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Honors Day 24: A Raisin in the Sun. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Writing your final draft Act II-III Test Monday. Some Tips and Notes for Completing the Final Draft. Check that you are consistent in point of view (first, second, or third person).
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Honors Day 24:A Raisin in the Sun • Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs • Writing your final draft • Act II-III • Test Monday
Some Tips and Notes for Completing the Final Draft • Check that you are consistent in point of view (first, second, or third person). • Check that your verbs are in consistent “time” (tense). Events and characters in literature are referred to in the present tense. • Do not use contractions, abbreviations, or numbers (unless the number cannot be spelled out in two or fewer words). • Check spelling and punctuation carefully.
More Final Revision Notes • Check that you use complete sentences rather than fragments or run-ons. • Check for clarity. Is your writing clearly understandable? • Check conciseness. Do not use more words than are needed to express your ideas. Ultimately, this is a check on vocabulary! • Check that requirements for margins, heading, font, and other format requirements of the “Park High School Writing Style Sheet” are followed.
Parenthetical References Within Your Text • Whenever information in your text is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized from a source: • Be sure to include that source in the “Works Cited” or “Works Consulted” (discussed below) • Be sure that the parenthetical reference (short form of source followed by the page number) immediately follows the information.
More About Parenthetical Citations • If the citation is at the end of a sentence, the period for the sentence follows the parenthetical reference. • If the source is clearly indicated within your sentence, only the page number or literary locator numbers need to be provided in parentheses.
Examples of Parenthetical Citations a. Mary Warren is a foil to Abigail Williams (Peating 38). b.“The role of Mary Warren in The Crucible is to function as the antagonist’s foil” (Peating 38). [Note that the use of the comma is delayed to include the reference with the sentence. If there were no citation, the period would precede the closing quotation mark.] c.The Mary Warren’s foil qualities, as mentioned by Peating, become clear as the third act progresses (38).
Giving Credit Where Credit is Due • Each source listed in the Work(s) Cited should be in the format indicated in the “Park High School Writing Style Sheet” • Works should be arranged alphabetically by the first letter of each source listing. • Source listings are single-spaced with a line skipped between entries. • The first line of each entry starts at the margin, with subsequent lines indented.
Where Does It Go? • The Works Cited may be a separate page (with the title “Works Cited” centered and unpunctuated on the first line) OR • It may be placed after the paper’s text (again, with the title “Works Cited” centered and unpunctuated) two spaces down from the final line of the conclusion.
Which is Which? • A “Works Cited” lists only works which are cited in the text of the essay. • A “Works Consulted” lists all works that were consulted during research.
Works Cited Anouilh, Jean. Antigone. New York: Samuel French Incorporated, 1972.
THESIS: Theme, three literary elements, both novels’ title and author, the word “novel” • Each body paragraph discusses one literary element, the theme, and BOTH NOVELS