WRITING ASSIGNMENT #1 - Animal Farm

PROMPT

In chapter II The Seven Commandments for the animals are spelled out in no uncertain

terms. Every society has certain rules that the members of that society must follow. There are

many rules in our society that are written; law libraries are full of them. There are also some

unwritten rules that guide our daily lives. (You shake hands when you meet someone new; you

don't spit in someone else's soup; you say, "Excuse me" when you burp, etc.)

Your assignment is to create a list of The “Three” Commandments for our society. Choose

the three most basic and important rules (written or unwritten) that guide our lives. Defend your

choices.

PREWRITING

Stop and think for a few minutes about what guidelines most people in our society follow.

Jot down all your ideas. Then, go back and weed out those ideas that are duplicated or are not asimportant as some of the others on your list. Now, look at your list. If you were to give this list toa foreigner who had just arrived in this country, would these "commandments" serve him well? Ifnot, go back and make revisions to your list until you are satisfied that you have the three mostbasic rules of our society.

DRAFTING

Your paper should have an introductory paragraph in which you lead up to and state your

three commandments. The body of your paper should have three paragraphs: one for each commandment you have set forth. Your topic sentences for these paragraphs should set forth your commandments,and the body of your paragraphs should include your justifications for choosing thecommandments.Write a concluding paragraph in which you summarize your points and leave your readerwith your most important thought.

PEER REVIEW

When you finish the rough draft of your paper, ask a student who sits near you to read it.

After reading your rough draft, he/she should tell you what he/she liked best about your work,

which parts were difficult to understand, and ways in which your work could be improved.

Reread your paper considering your critic's comments, and make the corrections you think are

necessary.

PROOFREADING

Do a final proofreading of your paper double-checking your grammar, spelling,

organization, and the clarity of your ideas.

FINAL COPY

Write a final copy of your paper. Write on one side of the paper. You may skip lines.

Turn in your rough draft, peer review form, and final copy.

PEER REVIEW

AUTHOR:______

REVIEWER:______

1. What I liked best about this paper:

2. These parts were difficult to understand and why:

3. Ways to improve this paper:

You may write on the back.