Style and Conventions
When prompts give students guidance about whether to use MLA, APA, or Chicago style, or emphasize the need for correct grammar and usage, they typically don’t say why. In fact, citation and stylistic conventions are functions of other elements such as genre and audience, and it’s both equitable and intellectually non-trivial to explain their relative importance within a writing assignment as a whole.
That being said, it's useful for designers to consider how important they in fact are: If they're really important, they should probably show up earlier in the prompt (where they in fact often do show up), and they should be substantially reflected in your feedback/grading rubric--in which case you should make sure they're time in the course dedicated to teaching them and be sure your teaching team are all on the same page about what feedback/grading on this front should look like (since grammar and style are perhaps the area of greatest debate and inconsistency among teachers who are reading student writing.
Why It Matters
Given the diversity of assignment types, disciplinary “flavors,” and student backgrounds all working together in any Gen Ed course, assignment prompts should specify whatever style guidelines (e.g., degrees of formality, citation styles, norms around grammar, etc.) that students are expected to follow. How much emphasis is placed on these guidelines and where they show up in the prompt should
- reflect their relative importance to the assignment’s goals and
- be consistent with the instruction and feedback students will receive.
What It Looks Like
Histories, Societies, Individuals
Science & Technology in Society
Ethics & Civics
Science & Technology in Society
More annotations for these examples of "What it Looks Like" coming soon