| | How to submit written assignments
Timeliness
- Assignments are due by the beginning of class on the
due date.
- Assignments in this class are governed by Franklin University
submission and return policy, as follows:
- Assignments must be submitted to the professor on
or before the due date indicated in the Course Schedule.
- Assignments may be accepted late but will receive
a grade penalty based on the following chart. No assignments will be
accepted once solutions have been distributed to any section of the
course.
Assignment submission date |
Maximum grade (% of total possible
points) |
On time |
100% |
Up to 1 week late |
75% |
More than 1 week late |
No credit
|
-
The professor, at
his/her sole discretion, may choose to amend this policy to extend the
submission deadline in certain cases to accommodate extenuating
circumstances.
-
Homework assignments submitted on time for grading will
typically be returned within one week of the due date
-
Projects and lab
assignments submitted on time for grading will typically be returned
within two weeks of the due date.
- No assignments will be accepted after the last class
date unless other arrangements have been made with the professor.
- A point of emphasis: if you know that some special circumstance will
prevent you from submitting your work on time, talk to the instructor in
advance to arrange a customized due date.
Keep in mind
- Include all of the required elements, no
excuses, no exceptions.
- If
you aren't sure about something, explain what you're confused about. You can
get partial credit for that. You can't get any credit for something that
isn't there.
- People have short attention spans, especially
professors (we earned the label "absent-minded").
- Be clear
- Get to the point quickly
- Leave out unimportant detail
- Eliminate repetition
- To say roughly the same thing another way: I really like clear, to-the-point writing, and I have limited
patience with confusing things.
- Do not expect that there will be a single
"right" answer to any assignment. This is graduate school, after
all.
- If you quote anything, be sure to give credit to your
sources. I prefer APA
style, but I do not require it. Any style that clearly
identifies the source of the quote is acceptable.
- After reading the description of a
assignment, if
you're confused about anything, contact
me with your questions. There's no benefit in guessing - ask.
- Each assignment will have a main turnitin assignment and revision assignment.
Turnitin insists on naming each revision assignment "Revision 1". If you submit a revision,
turnitin will not complain about matches between your revision
and your original. However, you may get lots of bogus complaints if you use
the wrong assignment names. Please be sure to check the assignment numbers
in the assignment writeup before submitting to turnitin.
- Within a few minutes after you submit an assignment
to turnitin, your originality report will be available. Check it.
Revise or add reference information if turnitin reports non-trivial matches
between your text and someone else's.
- You can submit revised versions of your work to the regular assignment,
as often as necessary, until the due date. Use the revision assignment after the due date.
- If you submit a revision, I will use it and ignore any previous version(s).
- Be sure to contact me if you do not want me to use a
revision.
- Written work by a team:
- Should show the names of all team members.
- Only one paper copy is needed, of course.
- Only one member of the team should to submit an electronic version to Turnitin.
It does not matter which team member submits your work to Turnitin, and it does not have
to be the same person for each assignment.
- However, if you submit a revision to Turnitin, be
sure that the same person who submitted the original also submits the
revision (otherwise, Turnitin will report a lot of bogus duplication)
-
Get Started with Turnitin Training
- Citation
guidelines from Landmark
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