The requirements for earning a "W" are more
formal than they used to
be. These new
requirements can be found at
this link: http://www.washington.edu/students/ugrad/advising/ged/gedw.html.
You must make arrangements with the ESRM100
TA's (eschelp@u.washington.edu) to complete the extra work required to
meet the W-credit criteria. We require that you ask to do this along
with your project proposal. The TA's must approve your W-credit
topic before you start writing. Unapproved topics will not be reviewed.
Choose an environmental
topic/issue that interests you, and do a literature search on
it.
This research project should involve some environmental science topic
which is important to human society.
Course Requirements for W Credit:
- Contact TA's at eschelp@u.washington.edu by the third
week of the quarter with a topic proposal for your paper.
- Students are required to submit a 10 page rough draft by the date on the syllabus. Drafts
that are less than 10 pages will not be reviewed for W credit. No
exceptions.
The paper must be double-spaced,
12 point Times New Roman font. Figures, tables, captions,
names, material within quotes, etc. are not part of the length
requirement. Anything that is not your own prose does not count. Do not
add excess spacing between paragraphs, and do use excessively short
paragraphs (most paragraphs should have at least 3 sentences in them)
to make the paper appear longer than it is. Even if the paper is 9.9
pages it is not long enough to meet requirements, so it is best to make
it substantially longer than this minimum. Submission must be by
attached MS Word file by email to eschelp@u.washington.edu.
- Rough
drafts must be complete with
an introduction, body, conclusion
and a bibliography so
that TA's can review your writing and add comments.
- Your report will be reviewed based on
content, research effort, organization and writing (including English,
grammar, spelling etc.).
- You must have a minimum of 8 sources, only
4 of which may be from websites. Make use of the library
scientific literature research databases to find the other 4+ sources.
- Remember to reference all your sources and
be careful not to plagiarize (see http://depts.washington.edu/grading/issue1/honesty.htm#plagiarism
for a description of plagiarism and how to avoid it). Directions
on how to cite your sources are given on the Project
Information page near the end, see project.html
- Taking a paper from another course and
rewriting it with an environmental science slant is encouraged so long
as we first review and comment on the paper used as the initial basis
of the compositon.
- The final
draft of the paper is due by the due date on the syllabus
for your project. This is the same day as the rest of the optional
projects.
NOTE: A W-credit paper counts as a Project Option
#1
for the class. Please turn them in seperately to ensure both are graded.
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