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![]() | Patrice Koehl |
Introduction to Computers: Fall 2013Term paper: Progress reportYou have turned in your prospectus: this means that you have decided on a subject for your term paper, have defined a few questions that will be discussed in the paper, and have done some research on where to find information so that you can document your paper. This progress report is the second stage that tracks your progress towards finalizing your paper. At this stage, we still do not expect a full "perfect draft": rather, we expect that you have made progress and refined the outline of your paper, as well as further your research on documents/books/web pages that will prove useful for writing your essay. Ultimately, your essay will have the following format:
The progress report should contain two parts: a "research progress" that describes what you have found so far in your research, and an "advanced outline" showing that the outline of your paper is shaping up and that you are getting ready to generate the first rough draft of your paper. Research progressIn this part, you should list the elements that you will need for your paper. In particular, we would like to see:
Note that this is still work-in-progress: it is perfectly OK if you add more references later on or if you do not use some of the references that you included in your progress report. An advanced outlineIn this part, you will describe the current state of your term paper. Most of it can still be in the form of bullet points, but the outline should have shaped up to match the final format of the paper. This outline should include:
Turning in your reportYour progress report should not be longer than 3 pages. 2 pages is perfectly OK! Turn in your document on Smartsite. GradingThe progress report is graded over 20 points, i.e. 10% of your grade for the term paper. The two parts (research progress and advanced outline) have equal weight. We do not judge the content: rather, we want to make sure that you have done your research correctly and that you have progressed in defining an outline for your paper. |
Page last modified 17 December 2015 | http://www.cs.ucdavis.edu/~koehl/ |