Antigone * Oedipus Paper
.
Conference Work due onMonday 2/13 at the start of class / Things you can try when you are
defining your key terms.
· Working thesis (formatted as its own body paragraph)
· Write the full “defining key terms” paragraph.
· Write the full first body paragraph including a focused topic sentence, multiple pieces of support with explanation and a clincher.
THEN, you have options…
ü Bullet point outline the rest of the paper.
ü Sentence outline the rest of the paper.
ü Write the rest of the paper.
What risk will you take:
FOCUS ORGANIZATION STYLE
I should see evidence that you are working on that risk factor when I examine the draft you turn in on Monday. / o Etymology – what is the word’s history?
o Examples. You can use examples of what the idea IS and also what it IS NOT.
o Operation – what does your idea look like in action?
o Archetypes associated with the definition.
o What are the idea’s components? For example are there multiple smaller ideas that help define this big ides. Aristotle broke the concept of tragedy into 8 different parts.
o Stereotypes: are there any stereotypes that help define what the idea is or what it is not?
o Figurative Language: Could you personify the idea?
o Last resort: dictionary definition. This is a cliché choice, but sometimes it works.
Antigone * Oedipus Paper
.
Conference Work due onMonday 2/13 at the start of class / Things you can try when you are
defining your key terms.
· Working thesis (formatted as its own body paragraph)
· Write the full “defining key terms” paragraph.
· Write the full first body paragraph including a focused topic sentence, multiple pieces of support with explanation and a clincher.
THEN, you have options…
ü Bullet point outline the rest of the paper.
ü Sentence outline the rest of the paper.
ü Write the rest of the paper.
What risk will you take:
FOCUS ORGANIZATION STYLE
I should see evidence that you are working on that risk factor when I examine the draft you turn in on Monday. / o Etymology – what is the word’s history?
o Examples. You can use examples of what the idea IS and also what it IS NOT.
o Operation – what does your idea look like in action?
o Archetypes associated with the definition.
o What are the idea’s components? For example are there multiple smaller ideas that help define this big ides. Aristotle broke the concept of tragedy into 8 different parts.
o Stereotypes: are there any stereotypes that help define what the idea is or what it is not?
o Figurative Language: Could you personify the idea?
o Last resort: dictionary definition. This is a cliché choice, but sometimes it works.