Writing Essay Food Security-jwu

Writing Essay Food Security-jwu

Writing Essay Food Security-jwu

My topic is GMOs and food security in USA

1) Briefly describe how you found the source you’ve selected, including search terms you used, any help you received from librarians, friends, or peers, the databases you searched, and how you ensured this was a credible source. If your search terms changed over time, or you looked at multiple databases, please include that information. In other words, tell me the story of finding this source from start to finish.

ORDER NOW FOR COMPREHENSIVE, PLAGIARISM-FREE PAPERS

2) Start by providing the enthymeme you’re working with for your Essay 2. Be sure to double check its format and logic. Briefly explain how the source you shared will help you to persuade your reader to accept this argument. What part of the argument will it address? What types of evidence will your pull from the source to support your claims (it might be helpful to review See attached file, important) It doesn’t matter how you see this source fitting in; I’m interested in reading your thinking behind choosing this source (and it’s OK if it ends up not being in your final Essay #2. That’s normal in research!)

3) What parts of Essay 2’s argument will this source be unable to support? In other words, what are the limits of this source’s utility to your essay? Please explain your answer.

TO FULL MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS FOR THIS THREAD:

1) Your Initial Post must be a minimum of 350 words, total.

 

UNFORMATTED ATTACHMENT PREVIEW

Because Essay #1 requires you to perform a literature review on your selected food justice problem, the sources you select to summarize and synthesize in the final essay will have the strongest impact on that essay’s structure. It’s important, then, to think not just about what the sources say about your essay, but how they present their arguments, and how (eventually, in Essay #2) their content might be used in a more direct argument. The Different Types of Evidence Obviously, in terms of format, evidence will be presented to readers as either direct quotes or paraphrases (and later in the term, visual evidence – but not for this first essay cycle). However, to research and use your primary and secondary sources effectively in an essay, it’s important to think about the different purposes your evidence serves in order to decide how