| | | | | "Bright winds lift each metaphor; clouds lift from a forest of writing brushes." -Lu Chi (from Wen Fu) |  | Writing Prizes:
The Three Generations Prize for Writing in the Social
Sciences
A prize of $300 awarded
to a Wellesley student for a paper on a social science topic, written
as part of her course work (excluding theses) or independently.
The Three Generations Prize for Writing in the Social Sciences was launched
in the Spring Semester, 1995, the third in a group of prizes for writing
supported by the Three Generations Fund. This fund, the gift of Judith
Stern Randal, her daughter Judith Randal Hines, and her mother Sybil Cohen
Stern, has done much to foster and support clear writing at Wellesley.
The response to the Three Generations Prizes has shown just how much Wellesley
students write--and care about writing--across the disciplines and throughout
their four years at Wellesley.
In reading submissions for this prize, the judges looked for a full and
complex argument, clearly stated and well supported by evidence; argumentation
that is accurate and appropriate to the discipline; and a level of diction
that is clear and comprehensible to any intelligent reader.
Entry Requirements:
Submit four copies of the paper to the Writing Program Office
(124 Founders) by Wednesday, April 22, 2009, 12:00 noon.
Attach a cover sheet including the following information: your
name, local address, phone, and email address; the professor and course
for which you wrote the paper, a brief description of the assignment,
and the date the paper was submitted.
Each contestant may submit only one entry.
Any Wellesley College student may submit a paper for this prize.
Honors theses may not be submitted; papers written for independent
studies are eligible. Entries need not have been written for a course. For example, an article that appeared in a publication (e.g. the Wellesley News) would be eligible.
Papers written during the Spring semester, 2008, as well as the
Fall and Spring semesters, 2008-09, are eligible.
Papers will be judged by the end of the first week of May and the prize
winner will be announced at Commencement. If you have any questions, please
call the Writing Program at extension 2576, or contact Esther Iwanaga,
coordinator of the prize.
Tips for submitting a prize-winning paper:
The judges look for a paper that reads well on its own and makes a strong
and strongly visible argument, well supported by evidence. Most prize-winning
papers have been revised before submission. A paper that earned an 'A'
for a course is not necessarily a prize-winning paper, in large part because
many papers written in response to an assignment may not read well to
someone unfamiliar with the course material. It helps to revise the introduction
so it introduces your topic to an outside audience. It is also a good
idea to polish up the tables and other visual material. And it goes without
saying that a paper with spelling errors, typos, and grammatical errors
will not win a prize!
In the past, prizes have been awarded both to highly technical papers
and to papers written for a general audience. The judges are interested
in the wide range of writing that is done in the social sciences.
We urge students to consult with their instructors before submitting a
paper for a prize. Your instructors can help you decide whether a paper
is worth submitting, and are also very happy to help you revise for submission.
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