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Hello! Please get a sheet from the front table and begin working. Also, please get your journals.

Hello! Please get a sheet from the front table and begin working. Also, please get your journals. Thursday February 27, 2014. English 9: Agenda. Go over commas sheet Grammar quiz In-text citation notes Interview questions, protocol, and practice SSR. English 9 H Agenda.

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Hello! Please get a sheet from the front table and begin working. Also, please get your journals.

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  1. Hello!Please get a sheet from the front table and begin working. Also, please get your journals. Thursday February 27, 2014

  2. English 9: Agenda • Go over commas sheet • Grammar quiz • In-text citation notes • Interview questions, protocol, and practice • SSR

  3. English 9 H Agenda • Review commas and homophones • Grammar Quiz • In-text Citation notes • Scriptwriting lesson/practice • SSR

  4. Goals • You will be able to cite sources parenthetically • You will be able to apply interview skills in a practice interview

  5. Grammar Quiz • You MAY use your notes. • Keep all rules in mind. • Correct the paragraph. • Turn it in to the front when you are finished, and then begin SSR.

  6. Icebreaker! • 1. your name • 2. favorite color • 3. favorite candy • 4. something you love to do • Crumple your paper into a ball and wait! • Pick up a ball from the front of the room and find the person it belongs to. Stand with that person on your right and the person who has your paper on your left. • We should all end up in a circle for introductions.

  7. Citations (notes) • Plagiarism is when you take credit for someone else’s work. It can be unintentional. • A citation is reference to a source of information • You should cite your sources to: • Avoid plagiarism • Credit those who put in hard work • Prove your information is accurate • Show where the reader can go to learn more

  8. In-Text Citation (citations) • In MLA style, referring to the works of others in your text is done by using what is known as parenthetical citation. • This method involves placing relevant source information in parentheses after a quote or a paraphrase. • Make sure you write the author and page number in parenthesis when quoting from a book. • Example: The article states that “over 900,000 people would no longer be in poverty” (James, 47).

  9. Citations (notes) • You should also make a citation when you are putting a fact you’ve learned in your own words. Unless you are the one who discovered that fact, you should tell your audience where it was found. • Example: • The invention of the straight edge movement started in 1981 with punk band Mino Threat (Blush, 42).

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