The template for the bill is located here.
The folder for our documents and bills is here.
Your first research paper is due at midnight on Sunday, October 21.
Please share the paper with me (giving me access to edit) to dpogreba@gmail.com. Don’t e-mail it or send it to my school address.
- In his review of Malcolm Gladwell’s work, Steven Pinker writes, “[t]he reasoning in “Outliers,” which consists of cherry-picked anecdotes, post-hoc sophistry and false dichotomies, had me gnawing on my Kindle.” Using three of the logical fallacies we studied in class, show how Gladwell relies on logical fallacies in his argument.
- In Outliers, Gladwell argues, “It is not the brightest who succeed. Nor is success simply the sum of the decisions and efforts we make on our own behalf. It is, rather, a gift. Outliers are those who have been given opportunities – and who have had the strength and presence of mind to seize them.” Defend/refute/qualify this argument.
- Michiko Kakutani writes that Gladwell’s “assessments turn individuals into pawns of their cultural heritage, just as Mr. Gladwell’s emphasis on class and accidents of historical timing plays down the role of individual grit and talent to the point where he seems to be sketching a kind of theory of social predestination, determining who gets ahead and who does not – and all based not on persuasive, broadband research, but on a flimsy selection of colorful anecdotes and stories.” Using evidence from the text and class discussion, defend, refute or qualify Kakutani’s assertion that Gladwell unfairly plays down the importance of individual grit and talent as determinants of success.
- Discuss the 10,000 hour rule and evaluate its relationship to success.
- Explain Gladwell’s theory about how culture and language affect the likelihood of plane crashes. Be specific about his claim and the evidence he uses to support it.
- Discuss Gladwell’s theory about parenting. What two styles does he believe there are? Which is more likely to lead to success? What examples does he use to prove his claim?
- Explain how the chapters about hockey players and airline pilots prove the same essential argument.
- Gladwell seems to believe that we are, at least in part, the product of our genetic and cultural heritage. Focusing on his examples of the Southern culture of honor and Chinese skill at math, explain his argument and show why/why not you believe it to be true.
- Apply the Toulmin Model to a claim from the text that I will provide you. Explain the data Gladwell uses to support his claim, the warrant that underlies it, and the effectiveness of the argument as a whole.
For each of these questions, you should be prepared to write at least 6-8 sentences using specific examples from the text. An answer receiving a score of an “A” will be well-reasoned, specific, and demonstrate mastery of the text.
- F. Scott Fitzgerald famously said that “there are no second acts in American lives.” Do the life and death of Jay Gatsby demonstrate this claim or refute it? Does the novel ultimately argue that one can never re-invent himself? Do we have the capacity to become someone entirely new if we commit to the new person or will the ghosts of the past always pull us back?
- How does the motif of accidents reflect the cynicism of the Modernist worldview?
- What is ultimately the most to blame for the tragic end of the novel: Tom’s philandering, Gatsby’s nostalgic desire for the past, Daisy’s selfishness, or Nick’s silence?
- Fitzgerald is known as the preeminent chronicler of the Jazz Age, perhaps better depicting its excesses and virtues better than anyone. How does Nick Caraway demonstrate both attraction to and repulsion from the lives of the incredibly rich inhabitants of Long Island?
- Does the novel argue that Jay Gatsby is a tragic hero responsible for his own downfall or is it a critique of a society in which romanticism is no longer allowed/permitted?
Your revisions for your welfare essay will be due in class on Thursday, October 4. Please make sure that you have highlighted/bolded all changes, included the checklist, and stapled all three parts together for class.
Some additional resources to use:
- Revision Checklist
- Topic Sentence and Thesis cheat sheet
- Naysayers
- General Persuasive Writing Handout
- The Comma
Make sure that your revisions reflect careful work that has been proofread and reviewed carefully.
We have a number of deadlines for Honors 2 to be aware of, so here they are:
- Friday, September 28: Have read the Epilogue of Outliers and be ready for the Latin Roots 1-3 test.
- Monday, October 1: Outline for Outliers Essay Due
- Tuesday, October 2: Revision of High/School Middle School Essay Due
- Wednesday, October 3: Outliers Exam
- Friday, October 5: First draft of Outliers essay Due
All of the material you’ll need for these is on the website.





