1.1. Define the problem 1.2 Identify the information requirements |
Steps 1.1 and 1.2: Develop your questions/research plan on your own. Format: text, maps, pictures, audio and video, charts and graphs Remember, this paper is 5-7 pages long + Works Cited |
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2.1 Determine kinds of sources 2.2 Prioritize sources |
Books, Internet, magazines, encyclopedia, documentaries, newspapers, interview (experts), databases Prioritize according to your need; make sure you are not using encyclopedias as cited sources. Science and academic: peer reviewed journals are the most authoritative |
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3.1 Locate actual resources 3.2 Locate information |
Books: 004-6 for technology; 300's for social issues; 600's for science information Databases: Pop Culture Universe, Modern World History, Wilson Web, Gale Internet: Google, but be sure to credential your source
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4.1 Engage (read, view, interview) 4.2 Extract (make notes) |
Take notes electronically, making sure to capture info for citation. You are responsible for the accuracy of your citation, not the generator or the database vendor. |
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5.1 Organize information 5.2 Present information |
The Works Cited page will be the last page of your paper. Make sure that your Works Cited page follows MLA formatting: 1" margins, 12 point Times New Roman font, with resources in alphabetical order in hanging format. Be careful to use MS Word View>Header and Footer for the pagination. Use proper MLA date formatting: Heading: 21 October 2009 Citation: 21 Oct 2009 REMINDER: NO encyclopedia entries are acceptable as sources. |
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6.1 Judge the product 6.2 Judge the process |
What did you learn about technology issues? What could you have done to make your essay stronger? What did you learn about planning your research? Sources? |
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The "Big6™" is copyright © (1987) Michael B. Eisenberg and Robert E. Berkowitz. For more information, visit: www.big6.com |