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 All assignments must be completed and submitted at the beginning of the 
        class period on the due date assigned and in the assigned format. You 
        will turn in BOTH a hard copy and an electronic copy. The hard copy 
        will be taken up at the beginning of class and the electronic copy should 
        be emailed to me (cmartin@english.ufl.edu) before the class period the 
        assignment is due. These assignments are due in class at the beginning of class on the dates 
        indicated. Your assignment grade will be dropped by one full letter grade 
        for every day it is late. Some assignments are individual, while others 
        are group based. If the group assignment is late, everyone in the group 
        is penalized. However, it is not an absolute that everyone in the group 
        receives the same grade. I will conduct both self and group peer evaluations 
        as a means of monitoring the work load balance within the groups. If you are going to be absent on the day that an assignment is due, email 
        the assignment to me BEFORE our class period and it will not be considered 
        late if you have emailed before class and bring a hardcopy to me on the 
        next class period that you are in attendance. Remember, my office hours are Tuesdays 11-3 in the Image Lab on the 4th 
        floor or Rolfs Hall. I will be happy to sit down with you and look over 
        the assignment with you and answer any questions that you may have.  
 ASSIGNMENT 1 – Resume, cover letter (50 points each for 
        a total of 100 points) For this assignment, you will need to locate a job opening in your field 
        and compose a resume and cover letter tailored for the job you select. 
        Both the resume and cover letter should conform to format, design, and 
        standards discussed in lectures, class discussions, and textbook/handouts. 
        You will need to turn in the job opening description (the ad) along with 
        your cover letter.  Job openingFind job openings in newspaper classified sections, trade/business journals, 
        or at the Career Resource Center. You may also search for openings online 
        at http://www.quintcareers.com/career_centers/ 
        or at http://www.monster.com
 The job you select must be appropriate for your major/major field and 
        should be both professional and degree-appropriate or an internship that 
        you are actually thinking about applying for. You should avoid applying 
        for job that only require a high school diploma or job openings for wait 
        staff, golf caddy, or summer camp counselor. You should also avoid applying 
        for a job that you are not qualified for. Select the job classified carefully 
        because you will be targeting your resume to this particular job. ResumeThe resume must be tailored for the job you’re applying for. Additionally, 
        it should be a resume you would send out when applying for a job. As a 
        result, you should ensure that the paper and print quality of your final 
        submission should be the highest possible. Be sure to follow both lecture 
        and Locker Chapter 17 guidelines for creating and formatting your resume.
 
 Resume Peer Review Questions
 
 Cover letterThe cover letter must match the job opening and should be a letter tailored 
        to the job and the company—not a form letter. You should also conduct 
        research into the company or business to which you’re applying. 
        Be sure to follow both lecture and Locker Chapter 18 guidelines for creating 
        and completing your cover letter.
 
 Cover Letter Peer Review Questions
 
 Resume Rubric-A resume/cover letter will be dropped one letter grade for one typo or 
        spelling error. After three typos or spelling errors the resume/cover 
        letter will receive a failing grade.
 -A resume will be dropped half a letter grade for every consistency mistake.
 
 Cover Letter and Resume 
        Review
 
 Learning Objectives:By the completion of this assignment, you should master how to
 • use standard resume and cover letter formatting;
 • integrate work, volunteer experience, and extracurricular activities 
        into a coherent framework;
 • tailor specific details of experience to a particular job description;
 • convey efficiently and clearly achievements on the job and potential 
        benefits your experience can offer a prospective employer;
 • formulate a cover letter that makes a persuasive argument for 
        the relevance of particular elements of your experience to a specific 
        job;
 • compose a cover letter that clearly addresses the concerns, expectations, 
        background of a specific audience;
 • use “you” attitude to address what benefits you offer 
        the company;
 • write a clear, effective cover letter that uses your resume as 
        a jumping-off point for a convincing argument about your qualifications 
        for a specific job.
 Grading Criteria:This assignment should
 • use standard business format for both resume and cover letter;
 • use action-oriented verbs that describe actions, not responsibilities;
 • adequately convey the scope of the writer’s experience as 
        relevant to the job;
 • differentiate cover letter from resume;
 • represent a strong fit for the job description;
 • demonstrate careful revision, editing, and proofreading.
 
 ASSIGNMENT 2 – Informative/Positive news memo: Choice of 
        7.15 or 7.17 at the end of Chapter 7) (100)
 Rubric: Check list on page 168.
 Positive Memo Revew Learning Objectives:By the completion of this assignment, you should master how to
 • employ standard business memo format and protocols;
 • use “you” orientation that foregrounds user benefits;
 • write clear, jargon-free sentences that display action and avoid 
        excessive wordiness;
 • use the optimal structure for conveying information or good news;
 • recognize the differences between active and passive construction 
        and use passive construction only rarely;
 • choose the appropriate nouns and verbs, as well as sentence structure, 
        to make your writing clear.
 Grading Criteria:This assignment should
 • foreground and summarize information most relevant to readers;
 • follow Locker’s structure for presenting informational and 
        positive messages;
 • display a forthright “you” attitude in addressing 
        audience interests;
 • avoid entirely or only rarely use passive construction;
 • rely on action-orientated verbs and concrete nouns for clearly 
        written sentences;
 • use standard business memo format;
 • show evidence of close revision, editing, and proofreading.
 
 ASSIGNMENT 3 – Improving a financial aid form in teams (p. 
      146-7) (50)
 
 Analyze the form. Among other design questions, consider the following:
 -Think about where/how the people completing the form are supposed to send 
      it.
 -Are the lines large enough to write in?
 -What headings or subdivisions in the form would remind people to list all 
      family members they intend to support?
 -How can you encourage people to return the form promptly?
 -Should you use capital or lower-case letters?
 -Does the definition of half-time apply to all students or just those 
      taking courses beyond high school?
 
 Financial Aid Review
 
 Learning Objectives:By the completion of this assignment, you should master
 • the elements of good document design, including the placement 
        of important elements and uses of font, color, and other design elements;
 • how to convey data and relationships by appropriately using the 
        correct visual elements (maps, bar charts, pie charts, graphs, and tables);
 • how to design a clear, effective, and user-friendly form that 
        elicits correct and useful information from its audience.
 Grading Criteria:This assignment should
 • use well-chosen design elements to elicit correct information 
        from its audience;
 • be clear, efficient, and easy to use;
 • provide adequate space for all audience feedback;
 • provide clear and appropriate instructions to audience.
 
  ASSIGNMENT 4 – Negative message. Choice A: 8.7 on page 
        206 where you can choose from A,B,C, or make your own company situation 
        like some of you did in the positive memo [note: 8.7 should be in memo 
        format not email format]; Choice B: 8.19 on page 211 [note: 8.19 can be 
        in any format]. (100)Rubric: Check list on page 202.
 Negative Message Review Learning Objectives:By the completion of this assignment, you should master
 • how to present negative information in a way that minimizes resistance;
 • how to use a buffer, rationale, alternatives, and the correct 
        tone for negative messages;
 • how to make your sentences hang together by using sequencing, 
        transitions, and common subjects;
 Grading Criteria:This assignment should, in addition to the criteria for the preceding 
        assignments, also include
 • appropriate use of subject lines for negative news memos;
 • correct use of a buffer;
 • optimal placement of negative news;
 • provision of both a rationale and alternatives or choices open 
        to readers;
 • appropriate “you” attitude;
 • appropriate tone and awareness of audience
 • writing that adheres to principles for both clarity and continuity;
 • correct usage, grammar, and punctuation;
 • close proofreading and editing.
 
  ASSIGNMENT 5 – Persuasive message (100) 
 Choose from one of the two assignments listed below and compose a 1-2 
        pp. persuasive letter or memo, relying on the persuasive techniques discussed 
        in the Locker text, in lecture, and in your discussion sections. Make 
        sure you also observe all of the 4Cs in your writing.  Option 1As program chair of the National Association of Retail Merchandisers, 
        you must find a speaker for your annual meeting in April. In Inc. 
        magazine you saw an impressive article about JAmy Owens, president 
        of the Retail Group, Inc., a Seattle-based strategic retail consulting 
        firm. Owens has become the guru of retail makeovers with a client list 
        of over 400 companies. She believes that the retail economy will increasingly 
        be driven by experience as opposed to transactions. Retail has to 
        feel relevant, or its dead, she says.
 Owens is very much in demand. She has been credited with helping many 
        well-known brands regain lost luster, including McDonalds, Blockbuster 
        Video, Sears, and Starbucks. When Nike lost the devotion of Generation 
        Y, it commissioned her to figure out how to win them back.
 Your Task: Write a 1-2 page persuasive letter inviting JAmy Owens, president, 
        Retail Group, Inc., 240 Pacific Avenue, Seattle, WA 98303. You know that 
        she generally earns $5,000 a time for industry presentations, but your 
        budget allows only $3,000. You hope, however, that shell be receptive 
        because you expect about 1,500 of the top retailers to attend the April 
        6 conference.
 Option 2As sales manager for a large irrigation parts manufacturer, you are concerned 
        about the use of profanity by your sales associates. Some defend profanity, 
        claiming it helps them fit in. For example, your female sales reps. claim 
        it helps relax listeners, drive home a point, and makes them one 
        of the boys. Youve done some research, however, and learned 
        that courts have ruled that profanity can constitute sexual harassmentwhether 
        in person or in print. In addition to causing legal problems, profanity 
        on the job projects a negative image of the individual and the company.
 Your Task:Use the Web and the librarys online resources to locate articles 
        related to the use of profanity and strategies employed by organizations 
        for dealing with it. One good resource is www.cusscontrol.com. 
        Prepare a 1-2 pp. persuasive memo to your sales staff encouraging them 
        to curb their use of profanity.
   Kimberly 
        Holker, a member of my fall 2005 GEB3213 class, won the 2006 ABC case 
        (see links below). You can read her persuasive 
        memo and persuasive 
        memo strategy as a model. Christopher Laden, another UF student, won 
        3rd place. You can read his persuasive 
        memo and persuasive 
        memo strategy as a model.http://www.businesscommunication.org/awards/student/2006_student_case.html
 http://www.businesscommunication.org/awards/student/2006_student_award.html
 Persuasive Message Review
 Rubric:
 * Exhibit a clear understanding of the audience, use an appropriate tone 
        and style, establish the desired relationship, and motivate the desired 
        outcome.
 * Accomplish the purpose of the message by stating a clear position and 
        supporting that position with logical points/sub-points, insightful reasoning 
        and/or persuasive examples.
 * Be well organized and easy to follow, include appropriate headings/bullets/lists, 
        and use smooth transitions.
 * Demonstrate superior mastery of vocabulary and superior facility with 
        conventions of standard written English (grammar, usage, and mechanics) 
        and use generally accepted U.S. business writing practices
 * Use an appropriate format and document design.
 
 Learning Objectives:By the completion of this assignment, you should master
 • the various structures for presenting information (comparison/contrast, 
        pro/con, problem-solving, etc.);
 • the distinction between causation and correlation in analyzing 
        information;
 • how to craft logical arguments;
 • how to link claims to evidence;
 • the appropriate patterns and uses for persuasive messages (direct-request, 
        problem-solving);
 • the use of directed-subject lines in memos making a request;
 • how to create persuasive memos suitable for a specific audience 
        and purpose;
 • how to organize memos and paragraphs using coherence principles.
 Grading Criteria:This assignment should, in addition to the general criteria for the preceding 
        assignments (standard business formatting, correct spelling, punctuation, 
        and grammar, evidence of proofreading and editing), also include
 • an appropriate, efficient subject line
 • appropriate direct-request or problem-solving framework for persuasive 
        message;
 • “you” attitude that addresses readers’ interests 
        and concerns;
 • logical argument, based on claims and evidence;
 • relevant information and evidence adequate to support claims;
 • appropriate tone;
 • correct use of clarity, continuity, coherence, and concision principles;
 • appropriate tone for audience and subject matter
 • a persuasive argument that overcomes any reservations or objections 
        readers might initially entertain.
 
 
 Preludes to Assignment 6:Gantt chart – 25 points;
 Progress report – 25 points
 
 Learning Objectives and basis for grading criteria:
 • the purpose, form, and content of a Gantt chart;
 • creation of clear-cut assignments for team members and completion 
        dates;
 • creating progress reports that emphasis the value to the client 
        of what’s already been accomplished, rather than the actual effort 
        involved.
 
  ASSIGNMENT 6 – Team report: see team 
        project handout and business report 
        handout (200 total points; team proposal = 50 points and the final 
        team report =150 point)Additional websites for business recommendation reports:
 http://www.gel.ulaval.ca/~poussart/gel64324/McMurrey/texte/feas.htm
 http://webtrain.austin.cc.tx.us/~technical1/reports2.html
 http://emedia.leeward.hawaii.edu/hurley/eng209w/booklet/pages/unit3/recrpt.pdf
 Sample recommendation reports:
 http://www.dot.state.tx.us/mis/aus-sat/asrstudy.htm
 http://academic.evergreen.edu/n/nadkarnn/walkway/feas.html
 http://www.cityofknoxville.org/development/report_sknox.pdf
 http://www.sec.gov/news/studies/pensionexamstudy.pdf
 http://osddp.org/files/issues/project_3_final.htm
 Learning Objectives:By the completion of this assignment, you should master
 • how to work effectively in groups, including using active listening, 
        brainstorming, planning, and collaboration;
 • how to write a clear proposal that argues for the need for the 
        study, its objectives, methods, and anticipated outcomes.
 • how to create surveys and questionnaires and how to administer 
        them to yield effective and reliable results;
 • how to organize a long business report, using persuasive argument, 
        visuals, and data;
 • use of headings and subheadings to guide readers;
 • how to present arguments that clearly reflect or anticipate audience 
        concerns, interests, objections, and reservations to a proposal;
 • how to write a clear, efficient, and effective executive summary;
 • how to research, incorporate, and document relevant information 
        in reports.
 Grading Criteria:This assignment should, in addition to the general criteria for the preceding 
        assignments (standard business formatting, correct spelling, punctuation, 
        and grammar, evidence of proofreading and editing), also include
 • standard contents for long reports: cover, table of contents, 
        executive summary, introduction, body, conclusion, recommendations, references, 
        appendices);
 • effective use of logic, persuasion, claims, and evidence;
 • effective use of all 4C’s;
 • clear, effective headings and subheadings;
 • visuals and references to clarify and document sources;
 • correct use of formatting for report, summary, headings, and references;
 • comprehensive coverage of all aspects of report relevant to its 
        audience.
 
  ASSIGNMENT 7 – Team oral presentation (100)Rubric in PDF
 Learning Objectives:By the completion of this assignment, you should master
 • adapting messages to specific audiences;
 • dividing responsibility for delivery among team members;
 • anticipating, answering, and overcoming audience objections;
 • using PowerPoint or other visuals to enhance or clarify points;
 • answering audience questions;
 • appropriate use of eye contact and physical gestures;
 • proper vocal pitch and tone;
 • self-assured, clear presentation of a complex topic to a particular 
        audience.
 
 Grading Criteria:
 This assignment should include
 • balanced division of portions of report among team members;
 • adequate handling of audience questions;
 • PowerPoint or other visuals to clearly convey main points;
 • an assured delivery that includes variable vocal pitch, gestures, 
        eye contact, and appropriate vocal tone;
 • use of language, evidence, and visuals appropriate to audience.
 
 QUIZZES – (100) (midterm and final each worth 50 points)
 In-class Writing and Participation – (100)
 TOTAL POINTS - 1000   GRADING SCALE 
         
          | PERCENT | POINTS | GRADE |   
          | 90-100 | 900-1000 | A |   
          | 87-89 | 987-989 | B+ |   
          | 80-86 | 880-886 | B |   
          | 77-79 | 770-779 | C+ |   
          | 70-76 | 700-776 | C |   
          | 67-69 | 670-669 | D+ |   
          | 60-66 | 600-660 | D |   
          | Below 60% | Below 600 | E |  |