week6 ml arev

62
Last Week: Review Cause and Effect: The Ebola Virus The first case of the Ebola virus has been reported in the United States and people are panicking. If we over-react to this news, then we will create a climate of hysteria causing more problems than we solve.

Upload: susan-acampora

Post on 18-Dec-2014

66 views

Category:

Education


2 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Week6 ml arev

Last Week: Review

Cause and Effect: The Ebola Virus

The first case of the Ebola virus has been reported in the United States and people are panicking. If we over-react to this news, then we will create a climate of hysteria causing more problems than we solve.

Page 2: Week6 ml arev

Last Week: Review Compare and Contrast

The Italian political philosopher Niccolo Machiavelli, once stated that it is better for a leader to be feared than loved, if not both. (Machiavelli 30) Being feared is often equated with being respected. However, it takes trust to be loved. For a leader to be truly successful, he must be both.

Page 3: Week6 ml arev

Session 12: Working With MLA

Eng 216A Research and Information LiteracyProfessor Susan Acampora

Page 4: Week6 ml arev

ALERT

The following presentation covers established conventions of MLA citation style formatting 7th Ed. derived from your course text Lester and Lester, and other sources.

However, your instructor may have special requirements. Always check with your instructor regarding their requirements

Page 5: Week6 ml arev

MLA

Lester and Lester. Writing Research Papers: A Complete Guide. 15th Ed. 2012

CHAPTER 11: Blending Reference Material into your Writing by Using MLA Style

Page 6: Week6 ml arev

Be sure to check our course website Week 6:

http://libraryguides.cnr.edu/RILSA PW = RIL

for more information, links and videos on working with MLA

Page 8: Week6 ml arev

Why MLA?

Publication Manual of the Modern Language Association 7th Edition

Commonly used by freshman composition, literature, English usage, and foreign languages course.

Designed to organize and manage research in a manner recognizable to all in the field

In LTCA your final project will be a Literary Research paper.

Page 9: Week6 ml arev

The Basics

Use 8 ½ x 11 white paper Any font as long as the italics appear

clearly differentiated from the rest of the text

12 point times font All double spaced 1 inch margins ON ALL SIDES Paragraphs indented by Tab key 1 inch

from margin One space after period or other

punctuation mark

Page 10: Week6 ml arev

5 Areas to Remember

Header and Heading Title and First Page Sections of the Paper In-Text Citations Work’s Cited Page

Page 11: Week6 ml arev

The Header and Heading

Page 12: Week6 ml arev

Header

The header is placed on the upper right corner flush with the right margin, ½” from the top

The header includes your Last Name and # of page.

Page 13: Week6 ml arev

By Beth Jones and Gina Hurley in collaboration with the Purdue Owl

Page 14: Week6 ml arev

Heading

Heading is located on the upper left. Heading includes the following

double-spaced: Your Name Professor’s Name Course Date in Day/Month/Year format

Page 15: Week6 ml arev

Title and First Page

The title is to be centered. Using standard capitalization. DO

NOT CAPITALIZE THE WHOLE TITLE! Do Not Bold or Use Quotations on

Title Use a double space between the title

and the first line of text.

Page 16: Week6 ml arev

Excerpted from Video by Beth Jones and Gina Hurley in collaboration with the Purdue Owl

Page 17: Week6 ml arev

Sections within the paper

Page 18: Week6 ml arev

Sections within the paper

MLA recommends that when you divide an essay into sections that you number those sections with an arabic number and a period followed by a space and the section name. 1. Early Writings 2. The London Years 3. Traveling the Continent 4. Final Years

Purdue Owl: https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/01/

Page 19: Week6 ml arev

In-Text Citations

Page 20: Week6 ml arev

MLA In-Text Citations

include the author's (or authors') last name and the page number(s) following the quotation, paraphrase, idea, or fact you are citing.

Example"When his father told him that he was to go back to school again, Charles's eyes filled with tears of gratitude" (Hibbert 83).  From the Libguide by Peter

NerzakPellissippi State Community

College

Page 21: Week6 ml arev

You may also refer to the author's name in the text of your paper. In this case, only the page number is needed following at the end of the sentence.

ExampleAccording to Andrea Tone, President John F. Kennedy took up to eight medications a day to treat illness and stress (112). 

Page 22: Week6 ml arev

Works Cited

Hibbert, Christopher. Charles Dickens: The Making of a Literary Giant. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 1983. Print.

Tone, Andrea. The Age of Anxiety: A History of America's Turbulent Affair with Tranquilizers. New York: Basic Books, 2009. Print.

Page 23: Week6 ml arev

Citing two or more books by the same author:

Murray states that writing is "a process" that "varies with our thinking style" (Write to Learn 6).

Additionally, Murray argues that the purpose of writing is to "carry ideas and information from the mind of one person into the mind of another" (A Writer Teaches Writing 3).

Page 24: Week6 ml arev

The Works Cited Page

Page 25: Week6 ml arev

Works Cited Page

All references listed on a Works Cited page.

A separate page at the end of the paper. 1 inch margins on each side, double-

spaced Include your header on the upper right The page is to be titled Works Cited

Centered with capitalized first letter of each word, no bold, italics

Hanging indent: Line 1 is flush with the margin/ Line 2 is indented ½ inch.

Page 26: Week6 ml arev

For more on Variations of In-Text Citing: The Owl @ Purdue

Online Writing Lab at Purdue University

https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/747/02/

Page 27: Week6 ml arev

Some Examples of MLA Works Cited….

Page 28: Week6 ml arev

Citing Authors

Authors are cited alphabetically by Last Name.

If there is no author, use title alphabetically

Use the following format: Last Name, First Name Middle Name or

Middle Initial. Do not use Dr. or Professor or PhD It is okay to use suffixes such as Sr. or Jr.

Page 29: Week6 ml arev

Continued…

For one work by an author the first entry uses Last Name, First Name, I.

But for subsequent works three hyphens replace the author’s name

Page 30: Week6 ml arev

Pagination

List pages using only numbers, WITHOUT p. or pp.

For double digit page numbers use 13-21

For triple + digit page numbers use 123-45

Page 31: Week6 ml arev

Publication Medium Required

At the end of each citation you must indicate its type such as Print Web Film DVD CD-Rom

Page 32: Week6 ml arev

Web URLS

Web site addresses are no longer required.

HOWEVER, your teacher may require them!

If you include a web site address do so at the end of the citation with angle brackets followed by a period

Page 33: Week6 ml arev

Articles from the Web

If an article you are using was originally published in print but you retrieved it online do the following:

Add and italicize the name of the database such as Academic Search Premier followed by date of access.

You do not need to include the web address or database subscription information

Page 34: Week6 ml arev

Example:

Excerpted from Video by Beth Jones and Gina Hurley in collaboration with the Purdue Owl

Page 35: Week6 ml arev

Titles of Works Cited

Capitalize the first letter of each word in the title but not conjunctions such as “and” “or” “the” unless they begin the Title

Use Italics for BOOK title, or JOURNAL title

Use Quotes for essay in a book or article in a journal

Page 36: Week6 ml arev

Citing Books

http://libguides.pstcc.edu/content.php?pid=24540&sid=503537

From the Libguide by Peter Nerzak

Pellissippi State Community College

Page 37: Week6 ml arev

Citiing a chapter or essay in a book

From the Libguide by Peter Nerzak

Pellissippi State Community College

Page 38: Week6 ml arev

Citing Multiple Authors

Page 39: Week6 ml arev

Citing Three Authors

Page 40: Week6 ml arev

Citing Four or more authors individually or us et al

Page 41: Week6 ml arev

Citing a Journal Article (Print)

From a Print Source

From the Libguide by Peter Nerzak

Pellissippi State Community College

Page 42: Week6 ml arev

Citing a Journal Article (Web)

From the Libguide by Peter Nerzak

Pellissippi State Community College

Page 43: Week6 ml arev

Citing a Newspaper

From the Libguide by Peter Nerzak

Pellissippi State Community College

Page 44: Week6 ml arev

Citing a newspaper accessed online

From the Libguide by Peter Nerzak

Pellissippi State Community College

Page 45: Week6 ml arev

Citing an Entire Website

From the Libguide by Peter Nerzak

Pellissippi State Community College

Page 46: Week6 ml arev

MLA 7th Formatting Video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=24Y31UrG2q4&list=PL4917D9E21FA6EDFF

Beth Jones and Gina Hurley in collaboration with the Purdue Owl

Page 47: Week6 ml arev

MLA 7th Formatting Lists of Works Cited

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EaFcJ3f4fJk&list=PL4917D9E21FA6EDFF

By Beth Jones and Gina Hurley in collaboration with the Purdue Owl

Page 48: Week6 ml arev

…About BOOKS

Page 49: Week6 ml arev

Now Let’s Search for Books

Let’s Search for Books today by keyword and subject terms

Page 50: Week6 ml arev

The Library Catalog

Page 51: Week6 ml arev
Page 52: Week6 ml arev
Page 53: Week6 ml arev
Page 54: Week6 ml arev
Page 55: Week6 ml arev
Page 56: Week6 ml arev

Ebooks

Page 57: Week6 ml arev
Page 58: Week6 ml arev

Print Books

Page 59: Week6 ml arev

What if a print book is not available at your campus library???

You may request it online.

Page 60: Week6 ml arev
Page 61: Week6 ml arev
Page 62: Week6 ml arev

Assignment One book and one Article

Go to Library Catalog Locate a book on your topic Fill out the MLA notetaking worksheet Create a book citation

Go to Academic Search Complete Locate an article on your topic (or use

one you have already found) Fill out the MLA notetaking worksheet Create a Journal article citation