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MLA Works Cited Documentation (Chapter 22, Step 6). Unit 3: Writing a Research Paper. Todays Objective. You will use the information you brought (from three articles) to create a Works Cited page. We will talk about TENSES!. Tenses.
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MLA Works Cited Documentation (Chapter 22, Step 6) Unit 3: Writing a Research Paper
Todays Objective You will use the information you brought (from three articles) to create a Works Cited page. We will talk about TENSES!
Tenses I know this is an extremely simple aspect of the English language, but 90% of my students make the mistake of using the proper tense. I have a few friends in America who have been reading many of your blogs, and they tell me that 'tenses' are probably the biggest problem many of you have. Today we will review tenses, and I really want you to focus on using these properly in your writings for the rest of the semester.
Tenses Tense is a method that we use in English to refer to time - past, present and future. Many languages use tenses to talk about time. Other languages have no tenses, but of course they can still talk about time, using different methods. QUICK REVIEW!
I know you know it... BUT YOU NEED TO SHOW IT!
Ask me about playing football. Simple Present Do you play football? Simple Past Did you play football? Present Progressive Are you playing football? Past Progressive Were you playing football? Present Perfect Have you played football? Present Perfect Progressive Have you been playing football?
Ask me about playing football. Will-future Will you play football? Past Perfect Had you played football? Past Perfect Progressive Had you been playing football? Going to-future Are you going to play football? Future Progressive Will you be playing football? Future Perfect Will you have played football?
Ask me about playing football. Conditional Simple Would you play football? Conditional Progressive Would you be playing football? Conditional Perfect Would you have played football? Conditional Perfect Progressive Would you have been playing football?
Tenses and Active Verbs Proper tenses are an issue in many of your blogs AND many of your resumes. I suggest you go online and look at the lists of active verbs on our website. It will help your papers look more ACTIVE. (Tenses will be on your final.
Model “Works Cited” Page (page 406) Title the page: Works Cited The title is NOT underlined, italized, or bolded Double spaced Hanging indentation a paragraph that has all lines but the first indented. Works Cited page must be in alphabetical order.
The “WORKS CITED” Page Definition: The “sources” you “cited” in your research paper are written “collectively” on one page. This page is called the “Works Cited” page. SO WHAT DO YOU DO? Type all your source cards IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER (by the first item on the card usually the Author’s Last name). REMEMBER: Indent ALL lines after the first.
Model Entries (page 393-5) Book by one author. Two or more entries by the same author. Two or more authors. Magazine article Newspaper article Editorial Selection in an edited collection Revised or later edition Article in an online magazine Article in an online website
Sources • Book Author Last name, First. Book Title.City of Publication:Publisher,Year of publication. Josephson, Matthew.Edison: A Biography.Portland:Wiley, 1992.
Sources Author or editor Last name, First name.“Article title.”Name of Magazine.Date of Magazine published: Page numbers. Magazine Saunders, Fenella.“They Invented it.”Discover Magazine.Oct 2006: 2-3.
Sources Author or editor Last name, first name.Web site title.Date of publication of site. <Internet address>. Date you found the information. Internet Beals, Gerry. Thomas Edison’s Home Page. 1999. <http://www.thomasedison.com>. Oct 2014
Book by One Author (page 393) 1. Author's last name is written first, followed by a comma, first name, and a period: Bryson, Bill. 2. One space, then the title and a period. The title is underlined: Bryson, Bill. A Short History of Nearly Everything. 3. One space, then the place of publication, colon, and publishing company, comma, date published, and period at the end: New York: Broadway Books, 2003.
ONE A book by David Anderegg called Worried All The Time and published in New York by Free Press in 2003. Anderegg, David. Worried All the Time. New York: Free Press, 2003.
TWO An article by Susan Page titled “No Experience Necessary” on pages 1A-2A of the September 29, 2003 issue of USA Today. Page, Susan. “No Experience Necessary.” USA Today. 29 Sep. 2003: 1A-2.
THREE A book by Michael W. Pasner and Ronald E. Smith titled Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior and published in a second edition by McGraw-Hill in New York in 2004. Pasner, Michael W., and Ronald E. Smith. Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior. 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004.
FOUR An article by Mark Miller titled “Parting with a Pet” found on May 16, 2004 at <http://www.msnbc.com/news/977726.asp?Ocv-KV20> in the October 8, 2003 issue of Newsweek Online. Miller, Mark. “Parting with a Pet.” Newsweek Online. 8 Oct. 2003. http://www.msnbc.com/news/977726.asp?Ocv-KV20> 16 May 2004.
FIVE An article titled “Depression in Teenagers” found on April, 2004 on the website titled Troubled Teens at <http://www.4troubledteens.com> and sponsored by the Aspen Education Group. “Depression in Teenagers.” Troubled Teens. Aspen Education Group. <http://www.msnbc.com/news/977726.asp?Ocv-KV20> Apr. 2004.
In-Class Writing Use the information you brought (from three articles) to create a Works Cited page. I'll give you plenty of time. If you have questions, refer to the examples in the book, ask a classmate or ask me.
A Few Things About MLA Modern Language Association. It is the most commonly used essay writing format. Other formats: APA, Chicago, turabian, and more. The information in the book is actually out-dated. A reference; no need to memorize. Pay attention to format style. Look-up updated formatting details. 396-406
Essay Format Formatting Your Paper • Times New Roman (font) 12 Pt(size of font) Double Space (Format; Line Spacing; Double) 1 inch margins (already set) NO BOLD NO ITALICS NO PICTURES • This is a “FORMAL” piece of writing and it should look like it
Citations within your paper pg. 391-392 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. Example: Johnson argues this point (12-13). This point had already been argued (Johnson 12-13). We will talk more about this on week 11
Blog Entry: Title 'Cultural Comparison' In this blog you are going to compare something you have learned this semester about American culture and compare it to an aspect of Chinese culture. Have fun with this one. Should be long enough to express yourself clearly. You can begin prewriting for this entry today if we have time. Homework Read THREE more articles on your general research topic. Read Chapter 22, Step 2 (Pages 384-5).