Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Citation for TDOAF

There are 2 things you need to include in your essay to properly cite a text you reference in your paper.
1. A Works Cited page listing citations for all references cited in the text (quotes, paraphrasing, and summarizing).
2. An in-text citation which follows the quote (or paraphrasing or summarizing)

#1: Below is the citation for TDOAF from the textbook. You can copy and paste it onto the Works Cited page in your character analysis essay.


Goodrich, Frances and Albert Hackett. The Diary of Anne Frank. Elements of Literature: Second Course. Ed. Laura Baci, et. al. Austin, TX: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2000. 346-409. 

OTHER CITATIONS YOU MIGHT NEED:
The actual diary:
Frank, Anne. Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl. New York: Pocket Books, 1953.

The short movie we watched in class:
The Short Life of Anne Frank. Schlessinger Media, 2002. DVD.


*PLEASE NOTE*
*You will have to change the font, size, and hanging indent to make the format match your essay after you copy and paste this.
**If you ONLY took quotes from the textbook, this is the only citation you will have on your Works Cited page.
***There is a sample Works Cited page below on this blog, so check it out, if you forget how it should look. 

#2:

 

Monday, October 21, 2013

Looking for quotes on Anne Frank for your paper???

The Christian Science Monitor offers Anne Frank: 10 quotes on her birthday. Click on the link to get quotes from Anne's diary that might help you hook the reader in your paper.

Goodreads has created a Holocaust Quotes Page, which is pretty cool, because it has quotes from a lot of the books we read for our Holocaust reading project. That would be a great way to start your character analysis paper, but remember, it has to relate to this paper. Stay focused.

Quotes from Holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel. He is amazing, to say the least. He survived the Holocaust, wrote about it, won a Nobel Peace Prize for all of his work in standing up against oppression. He is truly amazing, and one of his inspiring quotes may be the way to begin your paper.


Friday, May 10, 2013

Historical Poetry Research Presentation

Did you forget your packet?? Access the PPT here. If you click on the picture, it will open in a larger format.







Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Historical Poetry Finder



The following are links to websites that have acceptable poetry to be used for your Historical Poetry Research Presentation:

Famous History Poems

PoetryArchive.org (Poems about History)

British Historical Poems

Famous Poems and Poets Lists
         Poems about History
         Holocaust Poems
         Soldier Poems
         War Poems 


Monday, March 11, 2013

Do you know what a works cited page looks like?


Using Microsoft Word to Generate a Works Cited List

I am NOT negating the appropriateness of using Microsoft Word to manage your citations, insert in-text citations, and generate a works cited list. The technology is impressive! I just want to make sure that you know what it is doing for you in case the technology doesn't work correctly.

Here is a link to a tutorial on using Microsoft Word to do you MLA citations and works cited page. It is helpful sometimes to see the pictures to help you through this process. This is also posted as a gift to those of you who missed class on the day we went over this in the computer lab.

MLA Works Cited Page

Although creating a Works Cited page and using the in-text citations on Microsoft Word is incredibly helpful, it's almost one of those things that is too good to be true in your case. As eighth graders, you're in the beginning stages of learning how to cite information that you use from other sources in your personal writing. You are just learning that you NOT ONLY need to cite direct quotes, but also information that you paraphrase and summarize from sources, whether they be books, articles, web pages, etc. This can be confusing, and I'm afraid that relying on Microsoft Word to do the work for you, is not the best option until you have some experience working with citations.

OWL at Purdue is an online writing lab that has up-to-date information on citing in MLA format. You will use this cite in high school and college, so it is important to take a look at it now.

OWL at Purdue MLA formatting Electronic Sources- Click on the link to look at citations (that will go on the Works Cited page) for electronic sources. We used several of these for this particular paper. When you print the Works Cited page from Microsoft Word, IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY to make sure that the citations generated by Word appear the way they should according to MLA guidelines listed on this page.

OWL at Purdue MLA in-text citations (the basics)- Click on the link to go over what in-text citations look like and how they are used. Carefully read what to do when the author is unknown. I know many of you had sources without authors (Which is not considered to be typically credible, but is accepted on this particular assignment.), so you need to know how to cite that properly in your paper. The video in the previous post covered this topic as well.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

How do I do in-text citations??


If you have finished drafting your argumentative essay, have created the Works Cited page (or bibliography), and are unsure as to how to include in-text citations, please click on the link to the following video to see a demonstration.


*Note- You should pause the video throughout, so you can read the screen before she discusses it.
**Get HEADPHONES from Mrs. Morris, so you can hear the video.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Infohio... an awesome research tool @ your fingertips!

You can search for credible sources from a plethora of databases using Infohio. Search your topic (ex. Title IX and education or Title IX negative impact on sports) by following these steps:

1. Click on this link to go to Infohio.





2. Click on the Middle School button.




3. Click on the EBSCO host button.





4. Click on the "Select/deselect all" button.


5. Then, type in the key words to search and hit the SEARCH button. Look for FULL TEXT articles to read.

From here, you would take notes on the articles and copy down citations. You must GET PERMISSION TO PRINT from the teacher, because many of these articles are long. Remember to have the citation added (in MLA format) to the printed copy.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

2013 Title IX Argumentative Essay



As you can see, we are back in the land of Title IX 8th graders! Although I have left the posts from previous years about this subject visible, your assignment is different. You will not be writing a letter to the principal to persuade, but a formal essay that argues the worthiness of Title IX legislation.

You need to start here at the Title IX info website, and choose from the 10 key areas of Title IX which area(s) you are going to focus on in your essay. Appropriate areas are: SPORTS/ATHLETICS, EDUCATION (access to higher education, career education, learning environment, standardized testing, math and science), JOBS/EMPLOYMENT (employment, math and science, sexual harassment, career education), OR PREGNANT/PARENTING STUDENTS. Then, follow the instructions on the Computer Lab Research Sheet to take notes during class.