Instead, your paper may explore the causes of the problem, the effects of it, contrast various solutions, argue for the best solution, etc.
Avoid topics that don't impact you directly and for which it will be difficult to incorporate personal experience and/or locate a primary source for an interview you will conduct yourself.
During and after completing the necessary textbook reading, exercises in your textbook, reviewing of course lessons and materials, and participating in collaborative learning via the Discussions board, you are to draft, revise, and ultimately submit a paper of at least 1500 words in length.
Your paper must properly integrate source material. For Research Project #2, to gain experience working with different research methods,
you must conduct your own primary research
. This research needs to take the shape of an interview. Additional supporting evidence should also still be used, and for this paper, that should come only from reliable Internet sources - webpages and websites - (as opposed to books/database articles/indexes/etc., with which we will work on a later project).
Your paper must make use of proper MLA formatting and documentation; papers submitted without accompanying Works Cited pages will automatically earn 0's. Do not use more than 5 sources altogether, and even though you are writing research papers, do not as a whole allow the research to make up more than 30% or so of your paper's content. For these papers, you are to rely mainly on your own thoughts, ideas, interpretations, etc. on your chosen topic to construct the argument, using the research to support your claims, but not to replace them.
With this final submission, remember to also submit:
Please do not submit as multiple files (paper, Works Cited, CoA, Self-Reflection, etc.). All documents should be submitted as a single documented, properly formatted according to MLA rules, as a .docx, .doc, or .rtf file only.