The Purdue OWL site provides a good overview on referencing sources and avoiding plagiarism.
Click here for that site.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Monday, March 19, 2012
A 5-Minute Poem to Kick Start Your Week
Use this site to create your own list poem based on your biography:
Notes:
- A list poem may appear random but it is not
- The poem should end with something surprising, insightful, or important. One way to do this is to move from the literal to the figurative (see example poem below).
- Once you have made your initial list, consider re-arranging the order of the items. Also consider adding more detail. Use precise and concrete language as much as possible. Provide your reader with a clear image of what you see.
Sample below:
________________________________________________
What’s in the canoe
a sharpened axe with a battered wooden handle
a weathered tent green with mold
a bag of pea flour
a plug of tobacco
three long poles with metal boots
four damp wool blankets
a refusal to turn back
a lot of heart
--based on the book Great Heart: History of a Labrador Adventure
Extending, Revising, Polishing Genre Pices
I've spent time reading over your draft genre pieces. Here are some general suggestions that will help strengthen your pieces:
- Develop your headings and titles. A fully developed heading may be 2 - 3 sentences or more. A title is generally short -- but make the most of it. "Waris Dirie" or "Waris Dirie -- One Determined Woman" The 2nd title is stronger, yet it still doesn't "cost" that much. Agree?
- Among your 5 pieces, include at least 3 pieces about specific events or moments in your biography. General pieces that give an overview of a person and that person's accomplishments can be useful, but don't stop there.
- Aim for at least one piece from the point of view of a "contemporary" of your subject -- someone who knew your subject and had a relationship of some kind with him or her. That person undoubtedly had an opinion on your subject and a way of voicing that opinion.
Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Resource of the Day: ProQuest
ProQuest provides access to news stories not found on Google.
Scroll down once you reach that page.
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