Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Feb 28 - Mar 2 ... Calendar Update and Rough Draft Workdays


  • ROUGH DRAFTS must be submitted to me/shared with me electronically by midnight on Friday, March 2.  I will still accept them after that and you should still turn it in, but they will be subject to a late penalty in accordance with the grading policy.

  • FINAL DRAFTS .. we will be in the computer lab (A102) on 3/8 to print our FINAL DRAFTS!  You must turn in a printed copy in addition to the electronic copy you've already shared with me (the rough draft, prior to editing).

Monday, February 26, 2018

February 26 ... Updated Research Calendar - R/D due 2/28 ... F/D due 3/8



Research Paper Calendar ... the rest of the way ...

  • 2/26 - 2/27 ... Work on Rough Drafts (I will be out for a teacher workshop on 2/21)
  • 2/28 ... Rough Draft DUE / Submit an electronic copy of your Rough Draft (QUIZ)
  • 3/1 ... Peer Editing Activities (DAILY)
  • 3/2 - 3/8 ... Work on your Final Draft (Class in lab A202 on 3/6 and 3/7 to begin printing Final Drafts)
  • 3/8 ... FINAL DRAFTS DUE (Classes will meet in Library Lab A202 to print on 3/7) / Students MUST turn in a printed copy AND submit or share an online copy as well (2x MAJOR GRADE FOR FINAL DRAFT)


Info on Parenthetical Citations to review ...

http://www.easybib.com/guides/citation-guides/mla-format/how-to-cite-a-parenthetical-citations-mla/

https://www.ccis.edu/~/media/Files/Academic%20Resources/Writing%20Center/mla_examples.pdf


You can find MLA sample argument papers here to ensure you are on the right track with yours - or see me and we can go over what you have: MLA Sample Argument Papers

You may also want to look at the standard outline for an argument paper as you consider how to structure your paper: Argument Paper - Sample Outline


WORKS CITED INFO ... ONCE YOU HAVE COMPLETED YOUR WORKS CITED PAGE IN WORD ONLINE, BE SURE TO SHARE IT WITH ME - richard.davis@sfisd.org

  • Works Cited Page
    • 8 QUICK RULES FOR YOUR WC PAGE
    • Start a new page for your Works Cited list (e.g., if your paper is 4 pages long, start your Works Cited list on page 5).
    • Center the title, Works Cited, at the top of the page and do not bold or underline it. Use 12 point Times New Roman in both the title and the entries.
    • Double-space the list.
    • Start the first line of each citation at the left margin; indent each subsequent line five spaces (also known as a "hanging indent").
    • Put your list in alphabetical order. Alphabetize the list by the first word in the citation. In most cases, the first word will be the author’s last name. Where the author is unknown, alphabetize by the first word in the title, ignoring the words a, an, the.
    • For each author, give the last name followed by a comma and the first name followed by a period.
    • Italicize the titles of full works: books, audiovisual material,websites.
    • Do not italicize titles of parts of works, such as: articles from newspapers, magazines, or journals / essays, poems, short stories or chapter titles from a book / chapters or sections of an Internet document. Instead, use quotation marks.
  • Sample of what a Works Cited page should look like - https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/12/
  • The information you need for each citation is at the end of each source from the Gale database.  You can copy and paste the MLA Citation from there - but you may have to adjust the formatting (size, font, etc.) to make sure it is within MLA rules.

ARGUMENT THESIS STATEMENT INFO ... 


  • As you work, it is time to begin considering what your thesis statement will be.  Read over the following website if you need some assistance developing your thesis statement.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

February 20-23 ... Works Cited, Outline Example, and Writing the Rough Draft




Today you need to finish your Works Cited page and, hopefully, begin writing your rough draft.  Before you begin drafting, take a look at at least one of the MLA Sample Argument Papers at the link here: MLA Sample Argument Papers

You may also want to look at the standard outline for an argument paper as you consider how to structure your paper: Argument Paper - Sample Outline


WORKS CITED INFO ... ONCE YOU HAVE COMPLETED YOUR WORKS CITED PAGE IN WORD ONLINE, BE SURE TO SHARE IT WITH ME - richard.davis@sfisd.org

  • Works Cited Page
    • 8 QUICK RULES FOR YOUR WC PAGE
    • Start a new page for your Works Cited list (e.g., if your paper is 4 pages long, start your Works Cited list on page 5).
    • Center the title, Works Cited, at the top of the page and do not bold or underline it. Use 12 point Times New Roman in both the title and the entries.
    • Double-space the list.
    • Start the first line of each citation at the left margin; indent each subsequent line five spaces (also known as a "hanging indent").
    • Put your list in alphabetical order. Alphabetize the list by the first word in the citation. In most cases, the first word will be the author’s last name. Where the author is unknown, alphabetize by the first word in the title, ignoring the words a, an, the.
    • For each author, give the last name followed by a comma and the first name followed by a period.
    • Italicize the titles of full works: books, audiovisual material,websites.
    • Do not italicize titles of parts of works, such as: articles from newspapers, magazines, or journals / essays, poems, short stories or chapter titles from a book / chapters or sections of an Internet document. Instead, use quotation marks.
  • Sample of what a Works Cited page should look like - https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/12/
  • The information you need for each citation is at the end of each source from the Gale database.  You can copy and paste the MLA Citation from there - but you may have to adjust the formatting (size, font, etc.) to make sure it is within MLA rules.

ARGUMENT THESIS STATEMENT INFO ... 


  • As you work, it is time to begin considering what your thesis statement will be.  Read over the following website if you need some assistance developing your thesis statement.

REMINDERS ABOUT DUE DATES ...

Keep our updated dates in mind as you work ... it seems like a LOT of time ... but if wasted, it won't be.  Also, keep in mind that I am here to help you in this process ... but I am not a mind reader.  I can't tell the difference between someone who is working on something else because they are finished from someone who is working on something else because they aren't planning to do this assignment from someone who is working on something else because they "don't know what to do."  You're all adults (or close) ... so I expect that you will communicate questions or issues clearly.


  • 2/12 - 2/16 ... Analyze Sources and Highlight Notes
  • 2/19 ... STUDENT HOLIDAY
  • 2/20 ... Sources and Highlighted Notes DUE (MAJOR) - all work must be in your envelope and turned in to the crates in the classroom.
    • Works Cited Page - In Class (QUIZ) ***Papers MUST have a Works Cited page or they will be penalized as plagiarism*** and review parenthetical documentation
  • 2/21 ... Review options for paper organization - begin working on Rough Draft.
  • 2/21 - 2/27 ... Work on Rough Drafts (I will be out for a teacher workshop on 2/21)
  • 2/27 ... Rough Draft DUE / Submit an electronic copy of your Rough Draft (QUIZ)
  • 2/28 ... Peer Editing Activities (DAILY)
  • 3/1 ... Self-Editing and Revisions Activity (DAILY)
  • 3/2 - 3/6 ... Work on your Final Draft (Class in lab A202 on 3/6 to begin printing Final Drafts)
  • 3/7 ... FINAL DRAFTS DUE (Classes will meet in Library Lab A202 to print) / Students MUST turn in a printed copy AND submit or share an online copy as well (2x MAJOR GRADE FOR FINAL DRAFT)
***Any date that does not have a grade specifically attached to it may have a participation grade assessed.  Students are expected to use class time on the assignments as noted to stay on schedule - students who are wasting time, talking, sleeping, daydreaming, playing on their phones, etc. will lose points on participation grades.***

***Students who have not completed a major phase of the paper will not be allowed to continue to the next step until the previous major step is completed.  You cannot write a rough draft without research.  You cannot produce a final draft without first writing a rough draft.***

***Late assignments will be penalized per the grading policy regardless of the type of grade attached.  Assignments will be accepted up to three days late with a 30 point penalty.  Assignments will be accepted beyond that at the teacher's discretion and will be penalized 50 points.***

Thursday, February 15, 2018

February 15 ... Working with sources (and some Works Cited page information)




You have today and tomorrow in class to finish working with your source material - remember sources are due, with highlighted notes, on Tuesday 2/20.  Keep in mind your sources and notes are a major grade - whatever is in your envelope will be graded.

Yesterday we included some info on argument thesis statements for those of you ready to start moving forward (that information is copied on down the page here as well).

WORKS CITED INFO ...

  • Works Cited Page
    • 8 QUICK RULES FOR YOUR WC PAGE
      • Start a new page for your Works Cited list (e.g., if your paper is 4 pages long, start your Works Cited list on page 5).
      • Center the title, Works Cited, at the top of the page and do not bold or underline it. Use 12 point Times New Roman in both the title and the entries.
      • Double-space the list.
      • Start the first line of each citation at the left margin; indent each subsequent line five spaces (also known as a "hanging indent").
      • Put your list in alphabetical order. Alphabetize the list by the first word in the citation. In most cases, the first word will be the author’s last name. Where the author is unknown, alphabetize by the first word in the title, ignoring the words a, an, the.
      • For each author, give the last name followed by a comma and the first name followed by a period.
      • Italicize the titles of full works: books, audiovisual material,websites.
      • Do not italicize titles of parts of works, such as: articles from newspapers, magazines, or journals / essays, poems, short stories or chapter titles from a book / chapters or sections of an Internet document. Instead, use quotation marks.
  • Sample of what a Works Cited page should look like - https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/12/
  • The information you need for each citation is at the end of each source from the Gale database.  You can copy and paste the MLA Citation from there - but you may have to adjust the formatting (size, font, etc.) to make sure it is within MLA rules.

ARGUMENT THESIS STATEMENT INFO ... 
  • As you work, it is time to begin considering what your thesis statement will be.  Read over the following website if you need some assistance developing your thesis statement.

REMINDERS ABOUT DUE DATES ...

Keep our updated dates in mind as you work ... it seems like a LOT of time ... but if wasted, it won't be.  Also, keep in mind that I am here to help you in this process ... but I am not a mind reader.  I can't tell the difference between someone who is working on something else because they are finished from someone who is working on something else because they aren't planning to do this assignment from someone who is working on something else because they "don't know what to do."  You're all adults (or close) ... so I expect that you will communicate questions or issues clearly.


  • 2/12 - 2/16 ... Analyze Sources and Highlight Notes
  • 2/19 ... STUDENT HOLIDAY
  • 2/20 ... Sources and Highlighted Notes DUE (MAJOR) - all work must be in your envelope and turned in to the crates in the classroom.
    • Works Cited Page - In Class (QUIZ) ***Papers MUST have a Works Cited page or they will be penalized as plagiarism*** and review parenthetical documentation
  • 2/21 ... Review options for paper organization - begin working on Rough Draft.
  • 2/21 - 2/27 ... Work on Rough Drafts (I will be out for a teacher workshop on 2/21)
  • 2/27 ... Rough Draft DUE / Submit an electronic copy of your Rough Draft (QUIZ)
  • 2/28 ... Peer Editing Activities (DAILY)
  • 3/1 ... Self-Editing and Revisions Activity (DAILY)
  • 3/2 - 3/6 ... Work on your Final Draft (Class in lab A202 on 3/6 to begin printing Final Drafts)
  • 3/7 ... FINAL DRAFTS DUE (Classes will meet in Library Lab A202 to print) / Students MUST turn in a printed copy AND submit or share an online copy as well (2x MAJOR GRADE FOR FINAL DRAFT)
***Any date that does not have a grade specifically attached to it may have a participation grade assessed.  Students are expected to use class time on the assignments as noted to stay on schedule - students who are wasting time, talking, sleeping, daydreaming, playing on their phones, etc. will lose points on participation grades.***

***Students who have not completed a major phase of the paper will not be allowed to continue to the next step until the previous major step is completed.  You cannot write a rough draft without research.  You cannot produce a final draft without first writing a rough draft.***

***Late assignments will be penalized per the grading policy regardless of the type of grade attached.  Assignments will be accepted up to three days late with a 30 point penalty.  Assignments will be accepted beyond that at the teacher's discretion and will be penalized 50 points.***

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

February 14 ... Continuing our Research Analysis


  • Continue reading, analyzing, and highlighting your notes within your sources.  Remember that all sources should be highlighted/noted .. but you do not have to continue counting notes past 65 for the A level paper.

  • As you work, it is time to begin considering what your thesis statement will be.  Read over the following website if you need some assistance developing your thesis statement.

Keep our updated dates in mind as you work ... it seems like a LOT of time ... but if wasted, it won't be.  Also, keep in mind that I am here to help you in this process ... but I am not a mind reader.  I can't tell the difference between someone who is working on something else because they are finished from someone who is working on something else because they aren't planning to do this assignment from someone who is working on something else because they "don't know what to do."  You're all adults (or close) ... so I expect that you will communicate questions or issues clearly.


  • 2/12 - 2/16 ... Analyze Sources and Highlight Notes
  • 2/19 ... STUDENT HOLIDAY
  • 2/20 ... Sources and Highlighted Notes DUE (MAJOR) - all work must be in your envelope and turned in to the crates in the classroom.
    • Works Cited Page - In Class (QUIZ) ***Papers MUST have a Works Cited page or they will be penalized as plagiarism*** and review parenthetical documentation
  • 2/21 ... Review options for paper organization - begin working on Rough Draft.
  • 2/21 - 2/27 ... Work on Rough Drafts (I will be out for a teacher workshop on 2/21)
  • 2/27 ... Rough Draft DUE / Submit an electronic copy of your Rough Draft (QUIZ)
  • 2/28 ... Peer Editing Activities (DAILY)
  • 3/1 ... Self-Editing and Revisions Activity (DAILY)
  • 3/2 - 3/6 ... Work on your Final Draft (Class in lab A202 on 3/6 to begin printing Final Drafts)
  • 3/7 ... FINAL DRAFTS DUE (Classes will meet in Library Lab A202 to print) / Students MUST turn in a printed copy AND submit or share an online copy as well (2x MAJOR GRADE FOR FINAL DRAFT)
***Any date that does not have a grade specifically attached to it may have a participation grade assessed.  Students are expected to use class time on the assignments as noted to stay on schedule - students who are wasting time, talking, sleeping, daydreaming, playing on their phones, etc. will lose points on participation grades.***

***Students who have not completed a major phase of the paper will not be allowed to continue to the next step until the previous major step is completed.  You cannot write a rough draft without research.  You cannot produce a final draft without first writing a rough draft.***

***Late assignments will be penalized per the grading policy regardless of the type of grade attached.  Assignments will be accepted up to three days late with a 30 point penalty.  Assignments will be accepted beyond that at the teacher's discretion and will be penalized 50 points.***

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Spring Semester - Expectation Reminders

Per the faculty meeting last Thursday ... we need to increase our compliance (as teachers and students) with the following ...


  • No Fly List
  • Cellphones MUST be turned in before leaving the classroom for any reason
  • Do not allow students to leave early for lunch
  • Students need to be seated until the bell rings - not at the door or spilling into the hallways
  • Hall Passes - students are not allowed out of class for any reason without a pass

UPDATE TO IMPORTANT RESEARCH PAPER DATES!!!


Updated Dates for Research Paper.
  • 2/12 - 2/16 ... Analyze Sources and Highlight Notes
  • 2/19 ... STUDENT HOLIDAY
  • 2/20 ... Sources and Highlighted Notes DUE (MAJOR) - all work must be in your envelope and turned in to the crates in the classroom.
    • Works Cited Page - In Class (QUIZ) ***Papers MUST have a Works Cited page or they will be penalized as plagiarism*** and review parenthetical documentation
  • 2/21 ... Review options for paper organization - begin working on Rough Draft.
  • 2/21 - 2/27 ... Work on Rough Drafts (I will be out for a teacher workshop on 2/21)
  • 2/27 ... Rough Draft DUE / Submit an electronic copy of your Rough Draft (QUIZ)
  • 2/28 ... Peer Editing Activities (DAILY)
  • 3/1 ... Self-Editing and Revisions Activity (DAILY)
  • 3/2 - 3/6 ... Work on your Final Draft (Class in lab A202 on 3/6 to begin printing Final Drafts)
  • 3/7 ... FINAL DRAFTS DUE (Classes will meet in Library Lab A202 to print) / Students MUST turn in a printed copy AND submit or share an online copy as well (2x MAJOR GRADE FOR FINAL DRAFT)
***Any date that does not have a grade specifically attached to it may have a participation grade assessed.  Students are expected to use class time on the assignments as noted to stay on schedule - students who are wasting time, talking, sleeping, daydreaming, playing on their phones, etc. will lose points on participation grades.***

***Students who have not completed a major phase of the paper will not be allowed to continue to the next step until the previous major step is completed.  You cannot write a rough draft without research.  You cannot produce a final draft without first writing a rough draft.***

***Late assignments will be penalized per the grading policy regardless of the type of grade attached.  Assignments will be accepted up to three days late with a 30 point penalty.  Assignments will be accepted beyond that at the teacher's discretion and will be penalized 50 points.***

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

February 7, 8, and 9 ... Printing and Analyzing Research


  • Hopefully by now, you've gotten most of your sources identified and saved to your OneDrive.  Our purpose in being in the lab is to get them printed so we can begin highlighting our notes from each.

  • The picture below shows what your highlighted notes should look like - make sure your last name is at the top, number each source, and count up the total notes highlighted on each.  As you highlight, clearly mark in the left margin what your count is as you go.  Your notes should be numbered individually to the left and the total at the top of the first page.

  • Before you leave ... put your printed sources in your research envelope (they're on the desk - already labeled with your name, topic, and class period).  Turn in your envelope when you are finished and you can pick it back up at the beginning of class tomorrow.

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Research Paper - Research Journal and Brainstorming

These assignments were originally given when I was out with the flu last week - however, many students chose not to do them or were out sick as well.  I will still accept them UNTIL Friday - if you were absent on that date and are making up the work, it will be accepted for full credit ... if you chose not to do it when it was assigned, it will be subject to late penalties.  Regardless, it will not be accepted after Friday ...


1/30 - Research Journal (300-400 Words) - QUIZ GRADE


Tell me what you know about your research topic .. then discuss what you need to learn about your topic and about the research process in order to be successful with this paper. Why do you think research is important?



1/31 - Brainstorming / 10 Things - DAILY GRADE

Use the library database to begin casually researching their topics. The link is in several blog entries (including the blog from 2/5 & 2/6 outlining our research and finding sources.  You need to make a list of 10 things you learned about your topic through your preliminary research.



2/1 & 2/2 - MLA/Research Webquest

Copies of the webquest are available on the laptop cart - you can also find a copy online posted to the blog entry from those days.

RESEARCH PAPER ... IMPORTANT DATES



  • 1/24 - 1/26 ... Paper Intro/ Topic Review / Selection (DAILY)
  • 1/30 ... Research Journal / Proposal (QUIZ)
  • 1/31 ... Brainstorm (10 Things Activity) (DAILY)
  • 2/1 - 2/2 ... MLA / Research Webquest (DAILY)
  • 2/5 - 2/6 ... Search for Sources
  • 2/7 - 2/9 ... Search for and Print Sources (Classes will meet in Library Lab A202) / Begin highlighting and numbering notes within each source
  • 2/12 - 2/13 ... Analyze Sources and Highlight Notes
  • 2/14 ... Sources and Highlighted Notes DUE (MAJOR)
  • 2/15 ... Works Cited Page - In Class (QUIZ) ***Papers MUST have a Works Cited page or they will be penalized as plagiarism***
  • 2/16 ... Review options for paper organization - begin working on Rough Drafts
  • 2/19 ... STUDENT HOLIDAY
  • 2/20 - 2/22 ... Work on Rough Drafts
  • 2/23 ... Rough Draft DUE / Submit an electronic copy of your Rough Draft (QUIZ)
  • 2/26 - 2/27 ... Peer Editing Activities (DAILY)
  • 2/28 ... Self-Editing and Revisions Activity (DAILY)
  • 3/1 - 3/2 ... Work on your Final Draft
  • 3/5 ... FINAL DRAFTS DUE (Classes will meet in Library Lab A202 to print) / Students MUST turn in a printed copy AND submit or share an online copy as well (2x MAJOR GRADE FOR FINAL DRAFT)
***Any date that does not have a grade specifically attached to it may have a participation grade assessed.  Students are expected to use class time on the assignments as noted to stay on schedule - students who are wasting time, talking, sleeping, daydreaming, playing on their phones, etc. will lose points on participation grades.***

***Students who have not completed a major phase of the paper will not be allowed to continue to the next step until the previous major step is completed.  You cannot write a rough draft without research.  You cannot produce a final draft without first writing a rough draft.***

***Late assignments will be penalized per the grading policy regardless of the type of grade attached.  Assignments will be accepted up to three days late with a 30 point penalty.  Assignments will be accepted beyond that at the teacher's discretion and will be penalized 50 points.***


Monday, February 5, 2018

February 5 and 6 ... Finding Sources



  • Using the "Opposing Viewpoints in Context" database available through the library, begin finding sources for your reearch paper.
    • Keep in mind the requirements for each layer ... and plan to exceed them (meaning if you need 6-7 sources, set out to find 9-10).
    • Don't let the length of some sources deter you - short articles can contain a lot of information ... longer articles may take time to sort through, but you will have time to do so.
    • Printed sources and highlighted "notes" are due ... February 14 (Major Grade)
    • We will have access to the library lab (A202) to print sources from Wednesday 2/7 - Friday 2/9.
    • You will have time in class to highlight notes from the time you have them printed until the day they are due.


  • Or you can go to SFISD.org ... click on Students ... click on Destiny Library ... click on Santa Fe High School ... click on GALE Databases ... click on Opposing Viewpoints in Context 

  • Once you find an article that you feel confident that you will want to print, click "DOWNLOAD" under the Tools menu on the right and save it to your OneDrive. (Then when we have access to print, you'll only need to open your OneDrive up and print the saved articles - plus you will have copies saved when you need information from the articles for your paper/Works Cited page).

Thursday, February 1, 2018

February 1 and 2 ... Webquesting for MLA Form and Other Research Necessities


  • Answer the questions from the webquest on the copies provided to you in class ... however, to keep life simple, use the online text below to click on the links (rather than retype them).

  • You may work with a partner - but you will need your own copy of the information and will be responsible for all the information individually.  We will work on this in class today and tomorrow.


Name: ____________________                Period: __________       Date: ____________


You are going to embark on an online scavenger hunt. Your objective is to understand the rules of how to set up your papers, and how to cite resources properly. You will be searching for information on the Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL). You will work in the MLA portion of the website. The web URL is: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/.

Please fill in the blanks with the information found on the website. You will have to rely on your ability to navigate webpages, and to look for information under the appropriate headings. Today’s mission is primarily focused on two areas: MLA guidelines for paper set-up, and the proper MLA instructions for using research in your writing. This web quest will later serve as a valuable tool of reference for the research paper we will do in this course.

MLA Formatting and Style Guide
Go to General Format for the first two sections (https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/24/)

1. “________-space the _______ of your paper, and use a ____________ font (e.g. _________ _____
_______________).”
2. “The font size should be ____ pt.”
3. Leave only ____ space after __________ or other punctuation marks.”
4. Set the ____________ of your document to 1 inch on _____ sides.”
5. Create a __________ that _____________ all ___________ consecutively in the ________ _________ - __________
corner.”

Formatting the First Page of Your Paper
6. In the upper ______ - ________ corner of the first page, list ________ name, your ___________ name, the _______,
and the __________.”
7. “Double space again and _________ the ___________. Do not _______________, ______________, or place your title
in ____________ ____________.”
8. “Create a header in the upper right-hand corner that includes your _________ name, followed by a __________ with a
________ _____________.”

MLA In-Text Citations: The Basics
(https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/02/)
9. “Any source of information that you provide _____ - ________ must correspond to the source information on the
________ __________ ________.”
10. “In MLA style, referring to the _________ ____ _________ in your text is done by using what is known as
_________________ ______________.”

In-text Citations for Print Sources with Known Author
11. “For print sources like _________, ______________, scholarly _________ ___________, and ____________,
provide a signal word or phrase (usually the author’s _________ ________) and a page number.”

Citing Non-Print or Sources from the Internet
12. “Include in the text the ________ item that appears in the ________ ___________ entry that _________________ to
the ________________ (e.g. _________ name, ____________ name, _____________ name, ________ name).”


Works Cited Page how and why? Go to>>>http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/05/
13. Begin your Works Cited page on a _______________ page at the end of your research paper. It should have the same
one-inch margins and last name, page number header as the rest of your paper.
14. Label the page ____________________(do not underline the words Works Cited or put them in quotation marks)
and center the words Works Cited at the top of the page.
15. ___________ space all citations, but do not skip spaces between entries.
16. _______________ each word in the titles of articles, books, etc, but do not capitalize articles, short prepositions,
or conjunctions unless one is the first word of the title or subtitle: Gone with the Wind, The Art of War, There Is
Nothing Left to Lose
17. How do you cite books with one author?
18. How do you cite electronic resources?
19. What are the three ways of incorporating other writer’s work into your own writing? Q____________, p______________, and s__________________.
20. Take a quote or paraphrase from Purdue Owl’s website. Insert that quote or paraphrase below, and include an in-text citation. (Hint: The authors are listed as “contributors” in a yellow-shaded box at the top of Purdue’s page.)


Here are your questions:
21. What is plagiarism?
22. What is unacceptable paraphrasing?
23. What is acceptable paraphrasing?
24. What is common knowledge?
25. How do I detect plagiarism?
26. What, in your opinion, is the single best method of avoiding plagiarism?
27. When should the rules against plagiarizing be taught to students?