How inequality is reproduced in everyday life michael


There are four sections to this proposal, each addressing a different aspect of your proposed project.
1. Describe your topic (200-400 words)
a. Provide a brief description/background on the issue as you currently understand it
b. Explain why the topic is interesting to you
c. Provide a citation for at least one outside academic (peer-reviewed) source to support this section
2. Identify one of your communities that is impacted by it.
a. Describe the community.
b. Briefly describe why this is an important issue for that community.
3. In what way is your chosen topic an example of structural inequality? (100-200 words)
a. How is the inequality you are looking at built into the rules of the system?
b. Basically, you need to convince us that the issue is structural or systemic.
c. You may wish to reference course readings on structural inequality and structural violence for this section.
4. Finally, which option are you choosing? Will you do be doing primary or secondary research?
a. If primary research, then identify the organization you are planning to work with.
i. Provide a brief (no more than 100 words) description of the organization.
ii. Tell me what steps you have taken (or will be taking) to get involved with the organization.
b. If secondary research, then identify one additional outside resource (article, book, film, etc.) that may be useful for your research.
i. Provide a citation for the resource and a brief (no more than 100 words) summary of why you think it will be useful to your research.

Please use easy topic about the structural inequality.
Please use easy words and sentences.
My community is an international student in usa who is studying Engineering. There are much more man than woman in engineering major.
And There are two files I attached. You will choose which is better for the topic you chose.

Primary Research Project

Conceptual Overview

In Rigging the Game: How Inequality is Reproduced in Everyday Life, Michael Schwalbe argues that inequality is perhaps the most salient feature of contemporary life in the United States. But he also points out that inequality is an accomplishment-it is something that must be achieved and, thus, it is something we can actively work against. Community organizations provide opportunities for individuals to amplify their work-to do more than they ever could alone.

Project Overview

The purpose of this project is to explore the question of "What can one person do?" within the context of community organizations. To this end, you will be researching 1) an unresolved issue of structural inequality that impacts your community and 2) a non- government, community organization that is working to address this inequality.

Once you have chosen an organization, you will spend at least 4 hours working with them. During your involvement, your goal is to learn how the organization operates, what their goals are, and, more specifically, how individuals can get involved to do good work in the community. Along with the 4 hours of involvement, you will do an informal interview with at least one person involved with the organization (a volunteer or employee).

Paper Details

Prompt:

Draw on your research/experience and the course material to respond to the question "What is the role of the organization I have chosen in enabling individuals to address issues of inequality?"

More specifically, you must articulate and defend a clear thesis that addresses this question.

All parts of your thesis should be supported by your analysis of the organization (based in your experiences and secondary research) and your understanding of course materials. As you prepare your paper, you may find it useful to consider the following questions:

- What is the purpose of my chosen organization? What issues is it trying to address?

- What populations does the organization work with? What programs does it offer them?

- How can community organizations (like this one) assist concerned individuals in making change? Could the work be done without an organization? Why or why not?

- What is the impact of my organization? Of the individuals involved?

- What are the barriers faced by my organization and by individuals trying to get involved with my organization?

Requirements Length: 3-5 pages Sources:
- 2-3 course materials (readings or videos)
- 1 source created by the chosen organization (a website, a brochure, etc.)
- No other outside sources are required, but they are permitted.

Works Cited Instructions
As with any work you create, you should cite any sources you use. You should create a Works Cited page-either as a separate

document or attached it to the end of your reflection. I'm not picky about citation style; feel free to use APA, MLA, or Chicago Style for your citations. You can find information on best practices for citing sources here:
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/section/2/

Evaluation

As usual, your evaluation will be based on the PECS criteria: P: Your writing should have a clear Purpose

E: Your writing should Engage meaningfully with course texts.

C: Your writing should display Critical thought about the ideas you present. I want to see some of your own ideas and analysis rather than just summaries. S: You need to Support every argument you make.

Secondary Research Project

Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to create a shareable educational resource about a particular structural inequality. In it, you will 1) describe the structural inequality and 2) recommend at least 1 specific action people can take to help disrupt, dismantle, or otherwise work against that structure. There are 3 major components to this project: the resource itself, a 2-3 page reflection piece, and a Works Cited. Instructions for each can be found below.

In doing this assignment, you'll get the chance to:

- Synthesize information and ideas you've come across in the readings, conversations, and assignments.
- Reflect on how education can be a crucial component of being an active, engaged member of your community and of society as a whole.
- Produce a concrete resource that you can put out into the world about your topic.

Educational Resource Instructions
For the resource itself, I'm giving you a fair amount of freedom. You have to create an educational resource, but the exact form it takes is really up to you. Some options people have done in the past:

- Write an editorial/article about your topic that could be submitted to a newspaper or other periodical. (You don't have to actually submit it.)
- Create a brochure about your topic that can be printed and distributed.
- Create a short zine about your topic that can be printed and distributed.
- Produce a short podcast or video about your topic.
- Create a blog post (with links for more info) about your topic.
- Create a website about your topic.
- Create an educational board game or video game about your topic.
- Something else that you come up with (and get approved by me)

While you have a lot of freedom for the form of the project, there are certain criteria that all projects must meet. To get full credit your resource must:

- Be targeted towards a particular audience (likely a particular group of stakeholders for the issue)-Think about whom you want to reach. Who is likely to care about the issue if they learned about it? Who might be willing and able to take action?
o Your target audience should influence the form and language of the project. For example, you probably

wouldn't create a video game if your target audience is Idaho congresspeople (or maybe you would?).
- Contain the following components
1. A short background on the situation. Explain what is going on, how it's unequal, and why we should care about it.
2. A description of the communities that are most impacted by the issue and how they are impacted. This is related to the previous component; one way to make people care about an issue is to show them the harm it is causing to a particular group of people.
3. A description of at least 1 important cultural story or belief that helps sustain the conditions of inequality. As Schwalbe argues in Ch. 4-Arresting the Imagination, cultural stories are important. The stories our culture tells about particular groups or situations are part of what cause us to act in particular ways. (For example, people of color were once almost universally believed to be less intelligent than white people in the U.S. This contributed to the idea that they needed to be "cared for" and "saved from themselves," as well as the idea that they were best suited for manual labor-some of the primary justifications for slavery.)
Your job here is to identify at least one cultural belief that justifies or otherwise supports the structural inequality you are discussing.
4. Any other information that is useful to understanding the processes and forces through which it is sustained.
5. A "call to action"-i.e. an explanation of what can be done to change things and why that would be effective.

Reflection Instructions
You must submit a 2-3 page reflection that addresses the following:
1. Identify one or two of your social identities and explain how they are related to the issue you explored.
2. How does this project relate to your sense of responsibility to your community?
3. Why did you choose the particular audience you chose? How did the choice of audience influence other choices (format, content, call to action, etc.)?
4. What other ways can someone can get involved or work to make a difference with this issue? (Beyond what you identify in your resource)

Required Sources
You need to have at least 5 sources for your project.
At least two sources should be assigned materials from class (videos, articles, etc.) to help you ground your project in the theoretical frameworks we're developing this semester. Additionally, at least three sources should be sources that you found on your own through outside research.

Works Cited Instructions
As with any work you create, you should cite any sources you use. You should create a Works Cited page-either as a separate document or attached it to the end of your reflection. I'm not picky about citation style; feel free to use APA, MLA, or Chicago Style for your citations. You can find information on best practices for citing sources here:
https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/section/2/

Evaluation

As usual, your evaluation will be based on the PECS criteria: P: Your writing should have a clear Purpose

E: Your writing should Engage meaningfully with course texts.

C: Your writing should display Critical thought about the ideas you present. I want to see some of your own ideas and analysis rather than just summaries. S: You need to Support every argument you make.

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