OCEAN ACIDIFICATION PROJECT

  • INTRODUCTION. Describe the issue.  Include 3 properly formatted references. 
  • METHODS. A summary of our experimental methods used in this project.
  • RESULTS – What results did we obtain?  A graph, table or figure showing the most important result must be included for this section.
  • CONCLUSION Reflect on the what you have learned about ocean acidification, discuss what a feasible solution may be, and how  the  solution  addresses  “Life  Principles”

GRADING: The essay will be graded on clarity, accuracy, precision, relevance, depth, breadth, and logic, as well as completion of all the components.  

  1. CLARITY: Could you elaboratefurther on that point? Could you express that point in another way? Could you give me an illustration? Could you give me an example? Clarity is the gateway standard. If a statement is unclear, we cannot determine whether it is accurate or relevant. In fact, we cannot tell anything about it because we don’t yet know what it is saying. For example, the question, “What can be done about the education system in America?” is unclear. In order to address the question adequately, we would need to have a clearer understanding of what the person asking the question is considering the “problem” to be. A clearer question might be “What can educators do to ensure that students learn the skills and abilities which help them function successfully on the job and in their daily decision-making?”
  2. ACCURACY: Is that really true? How could we checkthat? How could we verifyif that is true? A statement can be clear but not accurate, as in “Most dogs are over 300 pounds in weight.”
  3. PRECISION: Could you give more details? Could you be more specific? Could you be more exact. A statement can be both clear and accurate, but not precise, as in “Jack is overweight.” (We don’t know how overweight Jack is, one pound or 500 pounds.) 
  4. RELEVANCE: How is that connectedto the question? How does that bear onthe issue? A statement can be clear, accurate, and precise, but not relevant to the question at issue. For example, students often think that the amount of effort they put into a course should be used in raising their grade in a course. Often, however, the “effort” does not measure the quality of student learning, and when this is so, effort is irrelevant to their appropriate grade.
  5. DEPTH: How does your answer address the complexitiesin the question? How are you taking into account the problems in the question? Is that dealing with the most significant factors? A statement can be clear, accurate, precise, and relevant, but superficial (that is, lack depth). For example, the statement “Just say No” which is often used to discourage children and teens for using drugs, is clear, accurate, precise, and relevant. Nevertheless, it lacks depth because it treats an extremely complex issue, the pervasive problem of drug use among young people, superficially. It fails to deal with the complexitiesof the issue.
  6. BREADTH: Do we need to consider another point of view? Is there another way to look at this question? What would this look like from a conservative standpoint? What would this look like from the point of view of…? A line of reasoning may be clear accurate, precise, relevant, and deep, but lack breadth (as in an argument from either the conservative or liberal standpoint which gets deeply into an issue, but only recognizes the insights of one side of the question.)
  7. LOGIC: Does this really make sense? Does that followfrom what you said? How does that follow? But before you implied this and now you are saying that; how can both be true? When we think, we bring a variety of thoughts together into some order. When the combination of thoughts are mutually supporting and make sense in combination, the thinking is “logical.” When the combination is not mutually supporting, is contradictory in some sense, or does not “make sense,” the combination is not logical.
 
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