27 Sep Purpose Good writers don?t just express ?ideas?they also stand up for themselves in respectful and professional ?ways. In this assignment, you wi
Purpose
Good writers don’t just express ideas—they also stand up for themselves in respectful and professional ways. In this assignment, you will practice self-advocacy by writing a professional email in response to a realistic situation.
Prompt
Choose one of the following scenarios (or create your own, with instructor approval):
- Academic Setting: You missed a deadline because of a legitimate reason (illness, family emergency, or documented issue) and need to request an extension.
- Workplace Setting: You have been given extra responsibilities but want to ask your manager for either (a) a reduced workload or (b) extra support/resources.
- Campus Life Setting: You want to advocate for a campus change (e.g., more study spaces, longer library hours, or improved mental health resources).
Your Task
Write a professional email that:
- Clearly explains your issue or concern.
- Provides enough context without oversharing.
- Makes a polite but confident request.
- Uses a respectful, formal tone and proper email formatting.
Email Requirements
- Format: subject line, greeting, body, closing/signature.
- Length: 200–300 words.
- Tone: respectful, professional, persuasive.
- Proofread for grammar, punctuation, and clarity.
Reflection (100–150 words)
After writing your email, include a short reflection answering:
- How did you balance professionalism with advocating for your needs?
- What was the most challenging part of writing this email?
What to Submit
- Your completed email (copy/paste into submission box or attach a Word file).
- Your reflection.