Helping to Create a Coherent Essay Structure

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Presentation transcript:

Helping to Create a Coherent Essay Structure Themes and Directives Title Screen Click to advance or the Presentation will auto-advance after 5 seconds. Helping to Create a Coherent Essay Structure

Themes and Directives Helping to Create a Coherent Essay Structure “Outline and Access Interactionist Explanations of Crime and Deviance” Make a Plan… Intro Screen A practice essay question appears automatically. Picture segments appear on-screen by mouse-clicking and introduce the various aspects of the Presentation: Make a Plan by identifying Key Themes in the question and answer the question by applying PEEL to each Theme. If you want to use a different question just edit the text accordingly. If you do this, however, you will either need to edit the Theme and Worked Example screens (if you want to walk your students through an example Theme paragraph) or end the Presentation before reaching those screens. To end the Presentation you can always click the ShortCutstv logo at the top-right of the screen. Identify Key Themes Apply PEEL Helping to Create a Coherent Essay Structure

Theme 1 Theme 2 Theme 3 Conclusion Introduction Point Explain Evaluate Link Link Evaluate Explain Point Theme 2 Link Evaluate Explain Point Link Evaluate Explain Point Theme 3 Link Evaluate Explain Point Theme Screen This screen introduces the principle of Themes as an organisational tool and the PEEL paragraph points that can be associated with each Theme. The screen is blank except for an Introduction box – if you want your students to start their essay with an Introductory paragraph you can briefly explain its purpose and function. If you don’t simply ignore this box… Click anywhere on the screen to reveal the Themes. Click to reveal each of the PEEL points in turn for Theme 1. Once all PEEL points are revealed a further click reveals further possible PEEL points for the remaining Themes. If you want to end the presentation at this point, click the ShortCutstv logo or the Conclusion button. If you want to develop the idea of Themes further, click Theme 1. Link Evaluate Explain Point Link Evaluate Explain Point Conclusion

Theme 1 Theme 2 Theme 3 Conclusion Introduction Point Explain Evaluate Link Link Evaluate Explain Point Theme 2 Link Evaluate Explain Point Link Evaluate Explain Point Theme 3 Link Evaluate Explain Point Theme Screen This screen introduces the principle of Themes as an organisational tool and the PEEL paragraph points that can be associated with each Theme. The screen is blank except for an Introduction box – if you want your students to start their essay with an Introductory paragraph you can briefly explain its purpose and function. If you don’t simply ignore this box… Click anywhere on the screen to reveal the Themes. Click to reveal each of the PEEL points in turn for Theme 1. Once all PEEL points are revealed a further click reveals further possible PEEL points for the remaining Themes. If you want to end the presentation at this point, click the ShortCutstv logo or the Conclusion button. If you want to develop the idea of Themes further, click Theme 1. Link Evaluate Explain Point Link Evaluate Explain Point Conclusion

Social Construction Point Explain Evaluate Link Theme and Paragraph Start by stating the point you’re going to discuss. In this case the paragraph focuses on the idea of crime and deviance as social constructions. Explain Continue by explaining why this point is important and use sociological examples to support and illustrate your argument. Evaluate Critically assess (make criticisms, draw conclusions, etc.) what you’ve explained. Use examples, where necessary, to support the evaluation. Link Link this paragraph to the next. For example, note that if crime is socially constructed, power is an important variable to discuss. Theme and PEEL screen Click each of the PEEL points to reveal how each is used to build a paragraph, focused on the Theme to cover a range of Assessment Objectives. The information on this screen gives a general indication of what kinds of things to cover under each PEEL heading. If you want to illustrate this further click “Social Construction”. If you want to end the Presentation here, click the ShortCutstv logo Theme and Paragraph

“Outline and Access Interactionist Explanations of Crime and Deviance” Theme 1: Social Construction Point Evaluate One of the key ideas of interactionist explanations of crime (the violation of a legal norm) and deviance (norm violation) is that both are socially constructed. This is a crucial observation because it changes how we need to think about crime and deviance. We can’t, for example, explain crime in terms of the qualities or characteristics of criminals because the same act – such as theft or some minor act of deviance – may be interpreted differently in different societies or at different times. So if deviance is not, as Becker argues “a quality of what someone does” interactionists say we must explain it in terms of how people react to what someone does. Although not essential, including this simple observation shows you know the difference between crime and deviance. It may also get you marks for knowledge. Explain This means that deviance is a relative concept, one that differs from society to society (in America it’s legal to drink alcohol in a bar if you are over 21; in Saudi Arabia this is a crime) and in the same society at different times (homosexuality, for example, was illegal in England until 1967). In other words, as Becker argues, if “Deviance is in the eye of the beholder” it follows that deviance cannot simply be explained in terms of what someone does. Although evaluation is often seen as involving criticism, it doesn’t have to be. The ability to draw logical conclusions, for example, is an important form of evaluation you shouldn’t overlook. Worked Paragraph Screen This screen gives students an idea of how PEEL can be used in relation to a specific question to build a paragraph that covers all the Assessment Objectives. Clicking each PEEL button reveals the example “essay text”. The final text box (“Link”) would, in the context of this essay, move the student on to the next Theme (“Power”) and set of related PEEL paragraphs (but that’s not included in this Presentation because by this stage your students should be getting the picture…). Clicking the blue hyperlinks within each piece of text reveals some further information about the highlighted link. Click the information box to hide it again. Click the ShortCutstv logo to end the Presentation. Use sociological research to lend weight and authority to your argument. Link To develop this idea further, we need to look at how interactionists understand and apply the concept of power.

Social Construction Labelling Conclusion Introduction Point Explain Evaluate Link Point Explain Evaluate Link Point Explain Evaluate Link Labelling Link Evaluate Explain Point Power Screen This final screen displays the complete list of possible themes. Click the ShortCutstv logo or Conclusion button to end the Presentation. Link Evaluate Explain Point Link Evaluate Explain Point Conclusion

ShortCutstv Themes and Directives www.shortcutstv.com © 2018 End Screen Click the shortcutstv.com hyperlink to go to our web site. Click the ShortCutstv logo to go to our Blog for more Sociology resources. Click anywhere to end the Presentation. The Presentation will auto-end after 25 seconds.