IPE
201 Introduction to International Political Economy Professor Van Inwegen
Paper Advice*
1. The
introduction may be the most important part of an essay. Its purpose is to indicate what the topic of
the paper is and to excite some interest.
In short papers of the kind you are asked to write for this course, the
introduction should not be very long. Do
not include substantive material in it that belongs in the body of the
essay. Instead, use the introduction to
set up a problem you will resolve in the succeeding paragraphs. Try to capture the reader’s interest by
indicating why the topic is significant.
Starting with a relevant example is often an effective way to begin.
2. No
additional research is expected or encouraged, but do make specific references to the course readings in your
paper. Give me proof that the author
actually said the things you attribute to him/her, even when you do not
directly quote the text. However, avoid
long quotations from the relevant text; your job is to explain the argument to
me in your own words. Because we are all
working from the same texts, the following is appropriate (Balaam and Veseth 10);
referring to the IPE textbook, page 10.
Papers without references will be penalized. NOTE THAT ANY ACT OF PLAGIARISM WILL RESULT
IN A FAILING GRADE FOR THE COURSE. FOR A
DISCUSSION OF PLAGIARISM, CONSULT THE UNDERGRADUATE BULLETIN.
3. Your
conclusion should not simply restate what you argued in the body of the paper –
that is boring and repetitious. The
conclusion should be the final stage of your argument, where you answer the
question you posed in the introduction or come to some judgment about the
case.
4. PROOFREAD
AND REVISE YOUR ROUGH DRAFT!! Leave
yourself enough time to make changes.
Spelling and grammar are important, but watch especially for awkward
language. Do your sentences sound right
when read aloud? Are they wordy and
imprecise? Sloppy writing will be
penalized!
5. Accidents/Problems happen. Avoid them being significant problems by backing
up your work. Always make a copy of your
paper on disk (or e-mail it to yourself).
Allow yourself plenty of time to print out your paper.
6. Talk over
your topic with someone else in the class outside of class. After you have written a draft, have someone
else read your paper. After another
draft, read your paper aloud. Give
yourself a day (or at least the night) between revisions.
7. Excellent papers are well written, clear,
concise, and comprehensive. In other
words, they are nearly perfect in terms of both form and content.
Common Problems Affect on Grade
No introduction 1 grade
Weak or flat introduction ½ grade
Exceeds page limit ½ grade
No references 1 grade
Insufficient references ½ grade
Incomplete exposition of
material ½ grade
or more
Repetition of extraneous
material ½ grade
or more
Confusing organization ½ grade or more
Writing errors ½ grade
or more
Grammar & Style Sheet*
1. Spelling counts. You should use your computer’s spell-check program, but be aware that it cannot catch all errors. You must know when to use to/too, there/their/ and its/it’s because many computers can not tell you when each is appropriate. Simple errors like these make it appear like you did not proofread your paper.
2. People deserve a “who,” not a “that” or a “which.” For instance, “he is the one who…” not “he is the one that…”
3. In any given sentence, nouns and pronouns agree in terms of number. For instance, it is incorrect to write “The owner should be free because it is their business.” Instead one should write “The owner should be free because it is her business” or “The owners should be free because it is their business.”
4. Avoid jargon like “in today’s society.” You will never see phrases like this in newspapers or magazines. It is better to say “in contemporary society,” or simply “today.”
5. Like a room
cluttered with too much furniture, wordy sentences spoil the aesthetic effect
you want to achieve. Less is sometimes
more. Ask yourself if any words in your
sentence can be chopped out without a loss in clarity. For instance, “This type of benefit is the
one which company rules and regulations should move to foster” could be edited
down to “This is the type of benefit company rules
should foster.”
6. The most common type of error college students make is not incorrect grammar but awkward constructions that sound strange to the native speaker. For instance, “there are two basic issues why he is wrong” should be revised to read “there are two basic reasons why he is wrong.”
7. Think carefully about your punctuation. Use semi-colons (;) sparingly. Place your commas strategically; do not stick them in at random. The commas in this sentence are out of place: “While, not a liberal she does think that freedom is necessary, and valuable.” It should read: “While not a liberal, she does think that freedom is necessary and valuable.”
8. The introduction may be the most important part of an essay. Its purpose is to indicate what the topic of the paper is and to excite some interest. In short papers of the kind you are asked to write for this course, the introduction should not be very long. Do not include substantive material in it that belongs in the body of the essay. Instead, use the introduction to set up a problem you will resolve in the succeeding paragraphs. Try to capture the reader’s interest by indicating why the topic is significant. Starting with a relevant example is often an effective way to begin.
9. While it is useful to listen to your paper, avoid using an overly casual or informal style. “Can’t” and “don’t” are inappropriate for writing and should be replaced with can not and do not.
* advice & grammar tips were borrowed from Dr. Robert Mayer of the Political Science Department at Loyola University and Dr. David Balaam of the International Political Economy department at the University of Puget Sound.