PART I: CONDUCTING AND WRITING UP RESEARCH.
1. Thinking through Research.
Introduction. Research Rhetoric: Purpose, Reader, Context. Your
Research Purpose. Your Research Audience. The Context of Your
Research. Weak vs. Strong Research Writing. Strong Ideas. Logical
Organization. Engaging Voice. Clear Words. Smooth Sentences.
Correct Copy. Professional Design. Weak Research Writing: An
Example. Strong Research Writing: An Example. Following the
Research Process. Understanding Assignments and Expectations.
Research Expectations. Assignment Keywords. Topic Options and
Restrictions. Project Parameters. Assignment Connections.
Brainstorming and Refining Topics. Brainstorming Viable Topics.
Choosing a Narrow, Manageable Topic. Developing Research Questions.
Simple and Substantial Questions. Main and Secondary Questions.
Framing a Working Thesis. Drafting a Strong Working Thesis. Focus
on Ethics: Preventing Plagiarism. A Principled Beginning. Practices
that Prevent Unintentional Plagiarism. Practices that Prevent
Internet Plagiarism. Practicing Your Research: Activities and
Checklist.
2. Planning Your Research.
Introduction. Exploring Your Resource Options. Focus on Your Major:
Case Studies in Resource Choices. Considering Information Sites.
Focus on Ethics: Identifying Challenges for Your Project.
Distinguishing Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Sources. Primary
Sources. Secondary Sources. Tertiary Sources. The Primary-Secondary
Symbiosis. Focus on Your Major: Following Methods of Inquiry.
Locating Your Major within the Division of Disciplines. Inquiry in
the Humanities. Inquiry within the Social Sciences. Inquiry within
the Natural and Applied Sciences. Getting Organized to Do Your
Research. Establish Priorities. Establish Best Practices. Establish
a Schedule. Focus on Your Project: Research for Different Forms of
Writing. Writing a Research Proposal. Parts of a Research Proposal.
Sample Research Proposal. Making Effective Keyword Searches.
Keywords/Search Strategies. Practicing Your Research: Activities
and Checklist.
3. Doing Research in the Wired Library.
Introduction. Getting into Your Library. How to Get Familiar with
Your Library. An Overview of Library Resources and Services.
Employing the Library. Searching the Online Catalog. Starting Your
Search. Searching the Catalog Using Distinct Methods. Building on
Your Initial Search Results. Employing Full Citations. Locate
Resources Using Call Numbers. Focus on Your Major: Finding Your LOC
Classification Home. Connecting with Other Online Catalogs.
NetLibrary. State Libraries. Library of Congress. Global Libraries:
WorldCat. Search Subscription Databases for Periodical Articles.
Understand Periodicals. Identify Your Library�s Subscription
Databases. Select and Search Databases. Generate a Citation List.
Study Citations and Capture Identifying Information. Retrieve the
Article�s Full Text. Focus on Your Major: Databases for
Disciplines. Using Print and Electronic Reference Works. How to
Find and Use Reference Works. Types of Reference Works. Using
Books: Trade, Scholarly, and E-Books. Identify Types of Books.
Working with Print Books. How to Work with E-Books. Practicing Your
Research: Activities and Checklist.
4. Doing Research on the Free Web.
Introduction. Understanding the Web: A Primer for Research. What Is
the Internet? What Is the World Wide Web? What Does an Internet
Address Mean? What Is the Free Web vs. the Deep Web? Using the Free
Web for College Research. Benefits of Free-Web Research. Drawbacks
of Free-Web Research. Guidelines for Researching the Free Web.
Focus on Your Project: Saving Web Information. Recommended Web
Resources for College Research. Using Wikis in Your Research.
Understanding Wikis. Wikipedia as a Resource: Strengths. Wikipedia
as a Resource: Weaknesses. Guidelines for Using Wikipedia. Finding
Other Wikis. Evaluating Free-Web Resources. Signs of a Quality
Website. Testing a Web Site�s Quality and Reliability. Locating
Information: URLs, Menus, Links, and Site Searches. Work with URLs.
Follow Helpful Links. Explore Menus. Try the Site�s Search Feature.
Locating Information: Subject Trees or Directories. The Structure
of a Subject Tree. Subject Trees: A Sample Search. Locating
Information: Search Engines and Metasearch Tools. Understanding
Search Engines as Research Tools. Guidelines for Using Search
Engines. Choosing Search Engines for College Research. Conducting
Advanced Searches with Search Engines. Practicing Your Research:
Activities and Checklist.
5. Doing Primary Research.
Introduction. Planning for Primary Research. Considering Primary
Research. Choosing a Method of Primary Research. Doing Effective
Primary Research. Focus on Ethics: Respecting and Protecting Your
Sources. Doing Primary Research with Integrity. Handling People
with Care. Conducting Interviews. Choosing and Finding People to
Interview. Preparing for an Interview. Doing the Interview. Sample
Interview Note-Taking Sheet. Following Up the Interview. Requesting
Information in Writing. Finding Contacts. Making Your Request.
Focus on Research Essentials: Observing Netiquette. Sample Request
Message. Conducting Informal Surveys. Finding and Selecting People
to Survey. Developing a Sound Survey. Doing Your Survey. Sample
Informal Survey. Analyzing Texts, Documents, Records, and
Artifacts. Choosing Primary Texts. Locating Primary Texts.
Analyzing Primary Texts. Focus on Your Major: Questions and
Documentation. Making Observations. Finding a Site for Your
Project. Getting Ready to Observe. Conducting Your Observation.
Making Sense of Your Observations. Conducting Experiments.
Understanding Experimentation. Following the Experimental Method.
Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist.
6. Working with Sources and Taking Notes.
Maintaining a Working Bibliography. Setting Up Your Bibliography.
Sample Working Bibliography Entries. Developing an Annotated
Bibliography. Focus on Multimedia: Using Bibliographic Software.
Developing a Note-Taking System. Note-Taking Strategies.
Note-Taking Systems. Focus on Multimedia: Using Note-Taking
Software. Engaging Your Sources through Critical Reading. Testing
Each Source for Value. Reading Key Sources Systematically and
Critically. Evaluating Your Sources. A Rating Scale for Source
Reliability and Depth. Criteria for Assessing Sources. Focus on
Multimedia: Interpreting and Evaluating Visuals. Sample Visual and
Analysis. Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting Source Material.
Summarizing Useful Passages. Paraphrasing Key Passages. Quoting
Crucial Phrases, Sentences, and Passages. Practicing Your Research:
Activities and Checklist.
7. Building Credibility: Avoiding Plagiarism and Other Source
Abuses.
Introduction. Recognizing Plagiarism. What Is Plagiarism? What Does
Plagiarism Look Like? Avoiding Source Misuse. Why Is Plagiarism So
Serious? How Do You Avoid Plagiarizing in Your Writing? What Other
Source Abuses Should You Avoid? What Other Academic Violations
Should You Avoid? Practicing Your Research: Activities and
Checklist.
8 Drafting Papers with Documented Research.
Introduction. Shifting from Research to Writing. Revisiting Your
Research Rhetoric. Understanding the Writing Process. Reviewing
Your Findings. Conducting Q & A. Deepening Your Thinking on the
Topic. Imagining Your Paper. Sorting Out Your Notes. Sharpening
Your Working Thesis. Deepening Your Thesis. Questioning Your
Thesis. Considering Methods of Organization. Organizational
Practices to Avoid. Organizational Practices that Consider Sources.
Basic Essay or Paper Structure. Patterns of Reasoning. Traditional
Organizational Patterns. Developing an Outline. Choosing a Type of
Outline. Connecting Your Outline and Your Notes. Considering
Drafting Strategies. Choosing a Drafting Method. Respecting Your
Sources While Drafting. Drafting the Introduction. Engaging Your
Reader. Establishing Your Voice. Establishing Focus and Scope.
Introducing Your Line of Thinking. A Strong Opening. Drafting the
Body: Reasoning with Evidence. Featuring Research in Your
Discussion. The Full-Bodied Paragraph. Choosing and Using Evidence.
Drafting the Body: Smoothly Integrating Source Material. A Pattern
for Integrating Sources. Practices for Smoothly Integrating
Quotations. Guidelines for Correctly Documenting Sources. Drafting
the Conclusion. Deepen Your Thesis. Complete and Unify Your
Discussion. A Strong Conclusion. Drafting the Title. The Purpose of
the Title. Patterns for Academic Titles. Focus on Multimedia: Using
and Integrating Graphics. Uses of Visuals in Your Research Writing.
Planning Visuals for Your Paper. Parts of a Visual. Types of
Visuals. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist.
9. Revising and Refining Your Research Paper.
Introduction. Practical Strategies for Improving Your First Draft.
Break Down Revising and Refining into Manageable Steps. Review Your
Draft from Multiple Points of View. Use Your Software�s Editing
Tools as an Aid. Revising in Action: Fixing Global Issues. Editing
in Action: Fixing Local Issues. Testing Your Ideas and
Organization. Improving Your Reasoning. Eliminating Logical
Fallacies. Improving Organizational Flow. Improving Paragraphs.
Checking the Voice of Your Writing. Testing Your Level of
Confidence. Testing for an Academic Style. Editing for Sentence
Smoothness. Fixing Primer Style. Fixing Rambling Sentences. Fixing
Unparallel Structures. Fixing Sluggish Sentence Structures. Using
Active and Passive Voice of Verbs. Editing for Sentence Variety.
Editing for Energetic Word Choice. Eliminate Wordiness. Replace
Vague Wording with Precise, Concrete Terms. Hit the Right Diction
Level. Replace Slanted Terms with Neutral Ones. Cut Clich�s. Rework
Pretentious and Flowery Language. Eliminate Jargon. Focus on
Ethics: Plain and Fair English. Striving for Plain English.
Striving for Respectful Language. Proofreading for Correctness.
Test Your Draft for Accuracy. Check Quotation Integration and
Punctuation. Check Titles of Works. Check Your Use of Historical
Present Tense. Check for the Top Ten Grammar Errors. Check for
Common Usage Errors. Focus on Your Major: Developing a Summary or
Abstract. The Content and Style of a Summary. Writing a Summary.
Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist.
10. Sharing Your Research Writing.
Introduction. Designing Your Research Document. Making
Rhetorically-Driven Design Choices. Planning Your Research
Document�s Format. Thinking through Page Layout. Using Color.
Making Typographical Choices. Submitting an Academic Paper. The
Character of an Academic Paper. Submitting or Posting a Digital
Document. Developing a Website. Contributing to a Wiki. Sharing
Findings in a Blog. Preparing Research Presentations. Planning Your
Presentation. Organizing and Developing Your Presentation.
Delivering Your Presentation. Focus on Your Major: Developing a
Poster Session. Focus on Multimedia: Using Presentation Software
Effectively. Building Your Research-Writing Portfolio. Explore Your
Project�s Fit in Your Portfolio. Add Your Paper to Your Portfolio.
Focus on Your Major: Writing into Your Discipline. Practicing Your
Research: Activities and Checklist.
11. Completing Team Research Projects.
Introduction. Understanding Principles and Types of Collaboration.
Principles of Collaboration. Types of Collaboration. Leading a Team
Research Project. Leading Individuals. Leading the Group.
Communicating in a Group. Brainstorming. Solving Problems. Making
Decisions. Giving Criticism. Taking Criticism. Resolving Conflicts.
Using Peer-Review and Peer-Editing Strategies. Writer�s Role.
Reviewer�s Role. Peer-Review Systems. Integrating Teamwork into the
Research and Writing Process. Dividing Tasks. Prewriting. Drafting.
Revising. Refining. Practicing Your Research: Activities and
Checklist.
PART II: RESEARCH-WRITING FORMS AND PROJECTS.
12. The Personal Research Paper.
Introduction. Guidelines for Writing a Personal-Research Paper.
Sample Student Paper: Personal-Research Writing. Writer�s
Reflection Student Model: �The Pi-Nee-Waus Powwow: A Place to
Gather� by Michelle Winkler. Reading Research Writing: Questions.
Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist.
13. The Analytical Research Paper.
Introduction. Guidelines for Writing an Analytical Paper.
Analytical Modes: An Overview. Definition. Process. Classification.
Compare-Contrast. Cause-Effect. Sample Student Paper: Analytical
Research Writing. Writer�s Reflection. Student Model: ��I Did Not
Get My Spaghetti-O�s�: Death Row Consumption in the Popular Media�
by Stevie Jeung. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing
Your Research: Projects and Checklist.
14. The Argumentative Research Paper.
Introduction. Guidelines for Writing an Argumentative Paper.
Argumentation: A Primer. Appealing to Character. Appealing to
Emotion. Appealing to Reason. Sample Student Paper: Argumentative
Research Writing. Writer�s Reflection. Student Model: �Making
Waves: Finding Keys to Success in the Failures of the Fish
Industry� by Andrew Skogrand. Reading Research Writing: Questions.
Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist.
15. The Primary-Source Research Report.
Introduction. Guidelines for Writing a Primary-Research Report.
Sample Student Paper: Primary-Research Writing. Writer�s
Reflection. Student Model: �Chew-Toy Color Preference in Kenneled
Dogs (Canis)� by Terri Wong. Reading Research Writing: Questions.
Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist.
16. Analysis of a Literary Text. Introduction. Guidelines for
Writing a Literary Analysis. Literary Research: A Primer. Critical
Approaches. Secondary Research. Literary Terms. Poetry Terms.
Sample Student Paper: Literary Research Writing. Writer�s
Reflection. Student Model: �Stephen Dedalus: Finding Identity in
Myth� by Rebecca Mombourquette. Reading Research Writing:
Questions. Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist.
17. The Literature Review.
Introduction. Guidelines for Writing a Literature Review. Sample
Student Paper: Reviewing the Literature. Writer�s Reflection.
Student Model: �The Role of MicroRNA in Cancer� by Dmitriy
Kolesnikov. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing Your
Research: Projects and Checklist.
III. SYSTEMS OF DOCUMENTATION.
18. MLA Style and Sample Paper.
Introduction. Directory to MLA Documentation. MLA Documentation at
a Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. Works Cited: The Basics.
Sample MLA Paper: �A Picture before a Thousand Words: Art Therapy
and the Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa� by Rubi Garyfalakis.
Writer�s Reflection. Sample First Page. Sample Middle Pages. Sample
Works-Cited Page. MLA Format Guidelines. MLA Format at a Glance.
Whole-Paper Format and Printing Issues. Typographical Issues.
Page-Layout Issues. Footnotes and Endnotes in MLA Documentation.
Content Notes. Bibliographic Notes. Format for Endnotes. In-Text
Abbreviations in MLA Format. General Guidelines for In-Text
Abbreviations. Acceptable In-Text Abbreviations. Conventions for
Names, Titles, and Internet Addresses. Names of People.
Capitalization and Punctuation of Titles. Listing an Internet
Address. MLA In-Text Citations. General Guidelines for In-Text
Citations. Guidelines for Sources without Authorship and/or
Pagination. Sample In-Text Citations. MLA Works-Cited Entries.
General Guidelines for the Works-Cited Page. Abbreviations of
Publishers� Names in Works-Cited Entries. Other Abbreviations for
Works-Cited Entries. Works-Cited Entries: Print Books and Other
Nonperiodical Documents. Works-Cited Entries: Print Periodical
Articles. Works-Cited Entries: Online Sources. Works-Cited Entries:
Other Sources (Primary, Personal,and Multimedia). MLA System:
Checklist.
19. APA Style and Sample Paper.
Introduction. Directory to APA Documentation. APA Documentation at
a Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. References: The Basics.
Sample APA Paper: �The Acculturation of Sex and Health: An Asian
American Dilemma� by Lanjun Wang. Writer�s Reflection. Sample Title
Page. Sample Abstract. APA Research Paper: The Body.
Sample References Page. Sample Appendix. APA Format Guidelines. APA
In-Text Citations. Guidelines for In-Text Citations. Sample In-Text
Citations. APA References Entries. General Guidelines for the
References Page. Reference Entries: Books and Other Documents.
Reference Entries: Print Periodical Articles. Reference Entries:
Online Sources. Reference Entries: Other Sources (Primary,
Personal,and Multimedia). APA System: Checklist.
20. Chicago/Turabian Style and Sample Paper.
Introduction. Directory to Chicago Style. Chicago Documentation at
a Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. Footnotes and Endnotes: The
Basics. Bibliographic Entries: The Basics. Sample Chicago Paper: �A
Thorn Beneath the Shining Armor: Churchill, Bishop Bell, and Area
Bombing� by Robert Minto. Writer�s Reflection. Sample First Page.
Sample Middle Pages. Sample Endnotes. Sample CMS Notes and
Bibliographic Entries. Books and Other Nonperiodical Sources (Print
and Digital). Periodical Articles (Print and Digital). Online
Sources. Other Sources (Primary, Personal, and Multimedia). CMS
System: Checklist.
21. CSE Style and Sample Paper.
Introduction. Directory to CSE Style. CSE Documentation at a
Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. Reference Entries: The
Basics. Sample CSE Paper: �Human Papillomavirus Infection in Males:
Penile Carcinoma� by Aurora Cruz. Writer�s Reflection. Sample First
Pages. Sample Middle Pages. Sample References Page. CSE References.
Books and Other Nonperiodical Sources (Print and Digital).
Periodical Articles (Print and Digital). Online Sources. Other
Sources (Field and Multimedia). CSE System: Checklist.
John Van Rys (Ph.D. Dalhousie University, M.A./B.A. University of Western Ontario) has taught composition, business writing, and literature courses to college students for more than fifteen years, primarily at Dordt College in Sioux Center, Iowa. In the fall of 2005, Van Rys began teaching in the English Department at Redeemer University College in Ancaster, Ontario, where he also is pursuing scholarly work in Canadian literature. For over a decade, he has worked on writing-across-the-curriculum theory and practice, on connections between workplace and academic writing, and on strategies for strengthening varied literacies in students (from reading to information to visual literacy). With Write Source Educational Publishing and Cengage Learning, he has coauthored writing handbooks for students from middle school to college. Van Rys also has coauthored an award-winning business-writing handbook for workplace professionals, WRITE FOR BUSINESS, with UpWrite Press. Patrick Sebranek (M.A. University of Wisconsin, LaCrosse) taught English, speech, and multimedia classes for sixteen years at Union Grove High School in Wisconsin. During that time, he served as the English department chair and worked on several district-wide projects, including a writing-across-the-curriculum program and a K-12 writing sequence. He has studied the works of James Moffett, Ken Macrorie, Linda Reif, Nancie Atwell, and many other contemporary educators dealing with writing and learning. Sebranek is an author and editorial director for the Write Source Educational Publishing House and works closely with teachers and educators on all new and revised handbooks and sourcebooks. Verne Meyer (Ph.D. University of Minnesota) has spent twenty-five years in the English classroom, first at the high school level and more recently at the college level. He has taught composition and theater at Dordt College in Sioux Center, Iowa. Meyer has received several awards recognizing his excellence as both a classroom teacher and a director of dramatic arts. He is considered an authority on writing across the curriculum and workplace writing, and often gives presentations as a featured speaker at educational conferences.
PART I: CONDUCTING AND WRITING UP RESEARCH. 1. Thinking through Research. Introduction. Research Rhetoric: Purpose, Reader, Context. Your Research Purpose. Your Research Audience. The Context of Your Research. Weak vs. Strong Research Writing. Strong Ideas. Logical Organization. Engaging Voice. Clear Words. Smooth Sentences. Correct Copy. Professional Design. Weak Research Writing: An Example. Strong Research Writing: An Example. Following the Research Process. Understanding Assignments and Expectations. Research Expectations. Assignment Keywords. Topic Options and Restrictions. Project Parameters. Assignment Connections. Brainstorming and Refining Topics. Brainstorming Viable Topics. Choosing a Narrow, Manageable Topic. Developing Research Questions. Simple and Substantial Questions. Main and Secondary Questions. Framing a Working Thesis. Drafting a Strong Working Thesis. Focus on Ethics: Preventing Plagiarism. A Principled Beginning. Practices that Prevent Unintentional Plagiarism. Practices that Prevent Internet Plagiarism. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 2. Planning Your Research. Introduction. Exploring Your Resource Options. Focus on Your Major: Case Studies in Resource Choices. Considering Information Sites. Focus on Ethics: Identifying Challenges for Your Project. Distinguishing Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Sources. Primary Sources. Secondary Sources. Tertiary Sources. The Primary-Secondary Symbiosis. Focus on Your Major: Following Methods of Inquiry. Locating Your Major within the Division of Disciplines. Inquiry in the Humanities. Inquiry within the Social Sciences. Inquiry within the Natural and Applied Sciences. Getting Organized to Do Your Research. Establish Priorities. Establish Best Practices. Establish a Schedule. Focus on Your Project: Research for Different Forms of Writing. Writing a Research Proposal. Parts of a Research Proposal. Sample Research Proposal. Making Effective Keyword Searches. Keywords/Search Strategies. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 3. Doing Research in the Wired Library. Introduction. Getting into Your Library. How to Get Familiar with Your Library. An Overview of Library Resources and Services. Employing the Library. Searching the Online Catalog. Starting Your Search. Searching the Catalog Using Distinct Methods. Building on Your Initial Search Results. Employing Full Citations. Locate Resources Using Call Numbers. Focus on Your Major: Finding Your LOC Classification Home. Connecting with Other Online Catalogs. NetLibrary. State Libraries. Library of Congress. Global Libraries: WorldCat. Search Subscription Databases for Periodical Articles. Understand Periodicals. Identify Your Library's Subscription Databases. Select and Search Databases. Generate a Citation List. Study Citations and Capture Identifying Information. Retrieve the Article's Full Text. Focus on Your Major: Databases for Disciplines. Using Print and Electronic Reference Works. How to Find and Use Reference Works. Types of Reference Works. Using Books: Trade, Scholarly, and E-Books. Identify Types of Books. Working with Print Books. How to Work with E-Books. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 4. Doing Research on the Free Web. Introduction. Understanding the Web: A Primer for Research. What Is the Internet? What Is the World Wide Web? What Does an Internet Address Mean? What Is the Free Web vs. the Deep Web? Using the Free Web for College Research. Benefits of Free-Web Research. Drawbacks of Free-Web Research. Guidelines for Researching the Free Web. Focus on Your Project: Saving Web Information. Recommended Web Resources for College Research. Using Wikis in Your Research. Understanding Wikis. Wikipedia as a Resource: Strengths. Wikipedia as a Resource: Weaknesses. Guidelines for Using Wikipedia. Finding Other Wikis. Evaluating Free-Web Resources. Signs of a Quality Website. Testing a Web Site's Quality and Reliability. Locating Information: URLs, Menus, Links, and Site Searches. Work with URLs. Follow Helpful Links. Explore Menus. Try the Site's Search Feature. Locating Information: Subject Trees or Directories. The Structure of a Subject Tree. Subject Trees: A Sample Search. Locating Information: Search Engines and Metasearch Tools. Understanding Search Engines as Research Tools. Guidelines for Using Search Engines. Choosing Search Engines for College Research. Conducting Advanced Searches with Search Engines. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 5. Doing Primary Research. Introduction. Planning for Primary Research. Considering Primary Research. Choosing a Method of Primary Research. Doing Effective Primary Research. Focus on Ethics: Respecting and Protecting Your Sources. Doing Primary Research with Integrity. Handling People with Care. Conducting Interviews. Choosing and Finding People to Interview. Preparing for an Interview. Doing the Interview. Sample Interview Note-Taking Sheet. Following Up the Interview. Requesting Information in Writing. Finding Contacts. Making Your Request. Focus on Research Essentials: Observing Netiquette. Sample Request Message. Conducting Informal Surveys. Finding and Selecting People to Survey. Developing a Sound Survey. Doing Your Survey. Sample Informal Survey. Analyzing Texts, Documents, Records, and Artifacts. Choosing Primary Texts. Locating Primary Texts. Analyzing Primary Texts. Focus on Your Major: Questions and Documentation. Making Observations. Finding a Site for Your Project. Getting Ready to Observe. Conducting Your Observation. Making Sense of Your Observations. Conducting Experiments. Understanding Experimentation. Following the Experimental Method. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 6. Working with Sources and Taking Notes. Maintaining a Working Bibliography. Setting Up Your Bibliography. Sample Working Bibliography Entries. Developing an Annotated Bibliography. Focus on Multimedia: Using Bibliographic Software. Developing a Note-Taking System. Note-Taking Strategies. Note-Taking Systems. Focus on Multimedia: Using Note-Taking Software. Engaging Your Sources through Critical Reading. Testing Each Source for Value. Reading Key Sources Systematically and Critically. Evaluating Your Sources. A Rating Scale for Source Reliability and Depth. Criteria for Assessing Sources. Focus on Multimedia: Interpreting and Evaluating Visuals. Sample Visual and Analysis. Summarizing, Paraphrasing, and Quoting Source Material. Summarizing Useful Passages. Paraphrasing Key Passages. Quoting Crucial Phrases, Sentences, and Passages. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 7. Building Credibility: Avoiding Plagiarism and Other Source Abuses. Introduction. Recognizing Plagiarism. What Is Plagiarism? What Does Plagiarism Look Like? Avoiding Source Misuse. Why Is Plagiarism So Serious? How Do You Avoid Plagiarizing in Your Writing? What Other Source Abuses Should You Avoid? What Other Academic Violations Should You Avoid? Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 8 Drafting Papers with Documented Research. Introduction. Shifting from Research to Writing. Revisiting Your Research Rhetoric. Understanding the Writing Process. Reviewing Your Findings. Conducting Q & A. Deepening Your Thinking on the Topic. Imagining Your Paper. Sorting Out Your Notes. Sharpening Your Working Thesis. Deepening Your Thesis. Questioning Your Thesis. Considering Methods of Organization. Organizational Practices to Avoid. Organizational Practices that Consider Sources. Basic Essay or Paper Structure. Patterns of Reasoning. Traditional Organizational Patterns. Developing an Outline. Choosing a Type of Outline. Connecting Your Outline and Your Notes. Considering Drafting Strategies. Choosing a Drafting Method. Respecting Your Sources While Drafting. Drafting the Introduction. Engaging Your Reader. Establishing Your Voice. Establishing Focus and Scope. Introducing Your Line of Thinking. A Strong Opening. Drafting the Body: Reasoning with Evidence. Featuring Research in Your Discussion. The Full-Bodied Paragraph. Choosing and Using Evidence. Drafting the Body: Smoothly Integrating Source Material. A Pattern for Integrating Sources. Practices for Smoothly Integrating Quotations. Guidelines for Correctly Documenting Sources. Drafting the Conclusion. Deepen Your Thesis. Complete and Unify Your Discussion. A Strong Conclusion. Drafting the Title. The Purpose of the Title. Patterns for Academic Titles. Focus on Multimedia: Using and Integrating Graphics. Uses of Visuals in Your Research Writing. Planning Visuals for Your Paper. Parts of a Visual. Types of Visuals. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 9. Revising and Refining Your Research Paper. Introduction. Practical Strategies for Improving Your First Draft. Break Down Revising and Refining into Manageable Steps. Review Your Draft from Multiple Points of View. Use Your Software's Editing Tools as an Aid. Revising in Action: Fixing Global Issues. Editing in Action: Fixing Local Issues. Testing Your Ideas and Organization. Improving Your Reasoning. Eliminating Logical Fallacies. Improving Organizational Flow. Improving Paragraphs. Checking the Voice of Your Writing. Testing Your Level of Confidence. Testing for an Academic Style. Editing for Sentence Smoothness. Fixing Primer Style. Fixing Rambling Sentences. Fixing Unparallel Structures. Fixing Sluggish Sentence Structures. Using Active and Passive Voice of Verbs. Editing for Sentence Variety. Editing for Energetic Word Choice. Eliminate Wordiness. Replace Vague Wording with Precise, Concrete Terms. Hit the Right Diction Level. Replace Slanted Terms with Neutral Ones. Cut Cliches. Rework Pretentious and Flowery Language. Eliminate Jargon. Focus on Ethics: Plain and Fair English. Striving for Plain English. Striving for Respectful Language. Proofreading for Correctness. Test Your Draft for Accuracy. Check Quotation Integration and Punctuation. Check Titles of Works. Check Your Use of Historical Present Tense. Check for the Top Ten Grammar Errors. Check for Common Usage Errors. Focus on Your Major: Developing a Summary or Abstract. The Content and Style of a Summary. Writing a Summary. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 10. Sharing Your Research Writing. Introduction. Designing Your Research Document. Making Rhetorically-Driven Design Choices. Planning Your Research Document's Format. Thinking through Page Layout. Using Color. Making Typographical Choices. Submitting an Academic Paper. The Character of an Academic Paper. Submitting or Posting a Digital Document. Developing a Website. Contributing to a Wiki. Sharing Findings in a Blog. Preparing Research Presentations. Planning Your Presentation. Organizing and Developing Your Presentation. Delivering Your Presentation. Focus on Your Major: Developing a Poster Session. Focus on Multimedia: Using Presentation Software Effectively. Building Your Research-Writing Portfolio. Explore Your Project's Fit in Your Portfolio. Add Your Paper to Your Portfolio. Focus on Your Major: Writing into Your Discipline. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. 11. Completing Team Research Projects. Introduction. Understanding Principles and Types of Collaboration. Principles of Collaboration. Types of Collaboration. Leading a Team Research Project. Leading Individuals. Leading the Group. Communicating in a Group. Brainstorming. Solving Problems. Making Decisions. Giving Criticism. Taking Criticism. Resolving Conflicts. Using Peer-Review and Peer-Editing Strategies. Writer's Role. Reviewer's Role. Peer-Review Systems. Integrating Teamwork into the Research and Writing Process. Dividing Tasks. Prewriting. Drafting. Revising. Refining. Practicing Your Research: Activities and Checklist. PART II: RESEARCH-WRITING FORMS AND PROJECTS. 12. The Personal Research Paper. Introduction. Guidelines for Writing a Personal-Research Paper. Sample Student Paper: Personal-Research Writing. Writer's Reflection Student Model: "The Pi-Nee-Waus Powwow: A Place to Gather" by Michelle Winkler. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist. 13. The Analytical Research Paper. Introduction. Guidelines for Writing an Analytical Paper. Analytical Modes: An Overview. Definition. Process. Classification. Compare-Contrast. Cause-Effect. Sample Student Paper: Analytical Research Writing. Writer's Reflection. Student Model: "'I Did Not Get My Spaghetti-O's': Death Row Consumption in the Popular Media" by Stevie Jeung. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist. 14. The Argumentative Research Paper. Introduction. Guidelines for Writing an Argumentative Paper. Argumentation: A Primer. Appealing to Character. Appealing to Emotion. Appealing to Reason. Sample Student Paper: Argumentative Research Writing. Writer's Reflection. Student Model: "Making Waves: Finding Keys to Success in the Failures of the Fish Industry" by Andrew Skogrand. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist. 15. The Primary-Source Research Report. Introduction. Guidelines for Writing a Primary-Research Report. Sample Student Paper: Primary-Research Writing. Writer's Reflection. Student Model: "Chew-Toy Color Preference in Kenneled Dogs (Canis)" by Terri Wong. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist. 16. Analysis of a Literary Text. Introduction. Guidelines for Writing a Literary Analysis. Literary Research: A Primer. Critical Approaches. Secondary Research. Literary Terms. Poetry Terms. Sample Student Paper: Literary Research Writing. Writer's Reflection. Student Model: "Stephen Dedalus: Finding Identity in Myth" by Rebecca Mombourquette. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist. 17. The Literature Review. Introduction. Guidelines for Writing a Literature Review. Sample Student Paper: Reviewing the Literature. Writer's Reflection. Student Model: "The Role of MicroRNA in Cancer" by Dmitriy Kolesnikov. Reading Research Writing: Questions. Practicing Your Research: Projects and Checklist. III. SYSTEMS OF DOCUMENTATION. 18. MLA Style and Sample Paper. Introduction. Directory to MLA Documentation. MLA Documentation at a Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. Works Cited: The Basics. Sample MLA Paper: "A Picture before a Thousand Words: Art Therapy and the Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa" by Rubi Garyfalakis. Writer's Reflection. Sample First Page. Sample Middle Pages. Sample Works-Cited Page. MLA Format Guidelines. MLA Format at a Glance. Whole-Paper Format and Printing Issues. Typographical Issues. Page-Layout Issues. Footnotes and Endnotes in MLA Documentation. Content Notes. Bibliographic Notes. Format for Endnotes. In-Text Abbreviations in MLA Format. General Guidelines for In-Text Abbreviations. Acceptable In-Text Abbreviations. Conventions for Names, Titles, and Internet Addresses. Names of People. Capitalization and Punctuation of Titles. Listing an Internet Address. MLA In-Text Citations. General Guidelines for In-Text Citations. Guidelines for Sources without Authorship and/or Pagination. Sample In-Text Citations. MLA Works-Cited Entries. General Guidelines for the Works-Cited Page. Abbreviations of Publishers' Names in Works-Cited Entries. Other Abbreviations for Works-Cited Entries. Works-Cited Entries: Print Books and Other Nonperiodical Documents. Works-Cited Entries: Print Periodical Articles. Works-Cited Entries: Online Sources. Works-Cited Entries: Other Sources (Primary, Personal,and Multimedia). MLA System: Checklist. 19. APA Style and Sample Paper. Introduction. Directory to APA Documentation. APA Documentation at a Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. References: The Basics. Sample APA Paper: "The Acculturation of Sex and Health: An Asian American Dilemma" by Lanjun Wang. Writer's Reflection. Sample Title Page. Sample Abstract. APA Research Paper: The Body. Sample References Page. Sample Appendix. APA Format Guidelines. APA In-Text Citations. Guidelines for In-Text Citations. Sample In-Text Citations. APA References Entries. General Guidelines for the References Page. Reference Entries: Books and Other Documents. Reference Entries: Print Periodical Articles. Reference Entries: Online Sources. Reference Entries: Other Sources (Primary, Personal,and Multimedia). APA System: Checklist. 20. Chicago/Turabian Style and Sample Paper. Introduction. Directory to Chicago Style. Chicago Documentation at a Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. Footnotes and Endnotes: The Basics. Bibliographic Entries: The Basics. Sample Chicago Paper: "A Thorn Beneath the Shining Armor: Churchill, Bishop Bell, and Area Bombing" by Robert Minto. Writer's Reflection. Sample First Page. Sample Middle Pages. Sample Endnotes. Sample CMS Notes and Bibliographic Entries. Books and Other Nonperiodical Sources (Print and Digital). Periodical Articles (Print and Digital). Online Sources. Other Sources (Primary, Personal, and Multimedia). CMS System: Checklist. 21. CSE Style and Sample Paper. Introduction. Directory to CSE Style. CSE Documentation at a Glance. In-Text Citation: The Basics. Reference Entries: The Basics. Sample CSE Paper: "Human Papillomavirus Infection in Males: Penile Carcinoma" by Aurora Cruz. Writer's Reflection. Sample First Pages. Sample Middle Pages. Sample References Page. CSE References. Books and Other Nonperiodical Sources (Print and Digital). Periodical Articles (Print and Digital). Online Sources. Other Sources (Field and Multimedia). CSE System: Checklist.
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