1. Start this assignment by composing several journal entries about workplace experiences you have had, or have heard about, focusing on people or events you may have found entertaining or disturbing. a. Treat each as a separate entry in a journal, just a paragraph or so, as if you were writing them at the time these events happened. b. You are looking to capture moments of interesting workplace experiences; while they share this common theme, do not be too concerned about connecting them together at this point c. It is best to write as many of these as you can, so getting started early is important. You will not use every entry you write, so the more you generate as a foundation, the more you will be draw together into the next part of the assignment d.Write a 1500-word "fictionalized journal" (reality and imagination mixed) mainly based on your work experience (or somebody else's work experience you know or imagined) with references to the stories you'll have read by then (Week 4/Unit 4) by way of analogy-- 1. Start this assignment by composing several journal entries about workplace experiences you have had, or have heard about, focusing on people or events you may have found entertaining or disturbing. a. Treat each as a separate entry in a journal, just a paragraph or so, as if you were writing them at the time these events happened. b. You are looking to capture moments of interesting workplace experiences; while they share this common theme, do not be too concerned about connecting them together at this point c. It is best to write as many of these as you can, so getting started early is important. You will not use every entry you write, so the more you generate as a foundation, the more you will be draw together into the next part of the assignment d.Write a 1500-word "fictionalized journal" (reality and imagination mixed) mainly based on your work experience (or somebody else's work experience you know or imagined) with references to the stories you'll have read by then (Week 4/Unit 4) by way of analogy