Make sure students use a consistent orientation on their path.
Make sure students explicitly include all segments of their path, including those which obviously yield zero.
Students in a given group should all use the same curve.
Students should be discouraged from drawing a curve whose longest side is along a coordinate axis.
Students may need to be reminded that $\OINT$ implies the counterclockwise orientation. But it doesn't matter what orientation students use so long as they are consistent!
A geometric argument that the orientation should be reversed when interchanging $x$ and $y$ is to rotate the $xy$-plane about the line $y=x$. (This explains the minus sign in Green's Theorem.)
Students may not have seen line integrals of this form (see below).
Line integrals of the form $\INT P\,dx+Q\,dy$.
We do not discuss such integrals in class! Integrals of this form
almost always arise in applications as $\INT\FF\cdot d\rr$.
Go to 3 dimensions — bend the curve out of the plane and stretch the region like a butterfly net or rubber sheet. This is the setting for Stokes' Theorem!