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Your advice paper will be a 7 to 10 page, advice-column style research paper. Th
Your advice paper will be a 7 to 10 page, advice-column style research paper. The goal of this paper is to evaluate your ability to apply course content to a real-life situation. While the final paper will not exactly be an advice column in itself, it will consist of a research-based answer to a question you’ve posed about a specific, imagined situation that relates to interpersonal communication. Your paper will include this question and the relevant context around this question, but will will primarily consist of your answer to it. Examples of advice columns include Dear PrudenceLinks to an external site., Captain AwkwardLinks to an external site., and other columnsLinks to an external site., where you can find great examples of the kinds of advice-seeking questions and the way they are contextualized. This being said, your question must be original (meaning you have to think it up yourself).
To start, you need to propose your topic. What will your question be, and how is it related to interpersonal communication? The goal of this assignment is to answer these questions. In this assignment, you will propose an advice column style question that you intend to answer within your final paper. The completed topic proposal assignment should include the following, in this order:
1) Three to five keywords (use the glossary in the textbook to come up with these)
2) A paragraph that contains the scenario and question they would like to answer (150 words)
3) A second paragraph that explains why this question is relevant to interpersonal communication and is of interest to the student (150 words)
Please use and follow the formatting template I’ve made available to you under the ‘Housekeeping and helpful materials’ module. It is also important that you submit the right kind of file–either a .doc, .docx, of .pdf file. If you submit something else, you will receive a 0. When writing your topic proposal, look over the rubric before you start and then after you’ve written your first draft or once you think you have finished. This is a good way to make sure you catch any easy mistakes before you submit.
You should not:
Define the keywords you’ve chosen
Draw on outside sources
Provide a cover page, title, or reference list
Include a sub-question in the case that you don’t want to include one (you will not be granted extra points for including a sub-question)
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