1. What the problem is, including its history and current status. First, research the issue fully. Use your research, citing it carefully, to show the reading your in-depth knowledge of the issue, gained from your research. Be sure to present more than one side to the issue and avoid sounding biased in your presentation.
2. A specific way to solve your topic/issue and initiate change After research, it is the time to propose change and persuade your audience to action. You need to argue for a specific recommendation that you believe will make a change in dealing with this topic/issue. Explain what you propose should be done about this topic/issue and offer realistic recommendations. Your solution should be your own and not borrowed from any research on the topic.
3. Logical reasoning and evidence that defends your recommendations – A proposal is still an argument where you need to prove that this solution can work. Your reasoning and evidence should focus on feasibility (it can be achieved with available resources) and implementation (how it should be completed). Again, you are not just stating why your solution should happen; you are explaining what is needed and how it can happen. Consider looking at analogous situations and what people have done to handle similar problems.
4. Your ability to target your audience and craft the proposal using situationally appropriate style- Proposals are generally targeted to a specific group of people who can help initiate change on the matter. You need to be able to identify who those people are and craft your proposal with them in mind. The writing should be formal, clear, and concise.
5. You understand how to properly create a full citation and in-text citation using APA guidelines.
Write a four-page proposal paper that focuses on offering a solution to your topic/issue
Use APA citation.
Incorporate and properly cite a minimum of 5 sources.
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