Schedule & Format--both options are open-book and open-notebook.
Notify instructor if you will take the exam in-class; office hours Thursday Content: 2 essays of app. 2 hours each. Length: At least 6-8 paragraphs each. Best essays are usually longer than average, overflowing with relevant ideas connecting texts, objectives, discussions, presentations, your research. Essay 1: Describe and evaluate your learning experience, referring to texts, objectives, research, and midterm. Essay 2: Compose a dialogue between four texts since the midterm (Objectives 1, 2, 3 & possibly others) Requirements:
Two helpful hints:
Essay 1: Referring to the following sources, describe and evaluate your learning experience in our seminar:
Integrate these and other dimensions of our reading, research, and discussions into a central comprehensive thesis concerning a "learning outcome" or estimate of progress in your career. Following are prompts or cues—not a checklist:
Essay 2: Referring to Objectives 1 & 2, compose a thematic dialogue between four texts since the midterm.
Major texts or sources: (At least two should be from the five fictions immediately below) The Man Who Would be King, Train to Pakistan, Jasmine, Things Fall Apart, Heart of Darkness. Other possible texts or sources: other films or websites reviewed in seminar (The following list may be revised) Derek Walcott, “A Far Cry from Africa” Walcott, "The Season of Phantasmal Peace" Achebe, "An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness" W. B. Yeats, “The Second Coming” Leopold Sedar Senghor, from A Prayer for Peace Chinua Achebe, "Named for Victoria, Queen of England" (handout) article on wife-beating in Africa; Talking their Way out of a Population Crisis; Web/Film Review: AlJazeera English video: Africa: States of Independence—Scramble for Africa Welcome to refer to any text(s) before midterm, but keep refocusing on texts since midterm.
Instructor's Reaction & continuing dialogue: About a week after submission, you'll receive an email from the instructor including your grade report with your research grade, your final exam grade, and notes. Consider replying to instructor. Graduate students work with faculty somewhere between master-apprentice and colleagues. Discussing written work can be a starting point for learning to interact with faculty. If you don't communicate in this way, look for other opportunities. Professors can be intimidating and unhip, but they're used to cooperating if you cultivate chances. We're just older versions of yourselves!
The final exam is designed to give the student considerable choice in emphasis and outcomes while requiring coverage and competence in common course materials. In the most successful submissions for these and similar exercises, students use their own voices and references to express and advance ideas or themes developed by the seminar's texts, objectives, lectures, presentations, and discussions. A dependable principle for such preparations is to start as early as possible so that your conscious and unconscious mind have time to work through the mental operations implicit in your interests and the subject matter. One hour a week ahead is worth two hours the night before. 1. Start notes for the final. Write down any impulse toward the subject matter, no matter how obvious or blunt. When you return to your notes, review them--extend some, cut some, put different notes together. 2. Review assignment, model assignments, evaluation standards. 3. Review & reread parts of texts that either worked for you or remained puzzling. 4. Start drafting. Professors or professional readers can usually detect the difference between raw, unedited prose that was recently composed and never reviewed, and prose that has been reviewed, refined, and extended. 5. Have a trusted reader read what you've written. Ask them to indicate what worked and what didn't. Many readers won't tell you what didn't work because they'll just glide or bump through it, but you can infer by process of elimination. 6. Welcome to email or phone instructor any time before or during submission-window. Always better to solve problems beforehand, plus I like seeing you working on problems. I check emails more often than phone messages. 7. When you think you've finished, put the exam aside for at least an hour, then give it a final read-through: proofread, edit, correct, improve. At the graduate level, "better" is more important than "late." But if more than a little late, communicate with professor before he communicates with you.
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