research writing ms. garcia ms. wile 6 th grade language arts

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Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

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Page 1: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Research WritingMs. GarciaMs. Wile6th Grade Language Arts

Page 2: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Introduction Do you remember the last time you wanted

to learn more about a topic that interested you? Where did you look for information?

There are lots of different resources for information. A resource is any type of material that contains information or helps you find it.

When you use these resources to find out information, you are doing RESEARCH!

Page 3: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Research Writing Tips In the next few slides, you will find some

tips that will help you write your very own research paper.

Page 4: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Tip 1: Library Reference Materials Almanac-Contains up-to-date facts about all

kinds of topics. Example: Names of people inducted into the

baseball hall of fame. Atlas-A book of maps.

Example: Use an atlas to find bodies of water. Encyclopedia-Contains facts and information

about a wide variety of subjects. Example: The digestive system.

Page 5: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Tip 1: Library Reference Materials Newspaper-Contains current news.

Example-Information on weather and sports. Anthology-Contains articles or stories by

one author or on one subject. Example: The Cat Anthology.

Journal-Contains articles or stories about a certain topic. Example: Contains articles or stories about

health and fitness.

Page 6: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Tip 2: Search Engines If you plan to use the internet for

research, one tool you’ll need is a search engine.

A search engine is a program that collects information from Web sites all over the internet and stores that information. Example: Google and Yahoo.

Page 7: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Tip 3: Primary or Secondary Source? Primary sources are direct sources. As

a rule, a primary source was somehow directly involved in the event or the issue you are researching. Example: A letter written by a soldier to

his wife during the Civil War. Secondary sources are indirect.

Example: A history book describing the important battles of the Civil War is a secondary source of information.

Page 8: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Practice-Primary or Secondary? An encyclopedia entry for New Zealand

______ A chapter in a history book about native

tribes in New Zealand ______ A letter written by a New Zealand

woman to a soldier fighting in war ______ An internet website that gives a brief

history of New Zealand ______

Page 9: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Tip 4: Decide whether sources are accurate and credible Inaccurate and unreliable information can

destroy a research report. Who is going to believe the writer?

Here are some questions to ask yourself to determine the value of your resources: Where was the information found? What is the authors purpose? What makes the author an expert? Where does the author get his or her

information?

Page 10: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Tip 5: Doing Research When you start getting information from

a resource, don’t just copy over whatever the source says about your topic. That is considered PLAGIARISM!

Try paraphrasing or summarizing the resource instead.

Page 11: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Examples Original Text (From a definition of color blindness)

Visual defect resulting in the inability to distinguish colors. About 8% of men and 0.5% of women experience some difficulty in color perception. Color blindness is usually an inherited sex-linked characteristic, transmitted through, but recessive in, females. Acquired color blindness results from certain degenerative diseases of the eyes. Most of those with defective color vision are only partially color-blind to red and green, i.e., they have a limited ability to distinguish reddish and greenish shades. Those who are completely color-blind to red and green see both colors as a shade of yellow. Completely color-blind individuals can recognize only black, white, and shades of gray. (Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.)

Page 12: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Examples Paraphrase: Color blindness, affecting

approximately 8% of men and .5% of women, is a condition characterized by difficulty in telling one color from another, most often hereditary but in some cases caused by disease. The majority of color-blind people cannot distinguish some shades of red and green, but those who cannot perceive those colors at all see red and green objects as yellow. There are people who cannot see color at all and perceive all objects in a range of black through gray to white. (Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.)

Page 13: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Examples Summary: Color blindness, usually a

sex-linked hereditary condition found more often in men than women and sometimes the result of eye disease, involves limited ability to tell red from green, and sometimes complete inability to see red and green. In a much rarer form of color blindness, the individual sees no colors at all.

Page 14: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Examples Quotation, Integrated: Color blindness is a

"visual defect resulting in the inability to distinguish colors" (Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.). Most often it is a hereditary condition that involves only some shades of red and green, but people with complete red-green color blindness see yellow instead, and some people have no color perception at all. (Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.).

Page 15: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

PracticeOriginal Text: The term cloning describes a number of different processes that can be used to produce genetically identical copies of a biological entity. The copied material, which has the same genetic makeup as the original, is referred to as a clone. (http://www.genome.gov/25020028)

Page 16: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

Tip 5: Doing Research When you want to quote what an author says

about a topic, put the words you are quoting into quotation marks. That way, the reader will know that the words are not your own.

Also, it is important to make clear who you are quoting. You can’t just borrow the words without giving proper credit. Example: In his book Sharks Alive!, author Saj

Shimshak describe what it’s like: “Even when you are safe in a cage, it can be frightening to stare at a shark in the face.”

Page 17: Research Writing Ms. Garcia Ms. Wile 6 th Grade Language Arts

APA Resource http://psychology.vanguard.edu/faculty/

douglas-degelman/apa-style/#title