I left the topic, necessary tips, and work sites for you. Regarding the work sit

WRITE MY ESSAY

I left the topic, necessary tips, and work sites for you. Regarding the work sit

I left the topic, necessary tips, and work sites for you. Regarding the work sites, I must say that I copied all the items for you because you do not have access to them.
Read the first draft assignment carefully! Read and re-read the assignment for the entire paper: This Module refers to the FIRST DRAFT. The final draft is more developed — READ.
Writing is a process.
Writing is rewriting.
With those ideas in mind, you will upload the FIRST DRAFT of the Informative Essay by the end of the week. We have chosen topics. We have worked on a thesis (narrowing your subject to something you can handle well in 1,200 words). It is now time to WRITE the paper. I will give you points for uploading and following directions. I am not your editor, so do not expect notes and corrections on the first draft. Get help on grammar and citing from a tutor!
Your sources are one eBook from the school databases and one website. (For the final draft next week, not using an eBook found through the school library databases will mean the paper gets a ZERO.) You don’t understand how to find eBooks? Talk to the tutors. Talk to the Librarians. Come to our Zoom meeting. (I do not teach through email.)
A first draft has a beginning, a middle, and an end. It is around 1,200 words, not including the Works Cited page. (Next week you should rewrite and make it better.)
For the first draft, you will do the following:
1 You will quote or paraphrase from your sources, but for this assignment, you are allowed to use a “signal phrase” to introduce a quote. Remember, paraphrases are YOUR words, but they get cited just like a quote.
2 At the end of the first draft, you will have a Work(s) Cited page to correspond to any in-text citation(s) in the paper (Points off for not doing so.)
You have to be proactive and responsible for learning, understanding, and following the rules of MLA. We have looked at Owl Purdue in class many times. It is now time to show that you can follow directions. Probably, it is a good idea to come to the Zoom meeting even though it is not mandatory.
Points off for being late. There is a shut down da
Once you hand in a first draft, you will have a week to re-write to improve the work and perfect the MLA. I am not your editor. You need to find help, if you need it. The library has websites on MLA. I have Modules on MLA. The library has tutors for checking essays. NetTutor Online is free and can help. Find help. Proofread. Perfect the MLA.
From grading the last paper, it is evident that many of you need help. I recommend getting help in our Zoom meeting. I expect college-level work. And you should expect that from yourself. Many students showed that they don’t know how to use the databases, and they don’t know how to cite. That will lead to failure in this class. I suggest getting help.
Topic: “The Importance of Recycling”
Works Cited
“What to do this Week: A Plant-Based Food Festival, an Earth Day Opera and More.” University Wire, Apr 21, 2024. ProQuest, https://lapc.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/wire-feeds/what-do-this-week-plant-based-food-festival-earth/docview/3042666684/se-2.
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Publication: Washington Square News, , New York University , New York, NY
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Relax and unwind at a mediation session
Bobst Library, 7th floor (on campus)
11 a.m.
As finals creep around the corner, take a deep breath and clear your mind at a 75-minute meditation session led by Hunt Parr, an instructor at the Yoga Alliance. This event is part of Flourish Festival, an event hosted by NYU’s Center for Global Spiritual Life and over 15 university departments, dedicated to supporting and celebrating wellness. A limited number of yoga mats will be available, but participants may also bring their own. The event is free, but advance registration is required to attend.
Listen to original music for and by NYU students
Paulson Center, room 620 (on campus)
8 p.m.
Experience an “evening of world premieres” with the NYU Percussion Ensemble and a group of student composers. The ensemble has collaborated with composer and Guggenheim Fellow Julia Wolfe for over a decade, crafting nearly 100 original pieces. The ensemble is also under the direction of conductor Jonathan Haas, who has premiered with the American Symphony Orchestra and BBC Symphony Orchestra, and Robert Honstein, whose music has been performed by orchestras including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Slovenian National Theater Opera. The event is free and open to the NYU community.
Learn about the search for extraterrestrials
Hayden Planetarium Space Theater
7 p.m.
Interested in the search for life beyond Earth? Join astronomer Jackie Faherty as she explores which stars and planets observatories tend to focus on and what today’s technology can reveal about the search for extraterrestrial life. Faherty will discuss recent findings, including insights from tools like the James Webb Space Telescope and the discovery of over 5,000 exoplanets. Tickets are $20 for general admission.
Celebrate Earth Day with the opera
321 Ashland Place, Brooklyn
7:30 p.m.
Celebrate Earth Day by watching The Climate Opera Project, a collection of four, 15-minute operas detailing the impacts of human-influenced natural disasters. Students from the NYU Tisch Opera Lab developed the operas in 2020 to demonstrate how art can raise awareness and inspire positive change. The American Opera Projects, an organization that has spent over 30 years developing opera and music theater projects, produced the show. Tickets are free for NYU community members who present their ID card to the box office the night of the show.
A discussion about food, race and climate change
Kimmel Center for University Life (on campus)
4 p.m.
Listen in for a discussion on environmental racism at a panel featuring university professors who will discuss topics related to food systems and race. This is a great opportunity to better understand NYU’s relationships with the farms supplying its community’s food, as well as how minorities are impacted by climate change. This event is free but make sure to register in advance to secure your spot.
Experience live storytelling
Skirball Center for the Performing Arts (on campus)
7:30 p.m.
Head on over to the Skirball Center for the Performing Arts for the third annual spring performance of “The Moth Mainstage,” a live storytelling event. “The Moth” is a two-act show, with a musical act, where performers craft true stories around a theme, giving voice to everyone‘s stories, especially those that aren’t usually heard. Labeled “New York’s hottest and hippest literary ticket” by the Wall Street Journal, you don’t want to miss some of the best storytelling the city has to offer. Tickets start at $41 for the general public.
Turn vegetables and fruits into pickles
Jasper Kane Cafe, 6 Metrotech Center (on campus)
11 a.m.
Learn how to pickle vegetables and fruits to combat food waste with NYU Eats and the Office of Sustainability. Head over to NYU’s Brooklyn campus to learn how to transform perishable fruits and vegetables, which might otherwise go bad, into delicious pickles. The event is free and open to the NYU community.
Debunking popular climate solutions
105 Wooster St.
7 p.m.
Join a panel of experts to discuss popularized climate solutions and their role at “False Solutions: Carbon Capture, Plastics Recycling, and Green Colonialism.” The Climate Museum will host CAS professor Dean Chiham, New School professor Ana Baptista and Plastic Pollution Coalition founder Julia Cohen to discuss carbon capture, plastics recycling and green colonialism — and why they aren’t functional solutions to the climate crisis. The panel, moderated by Climate Museum director Miranda Massie, will also offer light refreshments to attendees. The event is free but encourages guests to register in advance.
A plant-based food festival
Kimmel Center for University Life, Eisner & Lubin Auditorium (on campus)

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