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Date clarification:

STP 1: 1/14 and 1/21

STP 2: 1/28 and 2/4

STP 3: 2/11, 18, and 25

NOTE: If you have grouped them differently for your papers, email me to tell me which dates you are using for which papers.

Directions and Scoring Criteria for Short Thematic Papers

Think about STPs as conversations with me about the readings. It's ok to ask questions, to wonder, to critique, to try out new ideas. To write one, you will need to think deeply about some aspects of the readings.  Often the part that takes the longest is coming up with a theme and figuring out what you want to say about it.  But doing this thinking and processing will make the information "stick" in ways that will help you recall it and, more importantly, use it in your own work. It doesn't matter if I agree with your position, as long as you support it, but I will "talk back" in my comments.

After reading, talking, and thinking about the readings in a set (see below), jot down some of the ideas you think are most important.  Select one on which you want to take a position, and that can be used to relate several readings with your own experiences as a researcher and/or practitioner. For example, you might choose the theme "school-family interactions are an important context for socialization" based on the readings and your emerging theories of socialization. As you write, develop your theme while using

When you finish, give your paper a title that reflects your theme.

I will use these papers to assess your understanding of the readings and ideas and your ability to use them as you think about research and practice.  However, STPs are not the traditional "summarize what I read" paper you may be used to.  Instead of summarizing, you will take a position on the theme or big idea and compare it to the positions of the authors you read, as you interpret them.  Some authors may support this idea or have theories that are consistent with your view while others challenge it – challenge them back!  Using the readings critically means that you don't automatically accept the author's position, but instead examine the evidence presented and the assumptions made about families, peers, teachers, schools, and developing children.

Checklist for Short Thematic Paper #1 (3-4 pages double-spaced, 1" margins, 12pt)

____    Theme clearly identified, title reflects theme

____    Readings are used critically to support or challenge the position taken (no summaries)

____    No major misunderstandings of readings

____    At least one reading from each day, multiple readings from at least one day.

Checklist for Short Thematic Paper #2 & #3  (3-4 pages double-spaced)

____    Theme clearly identified, title reflects theme

____    Readings are used critically to support or challenge the position taken (no summaries)

____    No major misunderstandings of readings

____    At least one reading from each day, multiple readings from at least one day.

____    Makes a connection to at least one reading from an earlier group of readings.