Reader Response 8…
description
Transcript of Reader Response 8…
Reader Response 8… Write down on a piece of paper some ways in
which you feel like an outsider having trouble connecting with others
Or Define what respect looks like to you in a
classroom of diverse students. Be clear and specific and provide an example for each. › Respect for the instructor› Respect for other students› Respect for yourself and behavior› Respect for the subject› Respect for your homework› Respect for your class work
Peer Planner Study for Quiz on Chpts 7-8
Quiz Family Feud! Get into “families” of 4-5 students Each of the 4 questions have 4-5
answers. Write down the answers on your
“Family” paper (one per group)
Communicating in a Diverse
World
Chapter 9, pg 282
“Successfully intelligent people…question assumptions and encourage others to do so. We all tend to have assumptions about the way things are or should be…but creatively intelligent people question many assumptions that others accept, eventually leading others to question those assumptions as well.”
Robert Sternberg
Real Questions, Practical AnswersHow can I adjust to a new
society and connect to people in
my community?
How Can You Develop Cultural Competence? ---- Pg 282
1. Value Diversity2. Identify and Evaluate Personal
Perceptions and Attitudes3. Be Aware of Opportunities and
Challenges That Occur When Cultures Interact
4. Build Cultural Knowledge5. Adapt to Diverse Cultures
Diversity means… living, working, and
studying with people from different backgrounds.
becoming aware of different perspectives and different ways of doing things.
socializing with and perhaps marrying people from other cultures.
Diversity influences our… learning and communication styles sexual orientation or marital status education or socio-economic status levels of ability or disability different values different talents and skills successful intelligence abilities religious preferences
Expand Your Perception of Diversity – pg 286
1. Brainstorm 10 words/phrases that describe YOU (focus on characteristics others cannot SEE, for example: I am Swiss).
2. Partner w/ a classmate you do not know well. Write down characteristics you see (know, or can guess) about him/her
3. Talk w/ your classmate about all of the lists4. Write: what did you learn about your
classmate? Was your impression of them accurate?
5. Write what you wish people would focus on about you
Build Cultural Knowledge Read things that expose you to different
perspectives Ask questions of all kinds of people Observe how people behave Travel internationally to unfamiliar places Travel locally to encounter a variety of people
in your community Build friendships with students and coworkers
Pg 287
Thinking on Prejudgment
after doing that, list possible causes› family culture› fear of differences› experiences
Groups of 4-5 people answer this question on a separate piece of paper:
"why do people judge others before they know anything about them?
Identify & Evaluate pg 284
Prejudice› Preconceived judgment or opinion formed without
grounds or sufficient knowledge Influence of family and culture Fear of differences experience
Stereotypes› Standardized mental picture that represents an
oversimplified opinion or uncritical judgment Desire for patterns and logic Media influences laziness
Personal Difference Assessment
Read the handout. Answer at least one of the questions
The tough-minded person always examines the facts before he reaches conclusions: In short, he postjudges. The tender-minded person reaches conclusions before he has examined the first fact; in short, he prejudges and is prejudiced…There is little hope for us until we become tough minded enough to break loose from the shackles of prejudice, half-truths, and down-right ignorance.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Be aware of opportunities and challenges that occur when different cultures interact
Discrimination Hate Crimes Discussion: What are positives and
negatives of cultural interaction?
Build knowledge about other cultures
Positive Action - Address cause, not effect
Ten ways to Fight Hate
Practical Application Read the handout: Case Study: What
Would You Do?
Brainstorm on the back of the page to create solutions
Adapt to Diverse Cultures Look past external characteristics Put yourself in other people’s shoes Adjust to cultural differences Help others in need Stand up against prejudice,
discrimination and hate Recognize that people everywhere
have the same basic needsPg 289
How Can You Communicate Effectively?
Adjust to Communication Styles Know How to Give and Receive
Criticism Understand Body Language Manage Conflict Manage Anger
Personality Spectrum Communication StylesWhat style are you? Refer back to pg 76
Thinker-Dominant Communicators……focus on facts and logic
Organizer-Dominant Communicators……focus on structure and completeness
Giver-Dominant Communicators……focus on concern for others
Adventurer-Dominant Communicators……focus on the present
Communication StylesWhat style are you? Refer to pg 76
Get into groups with people of other communication styles.
Discuss ways you can improve communication when interacting with people who tend to communicate differently.
Do you Prefer to communicate with people of the same style?
Do you like the communication process with people of different styles?
What suggestions do you have for more effective communication?
Communication StylesWhat style are you? Refer to pg 76
Divide into groups of dominant communication styles.› Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of their primary
communication type.
Divide into new groups, each of which contains at least one of each of the four communication styles. › Discuss ways they can improve communication when interacting with
people who tend to communicate differently.
Do you Prefer to communicate with people of the same style? Do you like the communication process with people of different
styles? What are the challenges you face? What suggestions do you have for more effective
communication?
To communicate effectively… Listen well. Adjust your style to
your audience. Be comfortable with
giving and receiving criticism.
Communicate with cultural competence.
(Un-)Constructive Criticism (Pg 293)
What is constructive criticism? What is unconstructive criticism? What are the strategies to constructive
criticism? (Criticize the behavior, defend the
problematic behavior specifically)
Criticism
Constructive Try clipping your
hair back so that you don’t play with it so much.
You may try using a visual aid to remind yourself where you are in your speech and give a visual aid.
UnconstructiveYou looked like a
ditz playing with your hair like that.
You SUCKEDStop saying “uh” so
much!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YivQYeI0vys http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZiYMrjFFc4
Body Language (pg 294) 4 students at
the front of the room
Who would you want to hire?
Impressions?
Passive, Aggressive or Assertive. (pg 295)Passive
Lacking will or energy, not addressing the issue
AggressiveFocuses too heavily on your needs, demanding –
sometimes loudly.
AssertiveBeing assertive strikes the right balance. States fact
and opinions in an unemotional way. Requests respectfully.
http://www.videojug.com/film/communication-and-assertiveness-training-skills-3 - Boring video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kO2KEYhQbrM (RA’s)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15a9KAZgijg (Passive, Aggressive, Assertive)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDzoVtts3qU – passive aggressivenesshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tNzEodR7kLc – Passive Aggressive Videohttp://www.mtstcil.org/skills/assert-intro.html more activities
Try out each method: Role Play
Passive Aggressive Assertive
Joe and Charlie have been having a conflict over a library book that Joe borrowed from Charlie. When Charlie put the book in his locker to return it to Joe, it was stolen. Joe wants his book back.
Conflict Resolution (pg 296)Aggressive, Passive, or Assertive? Get a partner.Take turns convincing each other to get:
(partner being convinced should be considerate, but not immediately agree)› A chance to rewrite a paper for a better grade› A refund on an appliance that didn’t work properly› My partner to start doing more for the family› My father to let me make my own decisions about my
major› A raise and promotion at work
After each attempt, determine if the attempt was 1)aggressive, 2) passive, or 3) assertive.
Which was most effective?
Conflict Prevention Strategies (pg 295)Strategy: Send “I” messages
How it helps: Highlights the effect the actions have on you rather than the actions or the person involved
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6uf7G92KWJU – I message vs You message
Strategy: Be assertive How it helps: Being passive takes the focus off your
needs. Being aggressive focuses too heavily on your needs. Being assertive strikes the right balance.
How Do You Make the Most of Personal Relationships?
Use Positive Relationship Strategies Manage Communication Technology Avoid Destructive Relationships Choose Communities that Enhance Your
Life
Positive Relationship Strategies Prioritize personal relationships Spend time with people you respect and
admire If you want a friend, be a friend Work through tensions Take risks Find a pattern that suits you If a relationship fails, find ways to cope
Thinking Successfully About Relating to Others
Analytical thinking – Assess the underlying facts and assumptions that cause prejudice. Understand how and when communication, especially across cultures, can break down.
Creative thinking – See new ways of viewing diversity and its values. Think outside the box to resolve conflict, communicate, and deal with personal relationship issues.
Practical thinking – Learn from experiences in relating to others, be sensitive when relating to others, adapt to communication styles, recognize warning signs with negative communication patterns or damaging relationships.
taraadinThe Arabic word taraadin includes the concept of “compromise” but contains another level of meaning. Specifically, it refers to a win-win solution to a problem, an agreement that brings positive effects to everyone involved.
How would you apply this word to your life?
“We cannot live for ourselves alone. Our lives are connected by a thousand invisible threads, and along these sympathetic fibers, our actions run as causes and return to us as results.”
Herman Melville, Author
Resume Writing Collect everything you’ve done Write down
› Education (what HS? How many units/what classes @ college?)
› Volunteer activities, community service› Jobs/positions you’ve held› Awards› Don’t think you can make your jobs sound
good? Look at the skills you have!http://online.onetcenter.org/
Mock Interview Prepare yourself for an interview. Partner up Review the Interview Guide Role play
› First one person is the interviewer, asking all of the questions, record answers and make their observations.
› Once the first interviewer is complete, switch roles.
› You will be awarded up to 100 points for this activity, based on your answers and attitude.
Sections on a resumeStandard Contact Education Experience
Options Honors, activities,
outreach/volunteer Skills Objectives References
Use action Verbs! Recorded, Prepared, Explained, Assisted, Developed
HOW TO WRITE A RESUME
Presentation written By
Dinorah Rodriguez
Texas A&M
A RESUME IS A marketing piece,
an advertisement, for your unique set of skills/abilities/experience.
A tool that you use to gain an interview. A fluid and changing document which must
be personalized and targeted. A billboard. It is not going to be possible to list every
single item of interest about yourself in this document - you need to identify what will be of interest to your target audience and highlight that information.
What Will a Resume Do For
Me?
Enable you to assess your strengths, skills, abilities and experience - thereby preparing you for the interview process
Act as a reminder of you to the employer/interviewer after you're done interviewing
Be a basis for the interviewer to justify your hiring
The ultimate goal of a resume is to gain you an interview!
Are There Any Absolute Rules of Resume Writing?
Yes, but only a few! Almost every rule you have ever heard can be broken, if you have a very good reason. Some rules, however, are absolutes, including:
No typing errors
No errors in spelling
No lying or grandiose embellishments
Are There Any Absolute Rules of Resume Writing?
No negative information should be included
Include only relevant information
Never be more than two pages long (see Curriculum Vitae for Educational resumes)
How long should my Resume be?
1-page, this is not an absolute rule, › IF you have the right combination of experience and education.
Long enough to detail what you have to offer a potential employer, BUT short enough to entice that employer to want to know more (that is, invite you for an interview.)
As a general guideline, you should keep your resume to one page until you have 5-10 years of experience, then go to two.
If you cannot fill two entire pages with an appropriate amount of “white space”, you should condense it to one page.
White Space: draws the eye to key points Too much Not Enough
Just about right, maybe make the name larger, though
Will I Have More Than One Version of My Resume?
YES! Employers today want to know what you can do for them, so
it is imperative that you create a targeted resume each time you apply for an opportunity.
You will also develop a 'generic' resume to use in online databases, such as ours.
You may also need a scan able or web-based resume, depending on your field; more on these later.
Are There Different Styles of Resumes?
Yes, there are three resumes styles. The chronological and functional styles have been around for a long time.
Employers today are requesting the targeted style. Click on the resume type to see an example. This workshop focuses on developing a targeted resume.
We are not recommending that you follow these examples. It is important that your resume be unique
Which Style is Recommended for College
Students? Texas A&M- University Kingsville Career & Counseling
Services recommends doing a TARGETED resume, although some circumstances dictate a more generic approach.
Types of Resume Chronological Functional Targeted
How Do I Get Started? • Get a job announcement or description for the job, or type of job, you
are seeking, if possible.
• Make a list of all co-curricular activities you are involved in (clubs, Greek organizations, honor organizations, major-specific fraternities, intramurals, etc.)
• Compile a list of all community activities of which you are a part (PTA, church committees, social clubs, volunteer work, etc.)
• Gather together job descriptions from your past positions. If you haven’t saved copies of these, you should from now on!
• List what things friends/relatives/peers come to you for help with. This may assist you in identifying strengths you would not otherwise recognize in yourself.
What Must I Have on My Resume? Name
Address Phone number Education Profile or
Summary of Qualifications
Experience
What Else Can Be Included on My Resume?
Licenses/Certifications
Accomplishments/Achievements
Affiliations/Memberships
Activities and Honors
What Should Never Be on My Resume?
Height, weight, age, date of birth, place of birth, marital status, sex, race, health (some of these items may be necessary on an International Resume) or social security number (NEVER!)
The word "Resume" at the top! Any statement that begins with "I" or "My" Reasons for leaving previous job(s) Picture of yourself Salary Information for previous positions or Salary
Expectations Reference names Religion, church affiliations, political affiliations
How Do I List My Name?
Use your "go-by" name. That is, if everyone knows you by a nickname or your middle name, use it.
For example, Katherine Elaine Johnson – if everyone calls you Kate – just put KATE JOHNSON on the top of your resume, if everyone calls you Elaine – use ELAINE JOHNSON or K. ELAINE JOHNSON.
List any professional credentials (M.D., CPA, Ph.D.) that are appropriate for the job sought.
Phone Numbers or Email addresses?
List your current phone (and permanent phone if you plan to move soon) . Make sure you have a professional sounding message on it!
Mobile phone #s? Be aware that you could be caught at the gym or putting gas in your car. If you are in a situation that could compromise your professional appearance, let the call go to voicemail and call back.
Email address MUST be professional. addresses like [email protected] , [email protected] or [email protected] would not be appropriate! Use common sense.
Do I need an OBJECTIVE?
IF YOU WANT IT. Some say “YES, it tells the reader why you are sending the resume, i.e., what position or type of position you are seeking.”
does not need to be a complete sentence like the thesis statement of your resume.
Everything you include after it should support it! Ideally target your objective to include job title desired, position level,
field, industry, and/or company name. If you are sending this resume for a specific position at a specific company - SAY IT HERE!
Use the objective to tell what you can do for the company, NOT what you want the company to do for you… no statements like: to gain valuable experience, etc.
Avoid the words "entry level" ~ we recommend "professional" instead.
Education
Should I put my GPA on my resume? Yes, if it is 3.0 or higher If your overall GPA is lower than 3.0, but your GPA within your
major is 3.0 or above, you can isolate your major GPA. If you list your GPA for one degree, you must list it for all.
Licenses and Certifications –
Do I include them? Yes, if they are relevant to the job you are seeking. Otherwise, no.
All post-secondary institutions from which you (a) have a degree or (b) expect to receive a degree
College name, city, and state Major - be sure to get the exact name of your degree and list it here! If you
don’t know, check your degree plan or check with your advisor or dean’s office.
Graduation date (or expected graduation): Month/Year
Does Coursework Belong on my Resume?
Only if you are seeking a co-op or intern position and certain disciplines: check with your PD/Advisor› Section: “Education” or “Related Courses”.
If you took a course (or courses) that other students with your major would not take and it would be advantageous for a particular position, list it (probably under your qualifications area.)
What About High School?
Don't include high school on your resume, as a college student, it is understood that you completed high school.
Exceptional activities and honors from high school may be included IF (1) the honor is one that very few receive (i.e., valedictorian, Eagle Scout, etc.) or (2) the award shows an early interest in your career
Where do I list Academic Awards, Honors,
and Recognition?
We suggest using the Honors and Activities section at the end of the resume.
Summary of Qualifications / Profile / Skills Section http://www.onetonline.org/
Tailor this section to reflect what the employer is seeking, different positions will warrant that you create different qualifications sections.› NOT every single skill, experience, or attribute you possess here, focus on
what you can do to successfully perform the job. These are brief statements of your experience, training and/or
personal abilities which summarize your skills, abilities and experience.
Qualifications are more experience-based whereas Profiles are more personal attributes
Create a Action list from the tasks you performed at your job and volunteer experience. For phrasing and task lists, visit http://www.onetonline.org/
Developing a Summary of Qualifications / Skills / Profile -
STEP ONE Create a “Master” Resume that lists ALL of your jobs,
your volunteer experiences, your skills, your awards/activities, etc.
Identify your strengths, skills, abilities gained through past employment or campus organization or classroom experience.
List job duties, one at a time, starting each with an action verb
Each time you update your resume use the skills transferable to THIS position› Remember, typically an employer doesn't want to know what you did for
someone else. S/he wants to know what you can do for his/her organization. If there was a result (an accomplishment) related to the job
duty, put it in.
Developing a Summary of Qualifications / Skills /
Profile - STEP TWO Identify what the employer needs
› Reading the job description and/or position vacancy announcement. Look at job duties, position requirements and preferences, desired traits, knowledge/skills/abilities (also called KSAs on governmental announcements), etc.
Employer Skills Match - develop your Qualifications or Skills section by matching up what the employer needs with what you can provide.
Subheadings can be used, if appropriate, i.e., computer skills, customer service skills, etc.
Note that "Qualifications" or "Skills" are more experience-based or quantifiable whereas "Profile statements" are more personal attributes.
Reverse chronological order › that is, your most recent job is listed first
Include name of company, city and state. › Do not list street addresses, supervisors, telephone numbers or reason for
leaving. Dates of employment are required.
› Be sure to include month (or term) and year, i.e., Fall 2004 or June 2003-present.
There is no rule about which jobs you must include. › You might list every job you've ever held or you might just list your last 3
positions. Option: only include the relevant positions you've had
› name the section Related Experience or Relevant Work History or something similar.
How Do I List Jobs Within the Experience Section?
How Do I List Jobs Within the Experience
Section? Option: isolate the related experience (including internships) in one
section (titled Related Experience or Internships or ??) › then follow with the unrelated (but still valuable) experience in a Work History
section. List a job title so the employer has an idea of the work you
performed. › If you didn’t have an official title, choose one that best describes what you
actually did at this job. Typically job duties should not be included here unless they are
highly relevant to your objective. › Even then do not include duties which are Implied by your job title or alluded to
in the Summary of Qualifications or a Profile section. However, job accomplishments SHOULD be listed as bullet statements under each position as applicable.
Where Do I Put My Activities and Honors?
After your Employment History (unless you’ve had few/no jobs) Include scholarships, honors, organizations, and memberships. Community work, volunteer work, is also appropriate to list
here. Don't have to include everything you've been involved with
› Keep your goal in mind (getting that interview) and give enough information to allow the reader (i.e., potential employer) what s/he needs to make that decision.
Remember, don’t include anything from before college unless it is truly an exceptional feat.
Rank these items from 'most impressive' or 'most relevant' to 'least impressive' or 'least relevant' as it relates to your job target OR chronologically.
Name this section what it is. If it is all community work – Community Involvement – would be a good name; if it is all clubs and organizations – call it Activities; if it is all honors – call it Honors.
Are There Activities That I Shouldn’t List?
Activities that are controversial. › political affiliated groups, certain volunteer
work, and/or church activities.
IF that activity or membership is SO important to you that you would not want to work somewhere that it wasn’t ‘ok’ then include it on the resume, but
IF you are more interested in the opportunity and would just as soon wait to let them know that you are a Democrat or a Baptist, leave it off or list it generically, for example: Sunday School Teacher
Hobbies/Interests? References?
Don’t list hobbies or interests unless they are:› (1) organized, i.e., you belong to a club or › (2) relevant to the type of position you are
seeking
References Reference names don’t go on the resume itself.
› Separate document, using the same header as on resume. Then list the reference names and contact information in block (envelope) style.
Do not send to employer unless they request it.
3-5 references. › have direct knowledge of your job abilities (supervisor, etc.) or a professor who teaches a
major-related class.
Ask the references permission before you use them. › Also ask them if they will give you a good reference. You don’t want to list folks who
won’t sing your praises! Make sure to ask where they would like to be contacted, i.e., home or work and get the correct contact information for each person. Afterward, follow up with your references by sending them a copy of your completed resume. This will help them if/when they get a call on you.
Be sure to take copies of your references to all interviews. Most employers will request them at that time.
When & Why Do I Need a
Cover Letter? Acts as an introduction for your resume. Stands as a sample of your writing skills If you are sending your resume via email - the cover letter is
the email message itself. Then attach the resume following the employer's instructions (i.e., MSWord document, PDF, text document, etc.)
I Need My Resume to Distinguish Me From
Everyone Else, How Do I Do That?
Answer the question, "Why am I more qualified than the next guy?" Then develop your resume to reflect that.
DON’T try to distinguish yourself by fancy fonts, clipart or non-traditional papers. That is not the interest you want to capture!
Make your resume uniquely yours with the information, not the graphics/style/colors
What Is Focus In a Resume and Why Should
Mine Be Sharp? Average employer looks at a Resume for 2-5 seconds
before deciding to overlook it or look it over. Needs to be Easy to read Easy to spot the Name, Education, Experience (or skills) Appropriate amount of white space.
What Are the Type/Design Details I Most Need to Know and Follow? Use bold, italics, different font sizes, upper-case and small
capitals lettering Font 10 & 12 pt. Use: Times New Roman, Arial, Bookman,
Trebuchet, Lucida Sans, Garamond, Verdana or Courier. No more than 2 fonts.
Use white space, but also spread out your information in an aesthetically pleasing way.
Use bullets to draw the reader’s eye. But don’t bullet everything!
Be consistent with headings (size, boldness, etc.) and body text (indented, not indented, tabs right-justified, tabs left-justified, etc.)
What About Paper? Use resume paper. This can be purchased by the sheet at a
print shop or by the box at any office supply or discount store.
Don’t get fancy – plain white or off-white (cream, ecru, etc.) is your best bet.
Avoid any bordered or themed paper. You want the attention on your resume content not on it’s vehicle!
What About Mailing? Don’t fold and stuff your resume in an envelope (even the
nice ones you can buy to match your resume paper!)
Buy envelopes that are the same size as your resume and slip your cover letter on top, then your resume. Type an address label and return address label (or stamp if you have it) and mail flat.
Chpt 7: Writing for a Purpose
Form into groupsEach group will choose a topic (or present one of
your own!) Tooth brushing Ice cream Automated teller machines (ATMs) Sleep deprivation
½ of your group members will write a persuasive the other ½ of your group members will write an informative skit/speech about your topic
What Is the Writing Process?
Planning Drafting Revising Editing
The Four Stages of the Writing Process
Planning – Brainstorming, Free-writing, Journalists’ Questions, Research, Thesis & Outline
Drafting – Introduction, Main Ideas (Body), Supporting Evidence, Conclusion
Revising – Step back, take another look, be more objective
Editing – Correcting errors - everyone must do this!
Write a thesis statement
This is the CENTRAL MESSAGE you want to communicate!
State your subject and your point of view
It should reflect your writing purpose: inform or persuade?
It should be appropriate for the audience: the readers.
Planning your essay Evidence Gathering
Sheet Determine topic Determine purpose Combine the two to
create THESIS Give REASONS you
think that to be true Each reason becomes
a topic sentence
Evidence Gathering
Essay planning part 2 Take each one of
your“Reasons” from the topic starter
Develop each onemore fully into a para.With 2 examples
Evidence Gathering: Paragraphs
Brainstorming
Write down thoughts related to the topic
Organize the ideas into categories
Organizing the Body of a Paper
By Time – in order or reverse order By Importance – Most important to least important
or reverse By Problem & Solution – Straightforward! By Argument – present both sides; make your own
conclusion at the end By Cause & Effect – how events, ideas, or
situations caused subsequent events By Comparisons – How events, people, situations,
and ideas are the same (hint: find similes and metaphors)
For more ideas, take a look at Key 8.5
Avoiding Plagiarism by the way.. We use Turnitin.com here!
Plagiarism is the act of using someone else’s exact words, figures, unique approach, or specific
reasoning without giving credit.
Some ways to avoid plagiarism include: Make sources notes as you go. Learn the difference between a quotation and a
paraphrase. Use a citation even from an acceptable paraphrase. Understand that lifting material off the Internet is
plagiarism.
Take a Look at Key 8.6 for an example
Citing your Sources Cite all mentions of another author’s
original ideas, statistics, studies, borrowed concepts & phrases, images, quoted material, and tables.
You do not have to cite facts which are commonly known by your audience and easily verified in reference sources.› Specifics are cited, general knowledge is not.
When in doubt, cite your source.
(also known as ‘parenthetical documentation’)In other words- in parentheses.
Your in-text citations work with your bibliography (works cited) page to identify where any quotes or ideas borrowed from another author came from.
“References in the text MUST clearly point to specific sources in the list of works cited.”
- MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, 6th ed.
In-text citations
Works Cited page: MLA style citation
Include a “Works Cited” page listing all sources cited within the body of the paper.
Double-space, alphabetize the entries.
Do not indent first line, but do indent the following line(s) in an entry. (Called “hanging indent” in MSWord.)
Halio, Jay L., "Elizabethan Age." Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. Scholastic Library Publishing, 2006. HF-L High School. 1 Apr 2006 <http://gme.grolier.com>.
Life in Elizabethan England. Summer 2005. 31 Mar 2006 <http://renaissance.dm
.net/compendium>. Pressley, J. M. "An Encapsulated Biography." Shakespeare Resource Center,
February 10, 2005. 3 Mar 2006 <http://www.bardweb.net/man.html>. Shakespeare, William. Romeo and Juliet. New York: Scholastic, Inc., 1969. Thomas, Heather. The Life in Times of Queen Elizabeth I. 23 Mar 2006. 1 Apr
2006 <www.elizabethi.org>.
Works Cited page
example:
When Mercutio is wounded, he screams “A plague on both your houses!” referring to both the Capulets and the Montagues (Shakespeare 70).
The parenthetical notation (Shakespeare 70) identifies where the quote came from and refers to your bibliography page for further publication information.
In-text citations: Direct Quote
Works CitedShakespeare, William. Romeo and Juliet. New York: Scholastic, Inc., 1969.
Direct Quotes Direct quotation:
› Educators are cautioned that “…labels tend to stick, and few people go back later to document a shifting profile of intelligences” (Gardner 139).
Paraphrase with in-text citation:› Gardner explains that there are difficulties
in labeling children with a type of intelligence, including the problem that labels may last, while the assessment may change (139).
How to Paraphrase
Which of these should be cited?
A. On September 11, 2001, the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were attacked by hijacked airplanes.
B. Atta, Binalshibh, al Shehhi, and Jarrah had lived in Germany and were chosen over more established Al Qaeda members due to their exposure to the West and ability to speak English.
B was correct: it is specific and not commonly known
How would you cite it? In-body: Atta, Binalshibh, al Shehhi, and Jarrah had
lived in Germany and were chosen over more established Al Qaeda members due to their exposure to the West and ability to speak English (National Commission 160).
Works Cited: National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon
the United States. The 9/11 Commission Report. New York: W.W. Norton, 2004.
Which of THESE do you need to cite?
A. “The science labs at East St. Louis High School are 30 to 50 years outdated.”
B. When public schools were segregated, conditions were not equal.
A! It is very specific, even w/ out quotes!
How would you cite it? In-body: “The science labs at East St. Louis High
School are 30 to 50 years outdated” (Kozol 27).
Works Cited:
Kozol, Jonathan. Savage inequalities: Children in America’s Schools. New York: HarperCollins, 1991.
Create a Works Cited Page (#7 on checklist)
Use the website listed to create a “Works Cited” page.
You don’t have to remember the format of each component, just use the
Use an MLA creator like http://www.easybib.com/ or http://21cif.com/tools/cite/mla/index.html *if you want*or Download the template from Tosspon’s website *If you want*
Analytical Questions to ask yourselfas you revise Does the paper fulfill the requirements of the
assignment? (topics, length, style) Will my audience understand my thesis and how I have
supported it? Does the introduction prepare the reader and capture
attention? Is the body of the paper organized well? Is each idea fully developed, explained, and supported
by examples? Are my ideas connected to one another through logical
transitions? Do I have a clear, “to the point” writing style? (try to
avoid the passive voice!) Does the conclusion provide a natural ending to the
paper?