1 Writing at the Graduate Level Rachel Grammer and Kayla Skarbakka Writing Tutors Walden University...

Post on 29-Dec-2015

217 views 0 download

Transcript of 1 Writing at the Graduate Level Rachel Grammer and Kayla Skarbakka Writing Tutors Walden University...

1

Writing at the Graduate Level

Rachel Grammer and Kayla SkarbakkaWriting Tutors

Walden University Writing Center

22

Housekeeping

• Muting

• Questions

• Tech trouble? http://support.citrixonline.com/en_US/GoToTraining

• Recording: http://writingcenter.waldenu.edu/415.htm

33

Agenda

• APA Style• Paraphrasing• Plagiarism• Graduate Writing• Grammar • Resources

44

APA Style Refresher

• Citations• References• Paraphrasing• Plagiarism

5

Citations

66

Citations

77

Citation with Direct Quotation

• Direct quotations– According to Oyler (2012), “Citations help one’s

reader to better understand the origin of material” (p. 12).

– To become a stronger writer, one must begin “by tackling the ominous stare of the blank computer screen” (Powet, 2012, para. 4).

88

Citation Variations

• An organization: (US Bank, 2005)

• No author: (“Without Identity,” 2002)

• Secondary source: Cosby (as cited in Nash, 2007)

99

Which would be a correct in-text citation?

A. According to Johnson 2012, “College graduates are underprepared for the rigors of the corporate world” (p. 214).

B. Students who have recently graduated “are underprepared for the rigors of the corporate world” according to (Johnson, 2012, p. 214).

C. Johnson (2012) reminded the researchers that “College graduates are underprepared for the rigors of the corporate world” (p. 214).

10

References

1111

Common References

Poe, E., & Lee, A. (1847). Good poetry and one-syllable surnames. Journal of Really Nothing, 4(2), 23-45. doi: 107897830

Nadeau, N. (2012). Rapping with Seoul. Funtown, MN: Too Cool Press.

1212

Common References

U. S. Department of Education. (2007). Reconstructing the educational system: Guidelines from trial and error. Retrieved from http://www.ed.gov/ficticioussite

1313

Which Reference Is Best?A. Skarbakka, K., & Grammer, R. (2012). How to

talk like a scholar and really mean it. Journal of All Things Crazy, 8(17), 22-44. doi: 10x594930

B. Skarbakka, K., & Grammer, R. (2012). How to talk like a scholar and really mean it.

Journal of All Things Crazy, 8(17), 22-44. doi: 10x594930

C. Skarbakka, K., & Grammer, R. (2012) How to talk like a scholar and really mean it.

Journal of All Things Crazy, 8(17), 22-44. doi: 10x594930

1414

For a List of Common References

• www.writingcenter.waldenu.edu

• http://writingcenter.waldenu.edu/353.htm

He used the website →

15

Paraphrasing

1616

Paraphrasing

• Reread until you relax• Look up from the

screen

• Be selective: Do you need to paraphrase entire source?

• Change the structure, then the words.

Strategies

1717

Paraphrasing

Your Mind = Funnel

Your Mind = Funnel

1818

ParaphrasingOriginal: “Students who have a tendency to apply

source material without adapting a proper citation and abiding by APA format may be prosecuted for intentional imitation and may be required to modify their material.”

Paraphrase: Students may be accused of plagiarism and have to rewrite their papers if they use outside sources and don’t follow APA rules for citations.

19

Plagiarism

2020

2121

What is Plagiarism?Copying other people’s words, ideas, images, etc.

2222

Plagiarism and Culture: Why?

Academic• Test only• Memorization• Imitation

Lifestyle• Copying• Common

Knowledge• Definition of

“intellectual property”

Personal• Time• Fear• Lack of

confidence

2323

How to Avoid It

http://writingcenter.waldenu.edu/63.htm

Do:• Paraphrase• Restructure the

entire sentence• Give credit to any

ideas that are not your own

Don’t:• Just insert

synonyms• Forget your

citations

24

Graduate Writing Expectations

•Scholarly voice

•Argument

•Writing tips

•Resources

2525

Scholarly Voice

Goal: sound serious, professional, and informed

2626

Formality: Word choiceFormal and precise language• Avoid slang, colloquialisms, and clichés

The kids said the test was a piece of cake. The students said the test was easy.

• Avoid metaphors and similesThe patient was sick as a dog. The patient was diagnosed with severe pneumonia.

• Avoid contractionsJames hasn’t ever missed a day of school.James has never missed a day of school.

2727

Formality: Point of View• Avoid the second person (you/your)You need to be aware of your treatment options. →Patients need to be aware of their treatment options.• Avoid the general we (or us or our)We are responsible for our children’s wellbeing. →Parents are responsible for their children’s wellbeing.• Use the first person (I/me/my) only as appropriateThis paper will discuss…→ In this paper, I will discuss…The data will be collected.→ I will collect the data.The scholar will argue… → I will argue…Not appropriate: I found several studies that suggested…Not appropriate: I think that all politicians are corrupt.

2828

Neutrality

• Avoid opinion statements I think/I feel/I believe

Not so great: I think childhood obesity is a major concern.Better: Childhood obesity is a major concern.Best: Childhood obesity is a major concern as 17% of children in America are obese (CDC, 2012).

2929

Neutrality• Avoid generalizations

Not so great: Children do not get enough exercise.Better: Many children do not get enough exercise.Best: According to the CDC (2012), in 2011, only 29% of high schoolers received the recommended amount of exercise, defined as at least one hour per day.

3030

Clear and Direct Statements

• The simpler the better! Not so great: There are 60 individuals who participated in the study and responded to the survey.Better: Sixty participants responded to the survey.

Not so great: How to address the achievement gap in the most effective way has been argued and debated by scholars.Better: Scholars debate the most effective way to address the achievement gap.

3131

Consider Your Audience

• In general: scholars in your field• May depend on assignment

3232

Argument and Analysis

• Not just reporting what you’ve learned!• Take part in the scholarly conversation.

3333

Argument and Analysis: ThesisThesis• Specific and arguable• Comes at the end of introduction

Not so great: This paper is about classroom managementBetter: Classroom management is an important part of

teaching.Best: All teachers should develop the classroom

management skills of authority, individualization, and time management, which are necessary to run effective classrooms.

3434

Argument and Analysis

Evidence• Supports your central argument throughout

your paper• Demonstrates your scholarly credibilityEach and every sentence that uses information

from a source must include a citation.• Cite credible sources

3535

Argument and Analysis

Analysis• Your own interpretation of other authors’ ideas• Ensures that you’re not just summarizing your

research, but using it to support your argument According to Wilson (2011), 68% of Dallas high

school juniors reported chronic boredom in math class, suggesting a need to reconsider the math curriculum and invest in teacher training in this district.

3636

Writing Tips

3737

Tips: Research

Strong choices Weak choices•Articles from peer-reviewed journals•Peer-reviewed or scholarly books•Scholarly websites

•Wikis or blogs•Newspapers•Magazines•Popular books•General websites•Encyclopedias

3838

Tips: Prewriting

• OutliningI. Introduction

A. Main topicB. Focus of paperD. Thesis statement

II. BackgroundA. Evidence of the problemB. Significance of problem

III. Major Point 1A. Evidence of point…

3939

Tips: Writing

Introduction• Construct an arguable thesis• Establish your scholarly tone

Conclusion• Reiterate your thesis• Provide closure

4040

Tips: Writing

MEAL plan:• Main idea: topic sentence• Evidence: information from your sources to

support your main idea (usually include citations)• Analysis: explanation of the evidence/discussion

of its relevance in light of your thesis statement• Lead out: conclusion(Duke University's Thompson Writing Program, n.d.)

4141

Tips: Revise, revise, revise!Revision checklist:Thesis statementPaper and paragraph organizationUse of evidenceCitation formatReference formatScholarly toneSimple and direct sentencesMechanics (grammar and spelling)

4242

Recap• Include APA citations in each and every sentence

that includes information from your sources• All sources you cite in your paper should appear

in your reference list• Paraphrase mindfully and carefully• Keep your tone formal and neutral and your

sentences simple• Use scholarly arguments to join the conversation• Remember that writing is a process!

4343

Resources

• Website: http://writingcenter.waldenu.edu/ • Guides and resources• Exercises and quizzes• Webinars

• Writing courses• Grammarly• writingsupport@waldenu.edu• One-on-one paper reviews• Library

4444

Amsberry, D. (2010). Deconstructing Plagiarism: International Students and Textual Borrowing Practices. The Reference Librarian, 51, 31-44. doi: 10.1080/02763870903362183

Duff, H. A., Rogers, D. P., & Harris, M. B. (2006). International engineering students—avoiding plagiarism through understanding the Western academic context of scholarship. European Journal of Engineering Education, 31 (6), 673-681. doi: 10.1080/03043790600911753

Hayes, N., & Introna, L.D. (2005). Cultural Values, Plagiarism, and Fairness: When Plagiarism Gets in the Way of Learning. Ethics & Behavior, 15(3). doi: 10.1207/s15327019eb1503_2

Heitman, E., & Litewka, S. (2011). Seminar article: International perspectives on plagiarism and considerations for teaching international trainees. Urologic Oncology: Seminars and Original Investigations, 29 (1), 104-108. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2010.09.014

References

45

Thanks for joining us!

Questions?

writingsupport@waldenu.edu