Tаsk grоups оccur when а grоup of individuаls decide to form a cohesive group out of personal need or desire, but they are not appointed to be part of the group.
As а reminder, freewrite аsk yоu tо respоnd in writing to prompts. Throughout the course, these prompts will vаry in nature and are designed to help you generate and explore your own thinking. Freewrites are marked Complete (1) or Incomplete/Not submitted (0) and cannot be submitted late. To be marked complete, you must: Write at least 250 words (for reference these directions are approximately 100 words long; typically a double-spaced page is approximately 250 words) Respond directly to the prompt (meaning that address the question throughout your response). PROMPT: Part 1: Choose one complete sentence from LeGuin's "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas" that relates to the idea of community. Type the complete sentence and, in your response, explain how it relates to the idea of community. The Ones Who Walk Away_From_Omelas - Formatted.docx.pdf Part 2: Choose one complete sentence from Jemisin's "The Ones Who Stay and Fight" that relates to the idea of community. Type the complete sentence and, in your response, explain how it relates to the idea of community. The Ones Who Stay and Fight - Formatted.docx.pdf If you are not sure where or how to start, here a few questions that might help: How would the people who live in Omelas and/or Um-Helat describe their community? How do you think, based on the text, they would define community? What are the responsibilities and/or burdens of community members in Omelas and/or Um-Helat? What are the rights and/or privleges of community members in Omelas and/or Um-Helat? Are there places in the story where community interactions are described? Would you want to live in Omelas and/or Um-Helat? Why or why not? As with so much of the writing we do in our class, there is no "right" answer. A successful response is one that shares and explores your ideas. This is an informal writing assignment. It is NOT AN ESSAY so you do not need to include a formal introduction or conclusion; you can jump right into your ideas. While I'm less concerned with grammar and punctuation (and more concerned with your honest responses to the text and to the questions), an average reader should be able to understand what you've written.