TOPIC
Research paper on comparing and contrasting blimps (airships) from WW1 and WW2
Research Question
· What were the differences between airships in WW1 and WW2?

Thesis statement

Airships were utilized in both World War 1 and World War 2, but there were many differences between the utilization of these airships between both world wars. It was 21 years in-between the first world war and the second. Technology, the wars, the motive, everything changed in those 21 years except the use of airships in battle. Multiple countries utilized the airship in both world wars because it was a very successful weapon, but it was even more successful in world war 2.
Sources for information

Primary References

Wanderling, the. (n.d.). ZEPPELINS: HIGH ALTITUDE WARSHIPS. Retrieved October 28, 2019, from http://sped2work.tripod.com/zeppelins.html.

Zeppelin Raids. (2016, April 10). Retrieved from https://nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/education/zeppelins.pdf.

Secondary References

Airships and Balloons in the World War II Period. (n.d.). Retrieved October 28, 2019, from https://www.centennialofflight.net/essay/Lighter_than_air/Airships_in_WWII/LTA10.htm
Golson, J. (2017, June 3). WWI Zeppelins: Not Too Deadly, But Scary as Hell. Retrieved from https://www.wired.com/2014/10/world-war-i-zeppelins/

Requirements

Research Question, Thesis Statement, and Paper – Develop your topic into one clear concise research question and create a thesis statement. Compile your (one) question, thesis statement, and research into a written four to six-page (APA style) written paper. You can write from any perspective or lens that interests you: historical, scientific, technological, engineering, or mathematical. This research paper must include the following elements:
1. Title-page (not part of the page requirement)
2. Body (four to six pages)
o Introduction – Tells the reader what you are going to write about and includes your thesis statement. Be sure to make it interesting so the reader will want to continue and read the rest of your work.
o Body of the Paper – Goes through each point you want to illustrate by providing your ideas and your research about the topic. Be sure you write an opening sentence for each paragraph that will draw your reader into your idea or point.
o Conclusion/Summary – Reminds the reader what you wrote about in your work. It is similar to the introduction but with a concluding statement.
3. Reference-page (not part of the page requirement)
Rubric
  
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeIntroduction (5%)
Provides   context; includes a thesis statement and the lens that presents an overall   picture of student’s chosen topic
   
5.0 pts
Proficient (4-5 Points) –     Clearly provides all necessary information and sets expectations. Includes     a thesis statement and the lens that clearly presents an overall picture of     student’s chosen topic

3.0 pts
Satisfactory (2-3 Points) –     Minor lack or excess of information; minor lack of clarity. Includes a     thesis statement and the lens that adequately presents an overall picture     of student’s chosen topic

1.0 pts
Poor (0-1 Point) – Confusing,     vague or lacking; does not include a thesis statement or lens that presents     an overall picture of the student’s chosen topic or the thesis statement     and the lens is vague

5.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeBody Structure (5%)
Paragraphs focus   on one major idea each; Transitions clearly show relationships among ideas
   
5.0 pts
Proficient (4-5 Points) –     Paragraphs consistently meet expectations; transitions very clear

3.0 pts
Satisfactory (2-3 Points) – 1-3     lapses in paragraphs; 1-3 problems with transitions

1.0 pts
Poor (0-1 Point) – So many     lapses in paragraphs or problems with transitions that comprehension is     difficult

5.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeConclusion (5%)
Decisively ends   paper
   
5.0 pts
Proficient (4-5 Points) – Ends     paper with powerful impact; creates a fully satisfying sense of completion

3.0 pts
Satisfactory (2-3 Points) –     Ending works, but may be weak or does not create a good sense of completion

1.0 pts
Poor (0-1 Point) – Weak,     confusing or missing ending

5.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeContent (30%)
Paper   effectively responds to the topic; paper is sufficient length to adequately   address the topic (four to six pages)
   
30.0 pts
Proficient (25-30 Points) –     Paper carefully and thoroughly responds to all aspects of the topic

24.0 pts
Satisfactory (18-24 Points) –     Paper adequately responds to the topic; length is adequate to address the     topic

17.0 pts
Poor (0-17 Points) – Paper does     not respond effectively to the topic; length is insufficient to adequately     address the topic

30.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeVocabulary (10%)
Appropriate;   avoids jargon, slang, and overly emotionally charged words
   
10.0 pts
Proficient (9-10 Points) –     Skillful word choice that is precise, purposeful and always appropriate in     formality

8.0 pts
Satisfactory (7-8 Points) –     Relatively few minor errors

6.0 pts
Poor (0-6 Points) – So many     errors that writing is difficult to comprehend or offensive or irrelevant

10.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeWriting Style (10%)
Variety of   sentence constructions, appropriate brevity, use of parallelism, poetic   effects (such as metaphor, simile, alliteration)
   
10.0 pts
Proficient (9-10 Points) –     Pleasing variety of sentence constructions; always effective and     appropriate brevity, use of parallelism and/or poetic effects

8.0 pts
Satisfactory (7-8 Points) –     Relatively few minor errors

6.0 pts
Poor (0-6 Points) – Errors     detract significantly from comprehension or create significant distractions

10.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeGrammar (10%)
Fragments,   run-ons, tense, voice, person, disagreement, spelling, punctuation
   
10.0 pts
Proficient (9-10 Points) – Few     to no errors (1% or less of assignment word total)

8.0 pts
Satisfactory (7-8 Points) – Some     errors (less than 5% of word total)

6.0 pts
Poor (0-6 Points) – Errors     detract significantly from comprehension

10.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeSources – Number, Quality and Variety (10%)
Sufficient use   of the text to support ideas; 2 Primary and 2 secondary courses are included
   
10.0 pts
Proficient (9-10 Points) –     Effort beyond expectations; material from the readings is well-chosen and     effectively integrated. Valid and credible primary and secondary sources     are included.

8.0 pts
Satisfactory (7-8 Points) –     Adequate integration of material from the readings into the paper. Partial     use of primary and secondary sources are included.

6.0 pts
Poor (0-6 Points) – Does not     incorporate material from the readings into the paper. No use of primary     and secondary sources are shown.

10.0 pts
 
This criterion is linked to a   Learning OutcomeSources – Integration and Citation (15%)
Quoting,   summarizing, and paraphrasing; in-text citations and references adhere to   formatting style; current and accurate APA format is used
   
15.0 pts
Proficient (13-15 Points) –     Sources interspersed with writer’s own analysis or synthesis; quotes are     less than 10% of paper; 1-5 minor errors in documentation

12.0 pts
Satisfactory (10-12 Points) –     Sources interspersed with writer’s own work; quotes are less than 20% of     paper; more than 5 minor errors in documentation

9.0 pts
Poor (0-9 Points) – Sources     strung together with little of the writer’s own work; quotes are 50% or     more of paper; citations missing or with major errors; plagiarism

15.0 pts
 
Total Points: 100.0
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