LITR 4632
Literature of the Future

Midterm Assignment

Relative weight: 30-40% of final grade

Format: In-class or email; open-book and open-notebook. Instructor keeps office hours during class period.

Date: Thursday, 20 June. Email students can email the midterm to whiteC@uhcl.edu any time after Tuesday class (18 June) up to noon Friday, 21 June. (If you need more time, email to account.)

Content: 2 essay questions

Length(s): Essay 1 probably 5-8 paragraphs; Essay 2 probably 4-7 paragraphs.

Special Requirements / Instructions:

Special Advice: Don't hurry to email exam. When finished, take a break, then edit and improve.

To enhance content, connect the course as offered to your own interests and insights.

Email your answers to instructor at whiteC@uhcl.edu.

·               most common mistake: students send to “white” rather than “whiteC

·                Attach appropriate word processing file(s) to an email for whiteC@uhcl.edu. (Microsoft Word works, Microsoft Works doesn't)

·                Copy and paste contents of your word processing file into an email message to me at whiteC@uhcl.edu

Email acknowledgement: Instructor usually acknowledges receipt of your midterm within a few hours (unless you send it in at an odd time).

Email problems? A problem or two with email is normal in a class this size. Don't panic—we'll work things out.

Spacing: No need to double-space, but OK if you do. All electronic submissions are converted to single-space for reading onscreen.  

 

Midterm Content Outline—Two (2) Question Topics > (2) Essays total

Essay 1 (1.5-2 hours): Compare, contrast, and evaluate Narratives of the Future (5-8 paragraphs?)

·                  Referring to Objective 1, describe and evaluate the three primary narratives for the future. How do they differ, and how might they combine?

·        Refer frequently to texts and objectives. Move back and forth from terms, examples, themes.

·        How can you tell one narrative of the future from another, but also how each can turn into the other? Where or how do these narratives overlap or conflict?

·        Not required to go through 3 narratives one at a time; also possible to organize through "how they turn into each other"

Additional options: (You need not cover each item individually or in order.)

·        What models of human attitudes and behavior or destiny follow from these narratives? (e.g., decline or progress?)

·        What literary and cultural attractions or appeals to these narratives? What downsides or detractions?

Essay 2 (1 hour): Isolate a personal / professional topic in our course or readings (to be extended in final exam(4-7 paragraphs?)

Connect personal and / or professional reactions to course contents, 1+ course objectives, and 2-3 texts, unifying material to focus on how this course or its materials can work for your future.

Question: What themes, ideas, aspects, or element(s) of our course intrigue you or matter most? Why? What issue(s) seem most important and worth reading and discussing? What do you learn about your interests or assumptions? How can you imagine Literature of the Future playing into your future?

Your emphasis may be literary, cultural-social-historical, or both, but use examples from texts to illustrate and develop insights, and use terms and objectives to connect to the course.

Overlap with Essay 1 is possible.

Optional prompts: What difficulties or cautions naturally attend comprehension and expression regarding the future?

What difference do such stories make? Especially considering how long we've been telling them? Do all of us manage alternative futures?

Connect examples from texts to contemporary-future scene.

Possibly connect your theme to Literature of Ideas

Don't feel pressure to conform to views of instructor. The point of the essay is to show yourself learning.

 

Evaluation standards:

As in most Literature courses, quality of reading and writing distinguishes excellent work from competent work—not just reproducing data but organizing it into a unified, compelling essay.

Introducing and developing multiple examples from texts and relating texts to each other are standards for better exams.

·        "Develop" means  extending analysis, connecting to other examples (compare / contrast), and connecting to course objectives.

Audience:

Grading standards

Instructor's response often focuses on writing and organization as tranferable skills. For content, instructor often encourages students to "use course terms and objectives more frequently and systematically." The impression you don't want to give is that "you could have written this exam without taking the course!" 

Returning your midterms

Receipt of your email midterm will be acknowledged by reply email within a few hours.

Around Sunday 23 June, check for your midterm note and grade emailed from instructor.

 

midterm preparation: how to prepare?

review notes, skim texts—recall characters, events, situations, ideas relevant to 3 future narratives

review course objectives for terms, themes, etc.

take notes from notes—jot down ideas, examples, then arrange

review previous midterm samples—won't take long to find something to work with—models help kick-start thinking

recall examples from web highlights: