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ENGL 120 Cuyamaca Educational Barrier A New Language Narrative Discussion

Question Description

Overview:

Write a 300 – word narrative paragraph about a specific barrier or border that had an important influence on your education. The experience you choose should be one that you struggled to overcome or taught you a lesson. It could be an external barrier such as an experience with a teacher or poverty or an internal barrier such as a learning disability. Think about the experiences the student in First Generation faced. The experience may have helped you form a belief, change a belief, or strengthen your belief about education. You should describe the experience, reflecting on what happened as you tell of its effects.

NOTE: Please keep in mind that in this assignment, you should discuss ONE SPECIFIC barrier that you had. This paragraph should tell your reader about one experience, one day, one moment, which had a defining impact on your education. It should be a story, with a beginning, middle, and end.

Guidelines:

This should be at least 300 words in length, double spaced, and typed in a 12pt font (Times New Roman).

Definitions:

This assignment may still be unclear. Here are some definitions to help clarify this assignment:

In a narrative, you recount an event or story in order to explain some insight or truth gained from an experience. The writer who narrates tells a story to make a point—your first trip alone, the passing of a family member, a fight with a parent. An expository narrative has a point, a lesson, or a message to impart to the reader through telling a story or recounting an event and framing it with analysis.

When you want to explain what happened, you will need to tell the story in some kind of chronological order, putting the most important events—I took the wrong turn, I entered the funeral parlor, she yelled at me—in the most prominent position. When you want to give the texture of the experience, you will need to select words and images that help your readers see, hear, and feel what happened, sensory details—the road snaked to a dead end, the crowd thundered into applause, the sunshine softened our scowls. When you show and tell in this way, you can help your readers see the meaning of the experience you want to convey.

It is the inclusion of a lesson that distinguishes the expository narrative essay from merely narrative description of events. Expository narrative essays feature a lesson or clear message that is shown to the reader through the recounting of events or information. This analytical purpose is stated in the thesis statement in the beginning of the essay. The lesson or message is then supported/explained/proved/demonstrated in the body paragraphs. It is finally restated in the conclusion of the experience.

For our purposes in this paragraph, the message or lesson is the takeaway or analysis you have about the barrier event. Put it into context for your audience. Why is this important? What makes this barrier significant to you? To your educational journey? Why is this barrier an important one to share with your audience?

Paragraph Structure:

Please follow the PIE paragraph structure you learned about this week. Feel free to use this Sample PIE Paragraph as a guide. In your paragraph, please include:

  1. Topic sentence: Identifies what you are trying to explain, show, prove, or argue in your narrative. States what your barrier is or the barrier you are going to focus on. States the lesson or meaning you will impart to the reader about that barrier/experience. It is arguable.
  2. Information: Develop the narration of the one event using time order. The informative section of your paragraph should include specific details of the event, including who was involved, what happened, where it happened, and when it happened. This portion of the paragraph will include the sensory details. Remember to be as specific and vivid as possible.
  3. Explanation: The explanation portion of the paragraphs will explain what you were thinking and feeling as the events took place and will tie the information back to the topic sentence. Re-emphasizes the lesson learned and the message of the story you’ve told in your narrative.

Grading:

Below you will find a rubric for this assignment. Make sure to check the rubric before submitting. As you write, it may also help to review Understanding Your Assignment.

If you need further assistance, please consider taking advantage of our Online Tutoring with the Writing Center. Also, don’t hesitate to contact me with questions.

Rubric

Educational Borders Paragraph Rubric

Educational Borders Paragraph Rubric

Criteria Ratings Pts

This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomePoint: The paragraph has a point or topic sentence.

5.0 to >3.5 pts

Full Marks: The topic sentence makes a clear point that names the barrier that influenced your education. It states what you learned from your experience. States the lesson or message you will impart to the reader. It is arguable.

3.5 to >1.5 pts

Almost There: Topic sentence is present, but it does not clearly name the barrier that influenced your education or what you learned from it. The topic sentence maybe more of a fact than a claim.

1.5 to >0.0 pts

Not Yet: There is no recognizable topic sentence/point.

0.0 pts

No Submission

5.0 pts

This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeInformation: The paragraph has information that supports the Point.

5.0 to >3.5 pts

Full Marks: The paragraph provides clear information, giving many details about the barrier/event chosen. The reader can easily and clearly understand what happened. The informative section of your paragraph includes specific details of the event, including who was involved, what happened, where it happened, and when it happened. This portion of the paragraph will include the sensory details.

3.5 to >1.5 pts

Almost There: The paragraph has information provided, but it may lack details or clarity. It leaves the reader with questions about the barrier/event rather than full clarity.

1.5 to >0.0 pts

Not yet: There is no information provided.

0.0 pts

No Submission

5.0 pts

This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeExplanation: The paragraph has explanation that reflects on the Information given.

10.0 to >6.0 pts

ull Marks: The paragraph has sufficient and clear explanation. The explanation portion of the paragraphs explains what you were thinking and feeling as the events took place and ties the information back to the topic sentence. It re-emphasizes the lesson learned and the message of the story you’ve told in your narrative. There is significance provided to prove why the barrier is important.

6.0 to >3.5 pts

Almost There: The paragraph includes some explanation but it is not fully developed. It is significantly shorter than the information portion, and it does not clearly reflect on the event.

3.5 to >0.0 pts

Not Yet: The paragraph does not include explanation. It ends on the information portion without reflection.

0.0 pts

No Submission

10.0 pts

This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeMLA and Grammar

5.0 to >3.5 pts

Full Marks: Paragraph is double spaced, typed in a 12pt font (Times New Roman) and there are no errors in grammar or syntax.

3.5 to >1.5 pts

Almost There: There are a few errors in MLA format or grammar, but paragraph is mostly correct.

1.5 to >0.0 pts

Not Yet: There are enough errors in format and grammar that are distracting for the audience.

0.0 pts

No Submission

5.0 pts

Total Points: 25.0

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