Essay 4: Speculating about Causes

Essay 4: Speculating about Causes

We recently viewed some Ted Talks on “True crime” and read and viewed some other sources on crime and public safety. Why something occurs, gets worse, or gets better, is often complex. In addition, some people speculate about why something occurs, gets worse, or gets better, and they are proven wrong—or at least argued with by others about their theories on something.
I’d like to hear about a crime topic that is of interest to you and read about why it happens or what causes it. It could be about a very large crime problem, involving terrorism, drug trafficking, animal trafficking, or other large issues. It could also be about a specific crime you are interested in: what motivated Jack the Ripper? Why did Rolling Stone rush to publish what turned out to be an inaccurate article on rape at the University of Virginia? Why doesn’t Twitter just shut down ISIS accounts? Why do some Americans think (undocumented) immigrants are more likely to commit crimes than native born Americans?
In your introduction, present a well-defined phenomenon followed by a thesis that follows an appropriate thesis template. Your introduction should convince readers of the significance of the phenomenon. In the middle paragraphs, present realistic and innovative causes for the phenomenon. For each cause, refute, accommodate, or acknowledge possible objections and weaknesses. Not all causes are equal, so you may also argue that one cause is more important than the others. You can even write about causes that are wrong or most likely wrong.
Criteria you’ll be graded on
• A focused, well-defined phenomenon and thesis
o Use an example, anecdote, statistic, or interesting quote to get started.
o A paragraph or so laying out the phenomenon your paper will speculate about causes for
o Interest readers in your phenomenon.
o Present an arguable thesis with your reasons and counterargument previewed in it.
• A well-argued position
o Use a variety of strategies to explain your causes.
o Present numerous reasons (logical, moral/ethical, emotional, etc.) as to why you think your causes explain the phenomenon.
• An effective response to objections
o Address either a counterargument (the other side to the story) and/or address weaknesses in your causes.
• A clear, logical organization
o Use transition words like however and next.
o Use transition sentences at the beginning or the ending of paragraphs.
o Uses a signal phrase to introduce sources.
o Refer back to earlier examples, often bringing your paper or paragraph full circle by referring to an example at the beginning of the paper or paragraph.
• Use of sources/APA format and English grammar and vocabulary

Sources: 2
Images: if applicable, but not necessary
Due Dates: Rough draft due Wednesday, October 28, at 11:55 p.m. Final draft due Wednesday, November 11, at 11:55 p.m.
Format: APA
Page Length: 4-5

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