Final paper
- Due Dec 13, 2024 by 11pm
- Points 0
- Submitting a file upload
- File Types pdf
Final Research Paper Guidelines
Due Dec 13 by 11:00p ET via Canvas
Each paper must be an original written piece of work that takes up a topic covered under the thematic of games & culture with an emphasis on social scientific approaches. This is your opportunity to really dig in and research a topic of your choosing related to the course. If you’d like to write on something outside of the topics we’ve covered in class, please run the idea by me first to make sure it fits. I’d encourage you to pick something you are excited and curious about, maybe even something you have some experience with.
You will either be leaning on data from prior scholarship to build out your essay or, alternatively, some original research (for example, using a case study approach where you focus on an exemplar and analyze it in depth). If you want to do any research that involves interviewing people or observation you must speak with me for approval first. Please note that given the tight timeframe doing this kind of work is probably not viable unless you have a significant amount of time to dedicate to it.
A key factor in these papers is that you demonstrate a rigorous, scholarly analysis of the subject of your essay. You cannot just be “in your own head” or making broad claims but must evidence your arguments and engage with published peer-reviewed research. The key is that you find support for your argument in scenarios, research, and cases beyond your own personal experience. This will involve consulting academic journals and books on the subject, as well as leveraging good examples to build and anchor your argument.
Specs:
- Your paper should be 3000 words (+/- 10% allowed), PDF.
- Make sure you have a focused question and thesis you provide evidence for.
- Articulate what is at stake/why it matters in the argument you are making.
- You should meaningfully engage with a minimum of 5 peer-reviewed scholarly books or articles related to your topic. This means more than simply dropping in a single “one off” quote but actually discussing/working with the argument an author is making. Meaningful engagement can be about both building on and/or challenging work. Think of it as a form of intellectual conversation. Your core five references must either be scholarly articles from journals listed at my resource page at http://tltaylor.com/teaching/research-resources-for-students/ Links to an external site. or if a book, from an academic press. References beyond these can come from other sources. I also encourage you to make use of the great reference librarians we have here at MIT if you are unsure how to go about a rigorous lit review.
- Use the Chicago Manual of Style or APA conventions for quoting and citing work (see http://cmsw.mit.edu/writing-and-communication-center/citation-formats/ for guidance) and include a complete bibliography at the end of the paper.
- You must pay attention to proofreading and attend to the technical elements of writing a paper (your name and a title included, citations, page #s when quoting, etc.).
Writing assistance
If you have any questions (including how to properly cite things) please talk to me, as well as making sure to utilize the resources at The Writing and Communication Center: http://cmsw.mit.edu/writing-and-communication-center/. They offer fantastic assistance.
Late work
Due to the Institute’s grading deadlines for courses without final exams, there is very little leeway for late work. If you have not yet used your “free” one day extension you can use it for this, but beyond that I am unlikely to be able to accommodate any extensions (unless for a religious holiday which you must notify me of by Nov 21).