HOW TO DO A RESPONSE PAPER-THIS WILL BE A MINIMUM OF ONE TYPED PAGE AND MAXIMUM OF 2 PAGES. IN THE FIRST SENTENCE OR UNDER THE TITLE OF YOUR PAPER, MAKE SURE YOU HAVE AN MLA CITATION FOR THE STORY–THIS WILL ALLOW YOU TO QUOTE FROM IT IF NECESSARY.
PART 1: A SUMMARY OF THE WORK
To develop the first part of a report, do the following:
PART 2: YOUR REACTION TO THE WORK
To develop the second part of a report, do the following:
POINTS OF CONSIDERATION WHEN WRITING THE REPORT
Here are some important elements to consider as you prepare a report:
(Choose ONE discussion question and expound on it in a response paper; make sure you have a MLA citation for the story so you can quote from it.)
1. What do you think the significance of the title is? What is so “secret” about Walter Mitty’s life?
2. Is Walter Mitty an interesting person? Is his life significant? Why or why not? Why do you think his real life and his imagined lives are so different (in other words, what is the author trying to tell you about his life/lives)?
3. The phrase “He’s a real Walter Mitty” is popular among many people in America in order to describe someone who does not appear to have much skill or personality, but imagines himself or herself to be a genius in the most unexpected situations. Give an example of someone you know who you think is a “Walter Mitty” type.
4. Do you think there are a lot of people in the world who have real lives like Walter Mitty, and imagine alternative lives like he does? If so, why do you think there are so many people like this? What does this say about society in the present day?
Here below is the example she gave
A SAMPLE RESPONSE OR REACTION PAPER
Here is a report written by a student in an introductory psychology course. Look at the paper closely to see how it follows the guidelines for report writing described above.
Part 1: Summary
Part 1: SummaryTopic sentence for summary paragraph
A Report on Man’s Search for Meaning
Dr. Viktor Frankl’s book Man’s Search for Meaning (New York: Washington Square Press, 1966) is both an autobiographical account of his years as a prisoner in Nazi concentration camps and a presentation of his ideas about the meaning of life. The three years of deprivation and suffering he spent at Auschwitz and other Nazi camps led to the development of his theory of Logotherapy, which, very briefly, states that the primary force in human beings is “a striving to find a meaning in one’s life” (154). Without a meaning in life, Frankl feels, we experience emptiness and loneliness that lead to apathy and despair. This need for meaning was demonstrated to Frankl time and again with both himself and other prisoners who were faced with the horrors of camp existence. Frankl was able to sustain himself partly through the love he felt for his wife. In a moment of spiritual insight, he realized that his love was stronger and more meaningful than death, and would be a real and sustaining force within him even if he knew his wife was dead. Frankl’s comrades also had reasons to live that gave them strength. One had a child waiting for him; another was a scientist who was working on a series of books that needed to be finished. Finally, Frankl and his friends found meaning through their decision to accept and bear their fate with courage. He says that the words of Dostoevsky came frequently to mind: “There is one thing that I dread: not to be worthy of my suffering.” When Frankl’s prison experience was over and he returned to his profession of psychiatry, he found that his theory of meaning held true not only for the prisoners but for all people. He has since had great success in working with patients by helping them locate in their own lives meanings of love, work, and suffering.
Part 2: ReactionTopic sentence for first reaction paragraph
One of my reactions to the book was the relationship I saw between the “Capos” and ideas about anxiety, standards, and aggression discussed in our psychology class. The Capos were prisoners who acted as trustees, and Frankl says they acted more cruelly toward the prisoners than the guards or the SS men. Several psychological factors help explain this cruelty. The Capos must have been suppressing intense anxiety about “selling themselves out” to the Nazis in return for small favors. Frankl and other prisoners must have been a constant reminder to the Capos of the courage and integrity they themselves lacked. When our behaviors and values are threatened by someone else acting in a different way, one way we may react is with anger and aggression. The Capos are an extreme example of how, if the situation is right, we may be capable of great cruelty to those whose actions threaten our standards.
Topic sentence for second reaction paragraph
I think that Frankl’s idea that meaning is the most important force in human beings helps explain some of the disorder and discontent in the world today. Many people are unhappy because they are caught in jobs where they have no responsibility and creativity; their work lacks meaning. Many are also unhappy because our culture seems to stress sexual technique in social relationships rather than human caring. People buy popular books that may help them become better partners in bed, but that may not make them more sensitive to each other’s human needs. Where there is no real care, there is no meaning. To hide the inner emptiness that results from impersonal work and sex, people busy themselves with the accumulation of material things. With television sets, stereos, cars, expensive clothes, and the like, they try to forget that their lives lack true meaning instead of working or going to school to get a meaningful job, or trying to be decent human beings.
Topic sentence for third reaction paragraph
I have also found that Frankl’s idea that suffering can have meaning helps me understand the behavior of people I know. I have a friend named Jim who was always poor and did not have much of a family—only a stepmother who never cared for him as much as for her own children. What Jim did have, though, was determination. He worked two jobs to save money to go to school, and then worked and went to school at the same time. The fact that his life was hard seemed to make him bear down all the more. On the other hand, I can think of a man in my neighborhood who for all the years I’ve known him has done nothing with his life. He spends whole days smoking and looking at cars going by. He is a burned-out case. Somewhere in the past his problems must have become too much for him, and he gave up. He could have found meaning in his life by deciding to fight his troubles like Jim, but he didn’t, and now he is a sad shadow of a man. Without determination and the desire to face his hardships, he lost his chance to make his life meaningful.
Concluding paragraph
In conclusion, I would strongly recommend Frankl’s book to persons who care about why they are alive, and who want to truly think about the purpose and meaning of their lives