English – Quotes Assignment | Buy assignments online
https://serialpodcast.org/season-one
INSTRUCTIONS: please open a Word document and respond to following questions in MLA essay format (that means double-spaced and in Times New Roman 12-point font) and use 400-450 words. Save your document and then attach it below.
A quality response will mostly consist of your ideas, but will also have some information, such as details and quotes from the podcast, sprinkled throughout.
Serial, Episode Three (“Leakin Park”) tells the story of “Mr. S.” When you are first hearing the interview with “Mr. S.” while he is in police custody, do you find his version of how he came across Hae’s body believable? What specifically does he say (or not say) that causes him to be believable or not? Then, when you learn of Mr. S’s record and the specific nature of his crimes, does that make him and his story more or less believable? What does the knowledge of his crimes do (if anything) to the way you think about him? If it causes you to change the way you think about his believability, why?
Integrating Quotations as Evidence
Using quotations in your writing is a skill that you can master with practice and proper formatting, including documentation. The ability to support ideas with credible sources is the basis for formal research writing in the academic setting. Blending quoted material into your own writing is a technique that you will use often in a variety of writing assignments, and it is important to do it well.
The key to developing this skill successfully requires that you become adept with three specific guidelines:
- Select relevant and useful quotations, paraphrases, and summaries that directly support your main ideas.
- Cut the text accurately and appropriately, maintaining the original context and meaning.
- Weave the text so it blends smoothly with your tone and style.
These are three distinct actions in practice. Many students can choose a quotation that relates to a topic or a specific point, but there is much more to academic writing. It is the masterful weaving of a selected quote that can be difficult to achieve. A successfully woven quote will appear to be smoothly fused with the writer’s sentence. In other words, if you were to hear the sentence read aloud, you would not know where the quotation was. It is only when looking at the sentence on paper that the quotation becomes clear because of the quotation marks and in-text citation.
Two other necessary moves for masterful text weaving are introducing the quoted material prior to presenting the quote and explaining/interpreting the quoted material after the quote is presented. In the first action, you let your reader know you are transitioning from your own ideas to those of another person. In the second, you explain to your reader what the quote means and what you think is significant about the idea expressed by it.
Examples
Original quote: “But this holier-than-thou social media behavior is counterproductive, it’s self-aggrandizement at the cost of actual nuanced discourse and if we want to consider online discourse productive, we need to move past this” (Graff213). -Sean Blanda, from “The Other Side Is Not Dumb.”
Quote integration: Sean Blanda argues that when it comes to controversial social issues, our default is to assume people around us will agree, and if they don’t, they must be stupid. He cautions readers that accusing those with an opposing viewpoint of lacking intelligence ultimately prevents a productive, “nuanced discourse” from happening. What seems to be at stake for Blanda is an inability to value a diversity of viewpoints, which causes social and political stagnation.
Original quote: “Quite belatedly, I came to see that mass incarceration in the United States had, in fact, emerged as a stunningly comprehensive and well-disguised system of racialized social control that functions in a manner strikingly similar to Jim Crow” (Graff 235). -Michelle Alexander, from “The New Jim Crow.”
Quote integration: Michelle Alexander claims that the prison system in the United States is systemically biased against African Americans. She asserts that, much like the Jim Crow laws that spanned the late-19th to the mid-20th centuries, prisons in the United States have emerged as a “well-disguised system of racialized social control” through the trend of mass incarceration. Despite the fact that Jim Crow laws were eventually overruled, Alexander believes that African Americans still suffer limitations on their rights due to a racially biased and irrational criminal justice system, which suggests serious reform of the U.S. prison system is necessary.
Rubric
file:///C:/Users/User/Downloads/Whywomenandmenstillcanthaveitallarticles%20(1).pdf