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Writing
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Writing as an academic subject spans nearly every discipline, making it one of the most broadly studied topics in higher education. Students encounter it in composition courses, education programs, linguistics, communication studies, and professional training contexts. What makes it academically interesting is its dual nature: writing is both an object of study and the primary medium through which knowledge is produced and communicated. This tension between writing as a skill and writing as a subject of critical inquiry gives the topic unusual range, touching on areas as varied as civil rights documentation, Islamic arts such as Arabic calligraphy, language acquisition in ESL classrooms, and phenomena like glossolalia.

The papers archived here reflect a wide spread of approaches. Some take a self-reflective angle, such as skill self-assessments and reflection papers that ask writers to evaluate their own abilities and understanding. Others are evaluative or critical, including critiques of lesson plans and literary analysis of authored works. Applied and professional writing appears too, covering areas like labor relations, municipal budgets, and army regulations. Methodological writing, such as work on in-depth interviewing, treats written communication as integral to research design itself.

A strong essay on writing benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one dimension of the subject — craft, culture, function, or pedagogy — rather than treating all at once. Evidence drawn from specific texts, classroom contexts, or documented practices carries more weight than general claims about the importance of writing. The most common pitfall is circularity: writing about writing well requires demonstrating the very competencies being discussed, so clarity, precise word choice, and organized argument are not just stylistic preferences but core to the essay's credibility.

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Essay Doctorate
Strategic Human Resource Management and Mission Alignment
The focus of this work in writing is to answer the questions of what aspects of SHRM have made the writer of this work a stronger candidate to enter the business world and to discuss how this course affected the…
Paper Undergraduate
Treatment of Women in Mad Men
The cultural forms examined through the television show Mad Men permits the viewer to interrogate and transform their conventional understandings of the forms (Stokes). The series is critically sophisticated and also historically knowledgeable about the period and the advertising industry (Stokes). The treatment of gender roles slips easily between irony and parody, increasing the viewers' enjoyment and easing some of the discomfiture that is inescapable in the viewing. The show is mythologized nostalgia more than a postmodern reflection of the conventions of the time. Certainly the show is meta-textual in both presentation and reflection of society, but it simultaneously highlights the Anglo-male centricity of the period. And it is through that lens that we come to understand the "treatment" of women.
Paper High School
Analysis of "The Gryphon" short story
Misunderstandings are the essence of tragedy. Nowhere is this true than in the short story Gryphon, in which a fourth-grade teacher gets sick and a substitute teacher, Miss Ferenczi, appears before his class the next day. She is poorly qualified and appears to have psychological disturbances the students recognize quickly, although none of them knows what to do about it. At one point, she recounts seeing a gryphon -- "an animal in a cage, a monster, half bird and half lion" -- while traveling in Egypt. She tells the fourth-graders other wild tales, which only some of them believe. "She lies," says one kid on the school bus afterward. Eventually, after her eccentric behavior reaches a strange climax, one of the fourth-graders tells on Miss Ferenczi to the school principal, and she leaves by noon that day. In this story, Baxter's descriptions of children's collective and individual intelligence are utterly convincing; told through the eyes of a student, the story evokes a childhood experience one is not likely to forget through repeated use of striking animal imagery.
Paper Doctorate
Robert Hayden, One of the Most Important
Robert Hayden, one of the most important black poets of the 20th Century, was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1913 and grew up in extreme poverty in a racially mixed neighborhood. His parents divorced when he was a child and he was raised by their neighbors, William and Sue Ellen Hayden, and not until he was in his forties did he learn that Asa Sheffey and Gladys Finn were his biological parents. During the Great Depression he was employed for two years by the Federal Writer's Project, and published his first volume of poetry Heart-Shape in the Dust in 1940
Essay Doctorate
John Dryden Was One of the Most
This paper is about the 17th and 18th century poet John Dryden. Specifically, it focuses on his epic poem "Absalom and Achitophel." The poem is a satire about the reign of Charles II and the various people who tried to take power away from him and claim that they had the right to ascend after his death. Dryden uses the historical allegory to prove the horros of greed.
Paper Masters
My Father\'s Love Letters
This paper analyzes the poem "My Father's Love Letters." The poem is short but tells the story of a young child who has been abandoned by his or her mother and left to live with the father who abused the child. In this strange dynamic, the child has revised their story so that the mother is the villain and the father the hero, although it is aware of the violence.
Essay Masters
Is Folk Literature Too Violent?
The primary question of the paper is: is there too much violence within the texts or narratives of folk literature? Before the answer is provided, another question appears after this one -- they are too violent compared…
Paper Undergraduate
Autism Is a Developmental Disorder as it
Autism is a developmental disorder as it is marked with pervasive and severe impairment revolving around areas of development such as communication, imagination, reciprocal interaction and behavior. The diagnostic criteria for autism as incorporated by the DSM IV TR includes symptoms such as impairment in the use of nonverbal behaviors like eye contact, gestures, bodily postures during the normal routine social interaction, the inability to form good peer relationships, delay or lack in the development of the language being spoken, failure to start a conversation despite an adequate ability to speak, restricted and repetitive behaviors and stereotyped behavior patterns, interests and activities.
Paper Doctorate
Humanities the Renaissance Period Changed the World,
The Renaissance period changed the world, after the disasters, indecencies and barbarism of the dark ages it was a hope of light for mankind. It gave human beings the cultural upheaval; flourished in Europe it steadily transformed the way of living. The elements introduced and worked on in that era are still present in our daily lives, being enjoyed and cherished more or less by every human being. Its power introduced many new fields and transformed the existing ones; fields like philosophy, art and fine art, music, affairs of state, science, religion, literature and other scholarly aspects.
Paper Undergraduate
Relation of Human Factors and Interior Space Design
The objective of this work in writing is to summarize the article entitled "The Relation of Human Factors and Interior Space Design". This article begins by noting the importance of the human having tools that fit them well and that this was realized early in the development of the human species. Specifically, this article notes that Australopithecus Prometheus "selected pebble tools and made scoops from antelope bones in a clear display of selecting/creating objects to make tasks easier to accomplish." (p.3) Over the centuries there was improvement in the effectiveness of the tools as discovered by anthropologists and archaeologists including tools such as hammers, plows and axes. During the Industrial Revolution, more advanced machines were developed that assisted man with his work including such as the spinning Jenny and the rolling mills.