The Hunger Games Not Enough Food
De Anza College
Your Neighborhood
Your Club
Another Group
18. Problem Solution
Parking 1. Build a new structure?
2. Charge more to
encourage public
transportation?
3. Redesign the existing
space?
19. Homework
Read SMG 326-359 Kornbluh, Miller and
Sciara
Writing: Post #37 Identify a problem faced by
De Anza students. How would you solve the
problem? Write one paragraph outlining the
problem. Write another explaining a solution.