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Guidelines: Letter to Humanity
The Earth is always conversing. Perhaps not in a manner people are perceptive of or accustomed to, but converse it does. For example, the deafening silence at sunrise when a forest should be reverberating with a chorus of birds, or a pungent smell emanating from a river used to supply drinking water to millions of city residents, or the exposure of darker land surfaces as glaciers and ice sheets melt and retreat. The Earth has much to say to those who can identify and decipher the telltale signs playing out on the planet’s surface. To be ecoliterate is to know the language of place.
Requirements
You are the Earth. You are writing a letter to humanity to convey an important ecological message. Structure your letter around the following questions:
1. Who are you speaking to, humanity in general or a particular group?
2. What does it mean to live on Earth?
3. What are humans doing (or not doing)?
4. What guidance are you endeavoring to impart to humanity?
Student Identity
Stipulate the following details at the top right hand corner of the first page of your letter:
First and last name/surname
Course title (Environmental Problems & Solutions)
Class time (MWF, 10:10-11:00 AM)
Semester (Spring 2014)
Format
● Length: 3 pages of typed text, excluding maps, tables, or images/graphics. You are welcome to submit letters of additional word length. Note: 3 full pages as a minimum, not 2¼ or 2½.
● Font: size 12.
● Ling spacing: double-spaced.
● Printing: you are welcome to print double-sided.
References & Citations
The following must be cited in the body of your text (in-text citing):
— Direct quotes.
— Historical, statistic, or scientific facts.
— Graphs and drawings.
— Articles or studies you refer to within your text. Specify the date of publication.
Bibliography Page
You may cite using the MLA, APA, or Chicago Manual format. For detailed examples on how to properly cite your sources (in-text & bibliography) go to the Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL) at http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/section/2/. You must fully cite all Internet material. Only providing the URL is insufficient.