Steps 2-4
MLA
Modern Language Association
difference between paraphrase and summary
Paraphrase includes all details. Summary leaves some information out.
plagiarism
Stealing another person's words or ideas and passing them off as your own. (from the Latin word for kidnapping
URL
Uniform Resource Locator
Scope
a big umbrella that covers the paper's main ideas and supporting details. Information that strays outside of the scope destroys the paper's unity
working bibliography
a changeable list of sources
working outline
a changeable outline
Make sure a thesis statement is not . . .
a question
thesis
a single declarative sentence that captures the essence or central idea of your paper
Boolean Search
a title search based on key words
Primary Source
an original text, document, interview, speech, or letter. It is not someone's comments on or analysis of a text; it is the text itself
coherence
arranging your paper in an order the audience will understand
The thesis statement is located . . .
at the end of the intro paragraph
Upper left corner of a bib card
call number
3 common ways to organize a paper
chronologically, spatially, by importance
Secondary Source
is not an original text or document; rather, it is someone's comments on or analysis of a primary source.
unity
make sure all of the information fits the scope of your paper
Library
media center
lower right corner of a note card
page number
three kinds of notes
quotation, paraphrase, summary
upper left corner of note card
slug line
upper right corner of a bib card
source number
upper right corner of a note card
source number and sequential number ex. 4-2
call number
the series of numbers and letters printed on the book's spine come from either the Dewey decimal system or the Library of Congress system
lower left corner of a note card
type of note
lower left corner of a bib card
type of source
a title consists of
your topic, your limited focus, a colon to separate them
legitimate domains
.gov, .edu,. org., and .com if it it a legitimate news source
Two things you will do with your note cards when you have them made
1. sort them by slug line 2. decide which you will use and which you won't
skim reading
A rapid eye movement reading technique to identify the gist of a piece of writing.
What can you do to evaluate a source?
Check the author. Check the date.
Requirements to avoid plagiarism
Intext citation (author pg. #) works cited page