Assignment 2: Identifying Your Topic

Due Date: 9 pm Thursday, January 30

Choosing your topic is the earliest decision you need to make for this project. Potential topics can be drawn from course readings, news postings, outside lectures, course presentations, and other sources. Careful selection of a workable topic will help you complete this assignment efficiently and make a valuable contribution.

1. Begin with the following activities:

2. Prepare a list of two to three potential topics. For each proposed topic: (a) supply a few sentences to explain your interest and possible revisions; (b) note whether you would like to rewrite/add to an existing entry, expand an existing stub, or create an entirely new entry; and (c) list seven to ten new references to scholarly sources you would add in revising/creating the article. (You may include references to newspaper, magazine, or blog sources, but these may not count toward the required number of scholarly references. All references need to be presented in proper reference format, following the Chicago Manual of Style (link provided in Owlspace) or another approved social science format, such as APA (http://www.apastyle.org/). References not presented in an appropriate format will not be counted towards the total required.

3. Rank the topics in order from most to least desirable. One of these topics will become your final topic.

4. Please indicate if you would like to be paired with another student. If so, your rankings will be used to team you up with another student. If you know you would like to work with a particular class member, you may submit the topic proposals jointly, indicating how you would plan to split up the work. (In such cases, you must provide double the number of references.)

5. Submit your topics and username to the relevant assignment tab on OWL-Space by 9 pm Thursday, January 30. For full credit, be sure your name appears on your document and the file you submit must be labeled as follows: <LastName> WikiTopics.doc (or .docx)