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This paper is a major project. It can be fun, but if you put off the steps you will stress yourself and me, and endanger your grade, your credit, and your graduation! This research paper is your chance to learn something new, or something in much greater depth, and to share that information with others. It is not time for you to summarize what you already know. This project should require around twenty (10-20) hours of research time if you expect to earn top marks. You will be provided a number of days of class time to work on this assignment. But you should plan on working on this project several nights a week for an hour or so for the next two months. You are being assigned a number of due dates for steps along the way to completing this paper. These intermediate due dates are important for your success. If you get your work done at each of the assigned times, you will get all the help from me that you need to earn a good grade on this paper. Please see me for assistance anytime you feel lost or need help. You can expect to have a couple of class days in the library during the research portion of this assignment. This will NOT be enough library time. Be sure to plan ahead to spend time in the library here, at your local Multnomah County Library Branch, in the library of one of the local colleges or universities, or where ever you can find reliable, verifiable resources. Anywhere you can have internet access you can access online databases that have m ost if not all of the resources you will need to be successful. (Remember to be Efficient; Effective; and Ethical! 24 February lesson) Though the Internet may be a valid information source, it is extremely difficult to verify information from non-academic Internet resources. If you use a quote from an Internet site be sure to verify your information with another resource. You are required to use a variety of sources of information. Wikipedia may be a reasonable source for some of the information in your thesis. However if you can google the answer to your thesis, youre research question needs work. If there is already a Wikipedia entry that covers your entire topic you should not use that topic because you would have nothing new to add. The number of books, magazine articles, interviews, almanacs, or other sources that you will need to read and consult for this project depends on the questions you develop, and the resources that you find (there are minimum requirements listed later in the Sources section. You probably do not have a broad enough range of questions if you seem to be finding all of your answers in one book (why research a topic, if someone else already has?).
You CAN do this. And it wont kill you. And you can even have some fun on this project. Or you can kiss your whole thirteen (13) years of hard work adios, and you can skip the above steps, leave your research and writing for the last minute, and have to write another one of these next year. Whats it gonna be? Seriously, do a little bit each day (or at least four or five days a week). Plan to accomplish each of the above steps on time (notice due dates are usually after conference days; why do you think that is?) and Ill shake your hand at graduation.
Pep Talk
Topics
You are invited to research almost any topic of your choosing; however, I must approve your topic. The reason for this is to assist you in identifying a topic for which you will be able to locate sufficient, accessible resources. Your topic should be expressed as some kind of claim. A claim is simply a statement that you will show to be true in your writing. Examples include: St. Croiz is a wonderful travel destination; The destruction of native salmon populations in Oregon and Washington has displaced thousands of families and destroyed entire communities; and The totem was an important part of traditional Salish culture and remains an important cultural tradition today. Identifying your topic consists of three steps. 1) Identifying a general topic. 2) Identifying a specific research question. 3) Defining your main thesis statement. The chart below shows how these steps progress to a clear statement, which can be explained or argued using your thoughts and evidence provided by others.
Doing Research
Doing research means finding out about your topic. One key to successfully completing your research is to stay focused on your topic. Hopefully, each and every source you look at will have loads of fascinating information. But if you are researching avocados, you find really interesting facts about tomatillos, papayas, and mangos, but that information will not be useful for your paper.
Sources
Sources are the places where you find your information. Many people find information on the web, however there is a great deal of unreliable and unverified information on the web. Utilizing Multnomah County Librarys or the OSLIS.org website to access online databases is a great way to access information online. Some websites, such as those of universities, governments, and professional journalistic companies may provide information as well. Some non-profits provide unbiased information, however others provide very biased, sometimes inaccurate information, as well. In general one must be careful about how to use the world wide web to do research. Following Ms. Paiges guidelines for Efficient, Effective, and Ethical searches will help a lot. Just Googling will likely result in a poor or failing paper.
Koreshoff 99
Fill out one note card each time you come across a piece of information that you think is important to your topic. You will not have to use every note that you take, but the more notes you take, the easier it will be to write your paper later. If you are not sure what to write for the title, or main idea of the note at first, that is ok; you can add it later when you know more about your subject. One way to organize the topics on your cards is with the question or questions you are using the note to answer. One other way to take notes is to keep track of information online. I strongly suggest that even if you use Google Docs or some other online resource to track your bibliography you still use note cards for note taking. Having note cards will make constructing an outline (and therefore organizing your thesis) MUCH easier.
Bibliography
You will be using MLA (Modern Language Association) style for your bibliography and citations. This is something you do to avoid plagiarism (see below) and flunking. This used to be the part of research writing that caused people the most grief. However there are now online resources that will properly format your bibliography for you life is good in 2013! HOWEVER You MUST be sure to keep track of the important information about each resource you use so that you can use the online resource to make a correct bibliography. See the next page for notes on what information you will need on your bibliography cards.
Food & Culture Research Paper ! Zartler ! February 2014
Bibliography Cards
When you read a book, a magazine article, or information on a website, you also fill out a card. This is a bibliography card. It looks like, smells like, and acts a lot like a note card. But it contains information about where you got your information, not what information you found. Each time you read a new source of information, fill out a bibliography card. On your bibliography card you should write the title, author, and publication dates for your information source. See the bibliographic format page for examples.
Books/Journals
Author (s) Editor(s) Title Publisher Copyright Date Oates, David. Paradise Wild: Reimagining American Nature. Corvallis: Oregon State University Press,
2003.
2003 <http://www.galileo.usg.edu>.
It is also possible to keep track of your Works Cited material online. If you do most of your research in online academic databases (which I highly recommend) then you can copy and paste the citations provided with the article into a file.
Plagiarism is when you use another persons word, work, or ideas without giving them credit. It is a form of cheating. It is stealing. It is against the rules. You will flunk the research paper if you plagiarize. If you flunk your thesis, you are very likely to flunk this class. If you flunk this class you will not graduate. DO NOT PLAGIARIZE! PLEASE!
Based on the MLA Handbook for W riters of Research Papers , 6th ed., 2003.
In MLA style, sources are acknowledged by short parenthetical citations in the text instead of numbered footnotes. The parenthetical citation includes just enough information to point the reader to the complete information about the source in the Works Cited list. The parenthetical usually includes the author's last name (if an anonymous work, the first one or two words from the title), and the page number cited. Leave the author's name out of the parenthetical if it is clearly stated in your sentence. When your Works Cited list includes more than one work by an author, the parenthetical should include part of the title, i.e., (Nielsen, Hypertext 141). If the entire work is being acknowledged, or there is no page or paragraph number (as in the case of many online works), incorporate the author's name into the sentence instead of using a parenthetical. The works cited list, like your entire paper should be double-spaced (below it is shown single spaces to save paper).
Type of Entry
Book - single author Book - more than one author Work in an anthology e.g EBSCO Newspaper article from online database When citing an online source, include the publication date (5 June 1998) and the date you visited the site (15 April 2004). e.g EBSCO Article from an online database When citing an online source, include the publication date (1998) and the date you visited the site (15 April 2004). e.g EBSCO Article from a Web site When citing an online source, include the publication date (13 July 2000) and the date you visited the site (15 April 2004).
Citation in Text
(Oates 141) (Gilbert and Gubar 9) (Hooker 154)
Mention in your text: "Fletcher reports..." See section 6.4.1 of the MLA Handbook for more information.
Voss, Paul J. "Debris from Heaven in Paradise Lost." English Language Notes 35.3 (1998): 37-41. Academic Search Premier. EBSCOhost. GALILEO. 25 Sept. 2003 <http://www.galileo.usg.edu>.
Mention in your text: "According to Voss..." See section 6.4.1 of the MLA Handbook for more information.
Blume, Harvey. "Geek Studies." Atlantic Online 13 July 2000. 25 Sept. 2003 <http://www.theatlantic.com/ unbound/crosscurrents/cc2000-07-13.htm>.
Mention in your text: "Harvey Blume states..." See section 6.4.1of the MLA Handbook for more information.
Article from encyclopedia (unsigned) Article from online encyclopedia When citing an online source, include the publication date (1992) and the date you visited the site (15 April 2004). Entire Web site When citing an online source, include the publication date (2003) and the date you visited the site (15 April 2004). Web page within a larger Web site When citing an online source, include the publication date (1999) and the date you visited the site (15 April 2004). Film or video See section 5.8 of the MLA Handbook for citing radio, TV, live performances, recordings, interviews, and works of art.
Cowley, Geoffrey. "I'd Toddle a Mile for a Camel." Newsweek 23 Dec. 1991: 70-71. Snodgrass, Susan. "The Rubbish Heap of History." Art in America 88.5 (2000): 156-57. "Give Georgia More HOPE." Atlanta Journal Constitution 18 Dec. 1994: G6. Parks, Edd Winfield. "Edna St. Vincent Millay." The Sewanee Review 38.1 (1930): 42-49. Rpt. in Twentieth Century Literary Criticism. Ed. Sharon K. Hall. Vol. 4. Detroit: Gale, 1981. 310-11. "Tutankhamen." The New Encyclopaedia Britannica: Micropaedia. 15th ed. 1994. Killam, G.D. "Chinua Achebe." Dictionary of Literary Biography. Ed. Bernth Lindfors and Reinhard Sander. Vol. 117. Detroit: Gale, 1992. 15-34. Literature Resource Center. Gale. U of Georgia Lib. 25 Sept. 2003 <http://www.galileo.usg.edu>.
("Tutankhamen") Mention in your text: "Killam's analysis..." See section 6.4.1 of the MLA Handbook for more information.
Mention in your text: "The Electronic Poetry Center archives..." See section 6.4.1 of the MLA Handbook for more information. (Martin 4.8.IV)
Martin, Thomas R. "An Overview of Classical Greek History from Homer to Alexander." Perseus Digital Library. Ed. Gregory R. Crane. 1999. Tufts U. 25 Sept. 2003 <http://perseus. tufts.edu>.
Taxi Driver. Screenplay by Paul Schrader. Dir. Martin Scorsese. Perf. Robert De Niro, Cybill Shepherd, and Jodie Foster. Columbia Pictures, 1976.
Mention in your text: "The violence in Taxi Driver..." See section 6.4.1 of the MLA Handbook for more information.
Adapted from: University of Georgia. http://www.libs.uga.edu/ref/mlastyle.html See we all stand on the shoulders of giants!
The following is from the Purdue University Owl web site: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_mla.html#Works-Cited Your Works Cited List The works cited list should appear at the end of your essay. It provides the information necessary for a reader to locate and be able to read any sources you cite in the essay. Each source you cite in the essay must appear in your works-cited list; likewise, each entry in the works-cited list must be cited in your text. Preparing your works cited list using MLA style is covered in chapter six of the MLA Style Manual, and chapter four of the Handbook for Writing Research Papers. Here are some guidelines for preparing your works cited list. List Format Begin your works cited list on a separate page from the text of the essay under the label Works Cited (with no quotation marks, underlining, etc.), which should be centered at the top of the page. Make the first line of each entry in your list flush left with the margin. Subsequent lines in each entry should be indented onehalf inch. This is known as a hanging indent. Double space all entries, with no skipped spaces between entries. Keep in mind that underlining and italics are equivalent; you should select one or the other to use throughout your essay. Alphabetize the list of works cited by the first word in each entry (usually the author's last name), Basic Rules for Citations Authors' names are inverted (last name first); if a work has more than one author, invert only the first author's name, follow it with a comma, then continue listing the rest of the authors. If you have cited more than one work by a particular author, order them alphabetically by title, and use three hyphens in place of the author's name for every entry after the first. When an author appears both as the sole author of a text and as the first author of a group, list solo-author entries first. If no author is given for a particular work, alphabetize by the title of the piece and use a shortened version of the title for parenthetical citations. Capitalize each word in the titles of articles, books, etc. This rule does not apply to articles, short prepositions, or conjunctions unless one is the first word of the title or subtitle. Underline or italicize titles of books, journals, magazines, newspapers, and films. Use quotation marks around the titles of articles in journals, magazines, and newspapers. Also use quotation marks for the titles of short stories, book chapters, poems, and songs. List page numbers efficiently, when needed. If you refer to a journal article that appeared on pages 225 through 250, list the page numbers on your Works Cited page as 225-50. If you're citing an article or a publication that was originally issued in print form but that you retrieved from an online database, you should provide enough information so that the reader can locate the article either in its original print form or retrieve it from the online database (if they have access). For more about this, see our discussion of electronic sources. For more about formatting your works cited page, visit MLA List of Works Cited (from Research and Documentation Online), view a Sample Works Cited Page (from A Research Guide for Students), or visit some of the links in our additional resources section. Basic Forms for Sources in Print The MLA Style Manual provides extensive examples of print source citations in chapter six; The MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers provides extensive examples covering a wide variety of potential sources in chapter six. If your particular case is not covered here, use the basic forms to determine the correct format, consult the MLA Handbook, visit the links in our additional resources section, talk to your instructor, or call the Writing Lab (765-494-3723) for help.