Editor, author, or compiler name (if available). Name of Site. Title of article. Name of institution/organization, date posted, Medium of publication. Date you got it from the website. Link.
If you are missing any of this- skip it!
Example:
Cooper, Anderson. CNN. CNN World News Organization. "Hurricanes from Around the Globe." Posted Aug. 12, 2001. Online Article. Retrieved Dec. 9th, 2013. http:/www.cnn.%2867.com/sdslk
A place for English and Reading students to write, post, and comment on ideas, art, and literature previously discussed in class. "The one and only substitute for experiences we have not yet had is art and literature." ~Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Thursday, December 5, 2013
HELP WITH YOUR SOURCE PAGE
Try The Purdue Owl! This site is SO INFORMATIVE when it comes to formatting your Works Cited Page.
1.) MLA citation Basics
2.) How to cite a book
3.) How to cite an Internet source
4.) How to cite a periodical
5.) How to cite other common sources
ALSO feel free to use Son Of Citation Machine. This source actually forms the citation for you. Fill in all of the blanks and copy and paste it into your paper. Simple and Easy. Why re-invent the wheel?
1.) MLA citation Basics
2.) How to cite a book
3.) How to cite an Internet source
4.) How to cite a periodical
5.) How to cite other common sources
ALSO feel free to use Son Of Citation Machine. This source actually forms the citation for you. Fill in all of the blanks and copy and paste it into your paper. Simple and Easy. Why re-invent the wheel?
How to create an EASY Works Cited Page!
www.easybib.com
Try it out- you insert the web address and the site actually creates the citation for you! (Sigh.). Where was this when I was a kid?
Ted Ed Video
Yesterday we watched a video to remind you of why not to plagiarise. A mistake like this results in a zero- so BEWARE :) When using other people's information- simply tell us where you got it!
Click on the link below, then answer the 7 questions that pop up. Do this on your own paper.
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-punishable-perils-of-plagiarism-melissa-huseman-d-annunzio#watch
Click on the link below, then answer the 7 questions that pop up. Do this on your own paper.
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-punishable-perils-of-plagiarism-melissa-huseman-d-annunzio#watch
How to Cite Properly
All of the information in your book should be FACTS found from CREDIBLE SOURCES.
After you have put the research IN YOUR OWN WORDS or in "quotations," you need to tell where that information came from. The way we do this is by adding a parenthetical (which means in parentheses) reference.
---------
The cat is a very vocal animal. Known for its trademark purring, it also produces a wide variety of other sounds.
The mechanism by which cats purr is elusive. The cat has no unique anatomical feature that is clearly responsible for the sound. It was, until recent times, believed that only the cats of the Felis genus could purr. However, felids of the panthera genus (tiger, lion, jaguar, and leopard) also produce sounds similar to purring, but only when exhaling.
from http://www.panthera.org/
---------
If you know anything about cats, you've heard them purr. Purring is a noise that cats of all shapes and sizes make. No one really knows where the cat purr comes from, but only animals that are members of the cat family make this "trademark" sound. From small kittens to the biggest of cats (like lions and tigers) purr when they seem happy (Panthera).
----
For a website, I needed to find the title of the page, the author, the date I retrieved it, and the exact website. After finding all this information, I went to http://easybib.com/ and entered the website and all the information it asked for. REMEMBER- IF THERE IS INFORMATION MISSING FROM THE CITATION, YOU SHOULD STILL CREATE IT WITH WHAT YOU DO HAVE!!!! The website created the citation below.
"Panthera." Panthera. N.p., n.d. Web. 05 Dec. 2013.
...That's why my parenthetical reference said (Panthera).
Remember- do not plagiarise. It is VERY easy to catch and will result in a zero for your entire book!
After you have put the research IN YOUR OWN WORDS or in "quotations," you need to tell where that information came from. The way we do this is by adding a parenthetical (which means in parentheses) reference.
Here's what you probably have now:
(Someone else's Research and the website you got it from)---------
The cat is a very vocal animal. Known for its trademark purring, it also produces a wide variety of other sounds.
The mechanism by which cats purr is elusive. The cat has no unique anatomical feature that is clearly responsible for the sound. It was, until recent times, believed that only the cats of the Felis genus could purr. However, felids of the panthera genus (tiger, lion, jaguar, and leopard) also produce sounds similar to purring, but only when exhaling.
from http://www.panthera.org/
---------
Here's what it SHOULD look like:
(Put the information you got in your own words {this is called paraphrasing} or "quote" some of the information. Use the author's last name to indicate where to find it in your alphabetical Works Cited page)If you know anything about cats, you've heard them purr. Purring is a noise that cats of all shapes and sizes make. No one really knows where the cat purr comes from, but only animals that are members of the cat family make this "trademark" sound. From small kittens to the biggest of cats (like lions and tigers) purr when they seem happy (Panthera).
----
Meanwhile...on my Works Cited page:
I went back to my source- www.panthera.org/ and I looked for all the information I needed for my citation.For a website, I needed to find the title of the page, the author, the date I retrieved it, and the exact website. After finding all this information, I went to http://easybib.com/ and entered the website and all the information it asked for. REMEMBER- IF THERE IS INFORMATION MISSING FROM THE CITATION, YOU SHOULD STILL CREATE IT WITH WHAT YOU DO HAVE!!!! The website created the citation below.
"Panthera." Panthera. N.p., n.d. Web. 05 Dec. 2013.
...That's why my parenthetical reference said (Panthera).
Every bit of information in your book comes from somewhere else- not you. So you need to cite everything!
Remember- do not plagiarise. It is VERY easy to catch and will result in a zero for your entire book!
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
INTERNET SOURCES
What does this quote mean and how is it related to choosing credible sources for your book?
RELIABLE SOURCES?
DIRECTIONS: Click
on each link. Using your notes, determine whether or not each source is
reliable. Write your answers on a piece of paper. Explain why you chose the answer that you did.
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