INST 154
Apollo at 50
Fall 2019
E5: Term Paper
The goal of your term paper will be to apply what you have leaned in
about what made Apollo successful to begin to think about how other
"big things" were accomplished, or might in the future be
accomplished. You will select some other audacious goal that either
was, was not, or has yet to be achieved. Then over the course of the
semester, you should try to draw parallels between your chosen goal
and the Apollo Program.
There are many types of goals that you might consider, including:
- Social challenges, such as:
- Achieving the United Nations sustainable development goals
- Winning Richard Nixon's "war on drugs"
- Providing universal health care in the United States
- Ending legal discrimination on the basis of race
- Winning President Johnson's "war on poverty"
- Ending the gender pay gap
- Eliminating racial disparities in income and wealth
- Preventing mass shootings
- Ending the Great Depression
- Resolving world hunger
- Achieving universal suffrage in the United States
- Eliminating homelessness in the United States
- Technology development, such as:
- Combating the global AIDS crisis
- Mitigating global warming
- Developing nuclear weapons and their delivery systems
- Making commercial air travel safe, fast, and inexpensive
- Preventing or curing Alzheimer's disease
- Ending U.S. reliance on foreign oil
- Developing the modern Internet
- Eradicating smallpox on a global scale
- Establishing a permanent human colony on Mars
- The innovation of firearms
- Creation of national-scale rail systems
- Adoption of the printing press and development of the publishing industry
- Armed conflict, such as:
- Defeating of Nazi Germany in World War II
- Achieving the North Vietnamese victory in the Vietnam War
- Fighting The global war on terrorism
- The southward and westward expansion of non-native settlements during the Indian Wars
- Preventing nuclear war
- The liberation of Haiti from France
- The defeat of Napoleon
- Spanish conquest of the New World
- The end of the Roman Empire
- The global spread of communism during the Cold War
Note that you might disagree with the way I have grouped these. For
example, the AIDS crisis was as much a social challenge as it was a
challenge for medical "technology," some technologies are used in
armed conflict (e.g., nuclear weapons, but also the Internet), and
armed conflict sometimes arises from social challenges. And you might
easily think of other categories (e.g., the economic rise of China
doesn't fit neatly into any of these categories). The key is to have
some way of thinking about what kind of challenge you want to study,
and having a list of categories with a few examples may be useful as a
starting point. Note also that not all of my examples were completely
successful (Nixon's war on drugs, for example), but we can learn as
much from failure as from success. So don't hesitate to choose a
(partial) failure if the goal was important and ambitions.
At the end of the semester, you will then write a 5-6 page
(single-spaced, standard margins, 12-point font, not counting
references) term paper in which you draw on what you have learned in
this class to focus on the factors that did, didn’t, will or won’t
make it possible to achieve your chosen goal. There are many aspects
of the Apollo program that you might consider for comparison and
contrast with your chosen goal, including, for example:
- Politics. Apollo was made possible by political consensus, both at the time it started and as it evolved.
- Urgency. Apollo had to happen quickly if it was to serve its purpose, and that sense of urgency helped to maintain the political consensus.
- Economy. Apollo was costly, but the economy of the nation was sufficiently large at the time to bear that cost.
- Organization. Apollo was largely a bureaucracy, but there were also elements of a market (in the contracting) and cooperation (both between agencies of the US government and between different governments).
- Technology. Apollo relied principally on applying and extending kinds of technologies that were already known.
- Infrastructure. Many of the more mundane things Apollo relied on (printing, telephones, airlines, cities, highways, railroads, cars, manufacturing facilities, a legal system, ...) already existed.
Surely you can add to that list.
Part 1: Select a Goal
First select a goal and write a half page about it. We want to know
what your goal is (in not much more detail than listed above in the
examples), why you selected it (i.e., what about it do you find
interesting as a basis for comparison with Apollo), when did or will
it happen, and what you already know about it (i.e., will this all be
new to you, or is it something you have already studied?). Feel free
to select any of the examples used above, or any other similarly
ambitious goal (please don't select something of much smaller scale,
such as inventing Facebook or earning a Ph.D.). It would be best if
your goal were situated after the widespread introduction of printing
(about 1450), and if it is a future goal if it were in the twenty-first
century -- there is little to be gained by entering the realm of
further back history (where fewer sources may be available) or science
fiction (where it might be hard to ground your claims
adequately). This assignment is graded as part of your final term
paper grade, and we will offer feedback on your proposal. You must
work individually on your term paper, even if one or more other
students in the class select a related focus.
Part 2: Write your Paper
As the semester proceeds, you should take notes about aspects of the
Apollo program that you can compare and contrast with the goal you
have selected. You should strive to have a new insight on this every
week or two, and to write down your thoughts at the time. Then when
you finish your team experience you will already have notes
assembled that you can start from. A good strategy is to then outline
your paper and copy your notes into your outline as a starting point,
and then to write quickly the other parts of the paper that don't have
notes. Your outline should contain at least an introduction that
clearly states the goal, a background section that describes the
context in which your goal was, was not, or may yet be achieved, a
section analyzing the factors that made or may make your goal
achievable or unachievable, the story of how your goal did work out or
speculation on how it may work out, and a conclusion in which you draw
out some important points that can be learned from your analysis about
how big things get done, illuminating both commonalities with and
differences from Apollo. Try to do that all in the first week!
Seriously -- you can't improve your paper until it exists, so the
sooner it exists, the better it will be in the end.
You will likely find the Consolidated Notes
on Lessons from Apollo that we constructed in class to be useful
as you structure and write your paper.
Then you can spend a week working through the paper and improving it,
and doing some focused research to fill in gaps in your knowledge. In
the third week, you can then work carefully on parts that you learned
in the second week still need work. Before class on the date
indicated in the schedule, upload a complete draft of your term paper
to ELMS. This is not the final version -- we will assign two of your
discussion table partners to read it, and you will read two of their.
Then at our next class session you'll have a chance to discuss you
paper and their paper with them. Your TA will also give you comments.
Part 3: Polish your Paper and Submit It
At this point you will have seen two other papers, and gotten comments
from at least two people on your paper, and you will have been
thinking about it for more then three weeks. So you should be ready
to take a pass with fresh eyes and further improve it. Once you do,
you would be wise to send it to a friend for a final read and comments
before you turn it in. As with all of your writing, you must cite
your sources, use quotation marks where you quote from a source, and
scrupulously avoid plagiarism. Your final paper must be uploaded to
ELMS by the date and time indicated in the schedule, which is during
the final exam period.
Example
An example of a good term paper from a
prior semester is available. Note, however, that the length
requirements in that semester were different. Note also that this is
just one example of a good term paper -- there are many other factors
that could have been included in the analysis, and there are several
other ways of organizing that analysis. Finally, note that this paper
addresses a goal that was remarkably similar to Apollo (in the sense
that both goals essentially called for technical accomplishments) and
that if you are working on a goal ore focused on human behavior than
on technology that you will likely find many more differences from
Apollo (as readings A and D for class session 29 can help to
illustrate).
Rubric
The following is the rubric will be used to grade your assignment:
- 2 points: Proper length
- 3 points: Good, clear writing and proper grammar
- 2 points: Proper citations
- 2 points: Introduction
- 2 points: Background
- 8 points: Analysis
- 2 points: Story
- 4 points: Conclusion, including comparison to Apollo
Doug
Oard
Last modified: Tue Dec 3 19:12:47 2019