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Guidelines for Term Project. Goal—opportunity to further explore a weather topic of interest, and to share knowledge gained with others. Project is worth 20% of your final course. Choose topic, and begin working now!
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Guidelines for Term Project • Goal—opportunity to further explore a weather topic of interest, and to share knowledge gained with others. • Project is worth 20% of your final course. Choose topic, and begin working now! • 1. You will write a term paper (7 pages, not including abstract and references). Paper must be typed. • Written paper must follow ERAU ”Student Guide for Term Papers” format • 2. Additionally, you will prepare and present your topic to your class. Powerpoint format is preferred, but not required. Your oral presentation will be 10-15 minutes in length. • 3. If you have questions—ask!!
Turbulence Icing Wind shear Microburst Thunderstorm hazards Tornadoes Lightning Hurricanes Global Warming TV Weathercasting Climate change Limited data forecasting Climate of ____ Weather impacts on economy, aviation or military operations Air pollution Temperature indices El Nino Air Pollution Global climate patterns Other topic, as approved by professor Term Project Topics
Planning Dates • Class time will be allotted for student oral presentation of work between November 21st and December 7th • See professor to schedule your presentation date • Papers will be due no later than December 5th
Choctaw Aviation Institute Crestview Aerospace InstituteAPA FormatTerm Paper GuideJuly 2005
APA Format Term Paper Guide • Grading: • 50% proper APA format (margins, spacing, etc.) • 50% content (quality of writing)
APA Format Term Paper Guide • All Embry-Riddle term papers will use the Publication Manual (5th Edition) of the American Psychological Association (APA) format • This handout has been adapted from the Student Guide for Term Papers used by Embry-Riddle’s Extended Campus • There are also several excellent websites on APA format • http://www.apastyle.org
APA Format Term Paper Guide • Term papers have three sections: • Title Page • Body of Paper • Minimum of 1 citation required • Reference Page • Minimum of 1 reference required
Title Page Notes • Title: Typed in uppercase and lowercase letters, centered horizontally and in the middle of the page. No more than 12 words in length • Author: Typed in the same fashion, centered horizontally, and typed 1 blank line (double spaced) below the title • Institution: Typed in the same fashion 1 blank line (double spaced) below the author (in your case: Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University) • Page Number: 1 inch from the right edge of the paper and ½ inch from the top of the paper. All pages are numbered. • Short title: First 2 to 3 words of the title. Typed 5 spaces to the left of the page number • Running head: Typed in all capital letters 1 inch from the top of the paper and 1 inch from the left side. Note: you literally type “Running head” followed by a colon, followed by an UPPERCASE abbreviated title
Body of Paper Notes • Page number and short title in upper right corner 1 inch from the right edge of the paper and ½ inch from the top of the paper • Title of the paper centered horizontally, typed in uppercase and lowercase letters, one inch from the top. Title appears only on the first body page. • Double spaced. Do not put blank lines between paragraphs • 1 inch margins on all four sides • Left justify text. Do not right justify or block • First line of every paragraph indented 5 spaces • 12 point font
Citing Your Information • Care should be taken to give proper credit to sources from which you obtain information to avoid plagiarism. There is no need to cite EVERY SINGLE fact, just enough to indicate reference source. • There are two types: • Direct quotes (Information quoted verbatim) • Enclosed in double quotation marks • Reference the source (1 word), year of publication and page number of the quote • Example: • Everyone noted that “the situation is steadily decreasing at an alarming rate” (Johnson, 1968, p. 2). • Paraphrase (Information not quoted verbatim) • Only source and year is cited • Example: • One person was concerned that the situation was deteriorating (Johnson, 1968).
Citing Your Information • Using your citation, I will then go to the reference page to find it • For example, you stated in the body of your paper: • Everyone noted that “the situation is steadily decreasing at an alarming rate” (Johnson, 1968, p. 2). • You used a direct quote so your citation is source, date, page number • I will then go to your reference page and expect to find a reference beginning with “Johnson” • Johnson, W. (1968). Alarming Situations Abound. Washington, D.C.: Teacher College Press.
Internet References & Citations • Use the following format for internet citations in the body of your paper: • Everyone noted that “the situation is steadily decreasing at an alarming rate” (Johnson, 1968, ¶. 2). • You used a direct quote so your citation is source, date, page or paragraph number • The “¶” symbol replaces “p” and is used for internet sources that do not provide page numbers and directs the reader to the exact paragraph on the website • Finding “¶” in Word 2003: insert – symbol – special character
Internet References & Citations • Use the following format for internet documents on your reference page: • Johnson, W. (1968). Alarming Situations Abound. Retrieved May 14, 2005 from http://alarming.situations.com/stores/portal • If you cannot find an author or document title, substitute a brief (2 to 4 words) description of the website • The Weather Channel. (1968). Alarming Situations Abound. Retrieved May 14, 2005 from http://alarming.situations.com/stores/portal • If you cannot find a date, substitute “n.d.” (no date) • Johnson, W. (n.d.). Alarming Situations Abound. Retrieved May 14, 2005 from http://alarming.situations.com/stores/portal
Reference Page • “References” centered horizontally, typed in uppercase and lowercase letters, one inch from the top • Page number and short title from title page in upper right corner 1 inch from the right edge of the paper and ½ inch from the top of the paper • Double spaced. No underlining. • Only those sources cited in the body of the paper are listed • If multiple references, place them in alphabetical order • Notice that first line of each reference is left justified and additional lines are indented • Notice that title of each reference is italicized • Remove hyperlinks (right click and select remove hyperlink)
Secrets to Success • Proof your work • Use spellchecker (but carefully proofread, as well) • 2 point penalty per spelling error • Difference between road and rode • Save your title page, body of paper, and reference page in separate files • WHEN IN DOUBT ON FORMAT, LOOK VERY CLOSELY AT THE ENCLOSED EXAMPLES AND COPY THEM!