Have your:
I.D. Card Note Card directions Note cards W.O.D. sheet completed (if you
turned it in, please see me for your words)
You have ten minutes to:
Turn in pre-writing you missed Underline the italics that you missed
(show me but keep your work) When you come up to me, be in a
neat line If you are all set, start working on
your notecards
Word of the day review
http://www.visualthesaurus.com/
Review note card process
Write title Write publisher or author Paraphrase fact Write name Write number
To complete cards
Have all 7 categories filled Special cases: Biographical facts: 4 note cards
Birth Death How they died Where they lived
Poetic themes-style Reoccurring subject matter-person, place
or thing
Poetic theme and Reoccurring subject matter
http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/themes.do
Poetic theme: Message in the poems Reoccurring subject matter Things poet constantly talks
about
Examples of literary time periods 1500-1660- The Renaissance 1660-1800-Enlightenment 1785-1830 Romantic 1832-1901 Victorian 1901-1914 Edwardian 1914-1945 Modern 1945-1970 Post Modern 1970-now-contemporary
Process check
Step 1: Finish 8 cards by today Step 2: Finish 16 cards by the end of
Friday Step 3: Finish I.D. card by Monday Step 4: Bibliography by Tuesday
How to write a bibliography
Two types: Book Online Use information on cards Might have to use computer at home If don’t have computer, come in at
lunch
What you need in your Bibliography
One citation of a book Two citations of an online source Must have all the sources listed in
your note cards
Format of Bibliography Title it Bibliography and center it Single Spaced Write citations Indent the second, third etc. lines for each
citation Alphabetized by first word in each citation Capitalize all nouns in titles etc Space in between each citation
How to write a citation for a book
Encyclopedia citation Author’s Last name, First name. Title of section in “Quotations”. Title of Book Underlined Date of publication Periods between each section of citation Ex. Posner, Rebecca. ”Romance
Languages.” The New Encyclopedia Brtannica:Macropaedia. 1987.
Regular book citation Author’s last name, first name. Title of book (underlined or italics). City of Publication colon Publisher, Date of publication Periods between each Ex. Tan, Amy. The Bonesetter’s
Daughter. New York: Putnam, 2001.
Online citation… tricky Author’s last name, first name. Title of article in “quotations.” Website name underlined. Date accessed information day, Month year Address between <>. Periods at the end of each section Except
last section! Ex. Shiva, Vandana. “Bioethics: A Third
World Issue.” Native Web. 15 Sept. 2001<http://www.nativeweb.org/pages/legal/siva.html>.
Review:
Encyclopedia example: Franklin, Jane. “Emily Bronte.” The
New Encyclopedia of British Poets. 2005.
Regular book: Gustovic, Jeniana. A Life of Solitude:
Emily Bronte. New York: 2003.
Review: Online sources Tomlinson, Patrick. “Emily Bronte.” Poets
of Great Britain. 13 April 2010. <http://www.poetsofgreatbritain.edu/emily-bronte/biographyinfo.html>.
If no author, start with title: “Emily Bronte’s Poetry.”Poetic History
Federation. 13 April 2010. < http://www.poetichistory.org/emily-bronte/poet.info.html>.
Your turn
Take ten minutes to use the information on the direction sheet to write your own citations
Check with a neighbor
AnswersBibliography
Baker, Terri.“Emily Bronte.”Encyclopaedia of Literature 10 April 2010<http://www.encyclopaediaofliterature.com/poet/emily-bronte/life-of-poet.html.
Jones, Jane. Wonderful World of Poetry. New York:Forman Center Inc.:2008.
Kingston, Konni. “A Biography of a Poet.”Poetry is Cool. 12 April 2010 <http://www.poetryiscool.org/biography-poet.html>.