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Research: Freshmen Introduction OPEN Non Periodical Web Sources Please: 1. Sit at a rectangular table where there are 2 papers. 2. Write your name and.

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Presentation on theme: "Research: Freshmen Introduction OPEN Non Periodical Web Sources Please: 1. Sit at a rectangular table where there are 2 papers. 2. Write your name and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Research: Freshmen Introduction OPEN Non Periodical Web Sources Please: 1. Sit at a rectangular table where there are 2 papers. 2. Write your name and etc. on the papers. 3. Write your famous person’s name on 2 of the papers – be sure to spell the name correctly. Remember: - Do not move chairs between tables. - Four per table maximum in the library.

2 Today’s Agenda: 1.Research needed facts. 2.Document (cite) sources (each website) for your paper correctly. 3.Save a document to your W drive (which is your on-campus folder) and your Gmail or email. 4.Find 1 reliable open website.

3 Please complete on your Lesson Worksheet: Day 1 of 4 Name ________ Teacher ________ period __ (write your regular English Teacher’s name above) Freshmen Library Research Week – Day 1 of 4... pop icon ________________. (write here the name of your person you chose yesterday) When it is time to gaze Please read silently as it is read aloud.

4 A. What is MLA? 1. MLA means Modern Language Association. 2. The “rule book” or style manual for writing papers for English and other classes.

5 Works Cited is the MLA term for the last page in a research paper with the list of all sources used. Other styles call the Works Cited page the Bibliography. Example double spaced: Works Cited Hall, Bernice. Science of Food. Atlanta: Smith Publishing, 2002. Lucas, Edward. “Healthy Snacks.” Health 16 July 2001: 51-60. Murphy, Chris. Popcorn: A Healthy Alternative. Chicago: Merrill 2000.

6 What are Parenthetical Notes? Parenthetical notes: a word or words in parentheses at the end of a sentence in a paper showing the source of information. Example: “Allyson Michelle Felix (born November 18, 1985) is a track and field sprint athlete, who competes internationally for the United States” (Wikipedia Contributors).

7 What is PLAGIARISM? Plagiarism is stealing. If you use someone else’s work and do not give credit, you are plagiarizing. Information printed or copied from a web or print source is not your work. You must give credit to the source in your paper.

8 B. What are Reliable Websites? Sites that have a good domain, are current, and have reputable person(s) responsible for it.

9 What are Good Website Domains?.edu (created at a college or university).gov (created by an official U.S. federal agency or office)

10 Which Domains Vary?.org for organization: good site if good organization.com (commercial) for profit: good only if it is official or a personal website

11 C. How do I find a Good Reliable Open Website?

12 1. When internet searching in the EHS library, Use Chrome NOT Explorer 

13 2. Look for links from websites such as Wikipedia – a site approved by your teacher and the English Department. Always make sure that Wikipedia is approved by your teacher before using it.

14 3. Find the facts you need. If the website does not have the facts you need, find another website.

15 4. Scan the website for reliability: check for copyright date next to the c with a circle around it.

16 5. If your article is reliable, and it has the facts you need, then fill in the Works Cited information by searching the beginning, end, top, bottom if it does not give you the MLA style. Demonstration: Wikipedia External Links list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allyson_Felix Whole class activity: Fill in MLA boxes with Allyson Felix article info.

17 Allyson Felix Example Copy Works Cited from Tools menu http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allyson_Felix

18 Guided Practice: Using the Freshman Web Research Worksheet, do questions 1 (& 2 if time), researching from 1 website from Wikipedia External Links list

19 - Click on Chrome, google Wikipedia.org, find your famous person’s wiki page; then find External Links at the bottom of the page. - From the External Links list, research websites in order from the top of the External Links list to find your facts. - Use Wikipedia’s External Links list only. Do NOT get your information from Wikipedia yet – later you will use the facts on the Wikipedia page for the last questions; now use a website on the External links list.


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