Guide Paper Format v2
Guide Paper Format v2
use letter-sized white bond paper (8 x 11 inches, not A4 size) use Book Antiqua, font size 12 (no other font will be accepted) set a margin of 1 for top and bottom, 1.25 for left and right set line spacing above first paragraph as single, before: 0, after: 0 set paragraph alignment as Left (avoid Justified), except for title begin typing at upper left corner, right below top margin: SURNAME (BOLD), Name Middle Initial ID# / Major Course - Section Name of Instructor Type of Requirement (BOLD) Date submitted: day month year Word count: includes all words after the title <single space> Title is Bold and Centered, No Quote Marks (BOLD) <single space> Indent first line of essay at 0.5; start the word count here. set line spacing of 1st paragraph onwards as 1.5, before: 0, after: 0 set paragraph indentions at inches from left margin make sure paragraph alignment for entire essay is Left, not Justified leave the upper right corner blank for grade and comments from teacher for page numbers: click Insert > Page numbers > Position: Top of page (header) > Alignment: Right > Uncheck/remove: show number on first page no extra space between paragraphs
CORTEZ, Gabriela Luisa F. 2009-14724 / BS Psych Eng 1 MHU1 Prof. Sandra Nicole Roldan Expository Essay Draft 11 September 2010 Word count: 842 What Twilight Gets Wrong About Vampires The vampire story has been used for centuries in folklore, literature and film to signify some form of resistance against abusive systems and powers. Early legends depict vampires as hideous, bestial monsters. Bram Stokers Dracula, on the other hand, exposes the Old World aristocracy as decadent parasites. The glamorous vampire image used by Stephanie Meyer in the Twilight series was built on the Romantic rebel image made popular by Lord Byron. What Meyer does, however, is to reduce this powerful icon into the pathetic cute-boy rich-kid stereotype found in high school TV dramas. The complex nuanced relationships