*** Please note that this information was taken from a
previous class - so it will seem 'long winded', but for those of you who have
never written a seminar paper, or participated in seminar this information
should be helpful***
Some
hints for Seminar Papers, Discussion Questions & Seminar Discussions
The
seminar is at the very core of your Evergreen education. As such, a thorough
preparation for the seminar is of greatest importance. You will notice how
satisfying a great, lively, interesting, and thought-provoking seminar
discussion can be. The seminar papers, which you will write, will be a great
help to all of us and will make the discussion gel. Consider the seminar papers
and discussions as your greatest friends in obtaining the best education you
can get. Your challenge is to work hard in your thinking, reading, and writing.
Below are a few hints that might help you to write your papers, as well as
instructions concerning their mechanics.
§
The seminar
papers should be typed double-spaced, and proofread. Note that the seminar
papers are not formal essays. Rather, they should have at least three unconnected
paragraphs (talking points), each discussing a different chapter. Each talking
point in your paper will be a brief explication (discussion, critique,
analysis, appraisal, interpretation, clarification description) of an idea or
issue which intrigued, puzzled, confused, perplexed, confounded, disturbed,
tweaked, irritated, stimulated or otherwise engaged you from the reading. Each
paragraph needs to have a clear thesis, (e.g. a question you are asking, a
point that puzzles you, an observation that you made) followed by discussion of
the thesis that is supported by the text (with a page number and maybe a
quote), and a conclusion.
As
you are reading, keep notes, sketches, and diagrams, or write questions
and notes to yourself in the margins. Focus on finding the author's main points
and what arguments, reasons, or evidence she uses to support these main points.
Also ask yourself the following questions: Why does the author bother to make
this point (why does she think it matters)? Are the author’s arguments
good, in that her premises or evidence support(s) the conclusion or main point?
Why or why not? What is the most important or interesting argument in the
reading? And finally, what links can you find between the class' lecture topics
(for the current and/or previous weeks), workshops, and the readings? These
questions can inform your participation for seminar as well as your seminar
papers.
After
you've finished each reading, use your notes to work up a list of questions and
problems you want to discuss in the next seminar. These questions and problems
might include clarifying questions (e.g., what you did not understand in the
reading), discussion questions (e.g., open-ended questions that have no clear
answer and will provoke interesting
conversations), and observations about the author's main points or arguments.
Include a notation about what specific places (pages) in the text motivate each
question and observation. Separate your discussion questions from your personal
opinion about the readings; you will have an opportunity to say whether or why
you personally agreed or disagreed with the author's position, but this is not
the major purpose of discussion questions.
The
seminar discussion is exactly what is says--a discussion. Using your papers as
a guide, you will "throw" your ideas into the fray. If you notice
that your questions and ideas are in one way or another connected to what is
being discussed, share them with your co-learners. Equally, if your ideas seem
to be diametrically opposed to what is being discussed, voice your opinion.
However, each and every opinion must be informed by the texts and/or other
class related discourse. An uninformed opinion, a discussion not based on the
ideas of the class, can turn easily into meaningless babble. While your
personal experiences matter greatly, in the seminar discussion they can only be
relevant if they refer directly to the readings and other class material.
§
Make sure you
phrase each talking point into a discussion question format: this is a question
that you feel needs to be discussed in seminar. The talking point paragraphs
are your way of beginning this discussion and/or establishing the reason for
raising the question. These questions will help structure and guide our seminar
discussions. (See below for additional hints on composing discussion
questions.)
§
Strive in
your seminar papers to create connections between the different texts and
topics covered in class or sport in general. Nothing can be as beautiful as
discovering an unexpected intellectual connection, and nothing can be as
exciting as looking for such connections. If in your readings you stumble upon
an idea that connects to another text, film, or current event, refer in your
paper directly to the source where you found the connections. The ideas in your
paper will be a way of beginning our discussion in seminar.
§
Make two
copies of your typed, proofread seminar papers, one for the instructor to be
turned in at the beginning of the seminar and one copy for you to bring to the
seminar. Like all class work, the seminar paper must be turned in on time. If
you are unable to attend a seminar discussion, you are still responsible for turning
in your paper that day. (e.g., you might e-mail it to faculty or
have a friend deliver it). Failure to attend class or turn in your written work
on time may result in not being awarded upper division credit.
The
faculty will read all your seminar papers and turn them back to you with
appropriate comments by the following class meeting. Faculty comments will
primarily focus on creating dialogue with you about your ideas. While your
writing style is of secondary focus, I want you to develop a college level
degree of writing proficiency (coherent sentence structure, spelling, grammar,
and punctuation). If there are problems with the "mechanics" of your
writing, the faculty will point them out in hopes of supporting your writing
development. You may be asked
to work with the Writing Center if you need further help in developing your
writing skills.
Finish
your list well before seminar, and take time to let the questions percolate
before you write your seminar paper. Your questions, thoughts, and connections
will form the basis for your seminar papers and for our seminar discussions, so
be sure they represent your finest thoughts and inquiries about the readings.