Skills Lesson: Gathering Information Practice and Quiz
Explain the difference between a quotation, a paraphrase, and a summary.
A quotation is exact words from a source. To paraphrase is a writing a source excerpt in your own words. To summarize is you main ideas, in your words.
Read the excerpt below from the source material and the bibliography card. Then, answer the question that follows. Excerpt from "Human Cloning and Genetic Modification": 1. Reproductive cloning uses the cloning procedure to produce a clonal embryo which is implanted in a woman's womb with intent to create a fully formed living child—a clone. . . . 2. Therapeutic cloning uses the cloning procedure to produce a clonal embryo, but instead of being implanted in a womb and brought to term it is used to generate stem cells. . . . The purpose of using clonal embryos to generate stem cells is to allow creation of tissues or organs that the clonal donor can use without having these tissues or organs rejected by their body's immune system. Most people oppose reproductive cloning. Some people oppose reproductive cloning but support therapeutic cloning. Others oppose therapeutic cloning as well as reproductive cloning, either because they are opposed to the destruction of embryos as a matter of principle, or because they feel the acceptance of therapeutic cloning will set us on a slippery slope to the acceptance of reproductive cloning and human genetic manipulation. It is possible to support stem cell research and still oppose research involving therapeutic cloning. Bibliography Card: / Which note card is properly formatted and labeled?
B
Analyze the bibliography card and answer the question that follows. / Which note card is properly formatted and labeled?
D
Which of the following is possible when using the cybercard method of note-taking? I. highlighting and taking notes directly on a webpage II. organizing information collected with tags III. searching your collection of notes, tags, and webpages
I, II, and III
What should you record on a bibliographic card if you're using the index-card organizational system?
MLA bibliographic info
The purpose of a bibliographic card in the index-card method of note-taking is to record __________.
MLA-style source information
Read the selection below from The Reader's Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction by Joyce G. Saricks and complete the instruction that follows. Imagine almost any Alfred Hitchcock film that you have enjoyed, and you understand the pull of Psychological Suspense. These are books that play with our minds, that create frisson of unease, that blend the creepiness generated by the Horror genre with the tension inherent in Suspense. These are stories that attract a range of readers—and filmmakers—and fit uneasily in any related genre into which we try to slot them. Title: The Reader's Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction Author: Joyce G. Saricks City of publication: Chicago Publisher: American Library Association Copyright date: 2001 Page number: 186 Create a bibliographic card and a matching note card for the above passage.
Source #1: Saricks, Joyce G. The Reader's Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction. Chicago: American Library Association, 2001. 186. Print. Note card: Source #1: Psychological Suspense Definition Text: "These are stories that attract a range of readers—and filmmakers—and fit uneasily in any related genre into which we try to slot them."
If you wanted to create an annotated bibliography, what would you need to do?
You need to find a potential source. You will summarize it, evaluate it and reflect on it.
When keeping track of source information during the research process, what pieces of information should you record?
You should record the author, the title of the piece, publication, website, publisher, date and location published, date accessed, volume, issue, edition, and page number or URL.
Which phrase best describes a "research log"?
a day-by-day record of the research process
Which phrase best defines "annotated bibliography"?
a summary and evaluation of each potential source for a research project
How many ideas should be on each note card in the index-card method of note-taking?
one
Internet citation tools are useful because they __________.
organize your source information into proper MLA format
What should you record on a note card if you're using the index-card organizational system?
quotation, paraphrase, summary
The purpose of a note card in the index-card method of note-taking is to record __________.
quotations, paraphrases, summaries, and personal comments
A key difference between the annotated bibliography and the works cited page is that the annotated bibliography __________ each source.
summarizes, assess, and reflects on
Analyze the note cards below and answer the question that follows. / / What should be entered in the box at the upper right-hand corner of the note card?
the number one
Based on the MLA style guide, what do you need to submit with a research paper?
works cited page
Analyze the note cards below and answer the question that follows. / / Which piece of data best fits in the body of the note card above?
"Cloning is an asexual form of reproduction. All the child's genes would come from a body cell of a single individual . . . ."
Read the selection below from The Reader's Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction by Joyce G. Saricks and complete the instruction that follows. Imagine almost any Alfred Hitchcock film that you have enjoyed, and you understand the pull of Psychological Suspense. These are books that play with our minds, that create frisson of unease, that blend the creepiness generated by the Horror genre with the tension inherent in Suspense. These are stories that attract a range of readers—and filmmakers—and fit uneasily in any related genre into which we try to slot them. Title: The Reader's Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction Author: Joyce G. Saricks City of publication: Chicago Publisher: American Library Association Copyright date: 2001 Page number: 186 Create an entry for an annotated bibliography for the above passage.
#1 Saricks, Joyce G. The Reader's Advisory Guide to Genre Fiction. Chicago: American Library Association, 2001. 186. Print.