Preparing Parenthetical Citations and a Works Cited Page - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Preparing Parenthetical Citations and a Works Cited Page

Description:

Preparing Parenthetical Citations and a Works Cited Page Source: Book Parachute. Clip Art Gallery. 2005. DiscoverySchool.com. 13 July 2005 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:188
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: capeK12M9
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Preparing Parenthetical Citations and a Works Cited Page


1
Preparing Parenthetical Citationsand a Works
Cited Page
Source Book Parachute. Clip Art Gallery. 2005.
DiscoverySchool.com. 13 July 2005
lthttp//school.discovery.com/clipart/category/lang
1.htmlgt. Powerpoint Presentation Prepared By
Joyce Bell, Librarian Sarah Harrington, Social
Studies Teacher and Doug Worthley, Science
Teacher
2
What is MLA (Modern Language Assn.) Format?
  • Provides direction on the style required for
    papers (both pg. layout content)
  • MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers
    located in the library
  • Research Paper Guidelines provides sample
    citations for most sources library homepage,
    Student Research Help
  • Other formats, i.e. APA Chicago are similar,
    but different set of rules

3
Why Use MLA Format?
  • Allows readers to easily locate your sources
  • Provides a consistent format throughout your
    paper and among all student papers
  • Gives you credibility as a writer
  • Protects you from plagiarism

4
When Should You Use Parenthetical Citations?
  • Quoting words that belong to someone else (use
    quotation marks)
  • Summarizing facts ideas (condensing ideas in
    your own words)
  • Paraphrasing a source (change the phrasing into
    your own words)

5
  • Quoting Words That Belong to Someone Else
  • Do this when authors qualifications make them
    the expert (the authority on the topic) and
    there isnt a better way to make your point
  • Set up your quotation with an introduction i.e.
    authors name and source
  • Use quotation marks
  • After the quote, explain how the quote relates to
    your point

6
  • Summarizing Facts and Ideas
  • A common practice. Do this when the ideas are
    good but you would like to
  • condense them to make your point
  • Choose a short section that makes an important
    point
  • Delete trivial and/or redundant info.
  • Keep information that is necessary for meaning
    (who, what, where, why, when, how)
  • Substitute general words for lists (example
    tulips, pansies and roses flowers)
  • Select a topic sentence (or create one)
  • Organize whats left in your own words1
  • Introduce a summary as you would introduce a
    quote
  • Example
  • According to the PEW Research Centers Future
    Use of the Internet report, your summary begins
    here. (Roberts 215)
  • 1Marzano, Robert J., Debra J. Pickering and Jane
    E. Pollock, Classroom Instruction That Works (New
    York Prentice Hall,
  • 2004) 35.

7
  • Paraphrasing a Source
  • (Changing the Phrasing Into Your Own Words)
  • Rarely used, but can be useful when youre
    talking about a specific source that is difficult
    to read and want to make it understandable to
    your audience
  • Read through the original and rewrite each
    sentence in your own words
  • Preface your paraphrase with the source of your
    information and provide some background
    information.
  • Example
  • In 1215, English peasants insisted that laws be
    put in writing. That resulted in the document,
    The Magna Carta from which our own United States
    Constitution was modeled. The basic points of
    The Magna Carta are your paraphrase of each
    point here. (55)

8
Two Steps to Citing Information in Your Paper 1)
Authors last name and page of quote must
appear in the text of your paper. Notice the
citation precedes the punctuation mark. Osmond
had inquired to which Isabel had answered that
she was afraid her washerwoman wouldn't care for
her" (James 139). Coming from an American family
that was not terribly wealthy, she found it. 2)
Works Cited page lists full citations for all
parenthetical notations in the paper. James,
Henry. The Portrait of a Lady. New York Random
House, 1951. Your paper will be double-spaced
9
Parenthetical Citation Examples
  • More than one author with same last name
  • (A. Smith 55) (L. Smith 815)
  • More than one work by same author
  • (Twain, Huckleberry Finn 15) (Twain, Tom Sawyer
    128)
  • Different volumes of a multi-volume work (51402)
  • Examples From Research Paper Guidelines

10
Parenthetical Citation Examples
  • Citing indirect sources also called a source
    within a source or an anthology
  • (Angelou qtd. in Busby 330)
  • No known author use abbreviated version of Book
    title Coast of Maine
  • Citation (Coast 71)

11
Parenthetical Citation Examples
  • Authors name in text vs. authors name in
    reference
  • In Text
  • Only Angelou has used metaphor to argue this
    point (42).
  • In Reference
  • This illustrates effective use of metaphor to
    expose the
  • inhumanity of racism (Angelou 42).

12
Long Quotations
  • If a quotation is 4 or more lines long, indent
    the left side 5 spaces
  • to set it apart. Notice the citation comes after
    the period.

longer passed over in favor of others. In
America, her older sisters were always the ones
to be followed by men, whereas she was largely
avoided.
...her sister Edith was, as every
one said, so very much more
fetching. ...She saw the young men who came in
large number numbers to see her sister
but as a general thing they were afraid
of her they had a belief that some special
preparation was required for talking
with her. (James 44-45) In contrast to
her youth, Isabel is now the center of attention.
Her cousin is enchanted with her, Caspar Goodwood
is still chasing her, Lord Warburton has proposed
after knowing her for only a few days, and she
finally marries.... your paper will be
double-spaced
13
The Works Cited Page
  • Complete list of every source you make reference
    to in your paper
  • Individual citations provide the information
    necessary for your teacher to locate any source
    cited in your paper
  • Use a style manual. Formatting must be
    consistent pay close attention to details
    double-spacing, capitalization, punctuation,
    order, etc.

14
Sample Works Cited Page
  • Works Cited
  •  
  • Bazargan, Susan. "Representation and Ideology
    in 'The Real Thing.'" The Henry James Review
    Spring 1991 133-37.
  • Bell, Millicent. Meaning in Henry James.
    Cambridge, MA Harvard UP, 1991.
  • -----------------. Women in the Jamesian Eye.
    1995. 6 Nov. 1999
  • lthttp//www.bookpage.com/themerc/womeninth
    enovels.htmlgt.
  • Benardete, Jane. The Women Writers Henry James
    Influenced. 1995. 6 Nov. 1999
    lthttp//www.bookpage.com/womeninnovels.htmlgt.
  • Bronte, Charlotte. Jane Eyre. Denmark
    Wordsworth Editions Limited, 1992.
  • Hutner, Gordon. "Goodwood's Lie in The Portrait
    of a Lady." The Henry James Review Winter
    1987 142-44.
  • James, Henry. The Portrait of a Lady. New
    York Random House, 1951.
  • Yours will be double-spaced

15
  • MS Word Hint
  • Creating a hanging indent
  • 1. Click on the beginning of the second line
  • 2. Push enter once then push tab once

16
Works Cited Format
  • Top, bottom, left right margins 1
  • Works Cited centered, no bold, italics or
    underlining
  • Alphabetical by citation
  • Double-space every page
  • Use a hanging indent after the first line of
    each entry

17
Works Cited Examples Books
  • ONE AUTHOR OR EDITOR
  • Williams, Gene B. Nuclear War, Nuclear Winter.
    New York Franklin Watts, 1987.
  • Anderson, N. D., ed. The World's Religions.
    London Inter-Varsity Fellowship, 1950.
  • TWO OR THREE AUTHORS
  • Note Authors should be listed in the order in
    which they appear
  • on the title page.
  • Berelson, Bernard R., Paul F. Lazarsfeld, and
    William McPhee. Voting. Cambridge Harvard UP,
    1959.

18
Works Cited Examples Books
  • REFERENCE WORKS
  • Unger, Leonard, gen. ed. American Writers. 4
    vols. New York Charles Scribner's Sons, 1974.
  • ANTHOLOGIES (Underline title if originally
    published
  • independently plays, novels autobiographies
    usually are)
  • Angelou, Maya. A Good Woman Feeling Bad.
    Daughters of Africa An International Anthology
    of Words and Writings by Women of African
    Descent From the Ancient Egyptian to the Present.
    Ed. Margaret Busby. New York Pantheon Books,
    1992. 330- 31.
  • Silko, Leslie Marmon. Landscape, History, and
    the Pueblo Imagination. The Ecocriticism
    Reader Landmarks in Literary Ecology. Ed.
    Cheryl Glotfelty and Harold Fromm. Athens, GA U
    of Georgia P, 1996. 264-75.

19
Works Cited Examples Online Databases
  • JOURNAL ARTICLE
  • Rivera, Gaspar. "Violence Against Children
    Widespread, Says Human Rights Report."
    American Behavioral Scientist 8.2 (2002) 152- .
    Academic Search Premier. EBSCOhost. University of
    Southern Maine Library, Portland. 23 May 20
    lthttp// ehostvgw5.epnet.com/gt.
  • Jones, Ralph. "Dramatic Elements in Hemingway's
    Works." Wascana Review 66.2 (1986) 77-98.
    Literature Resource Center. EBSCOhost. CEHS
    Library. 15 Feb. 2003 lthttp//galenet.
    galegroup.com/gt.

20
Works Cited Examples Online Databases
  • ARTICLE IN A REFERENCE SOURCE REPRINTED IN A
  • LIBRARY SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE
  • Martine, James J., ed. "Ernest Hemingway."
    Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 9
    American Novelists, 1910-1945. The Gale Group,
    1981. Literature Resource Center. EBSCOhost.
    CEHS Library. 15 Feb. 2003 lthttp//galenet.galegr
    oup.com/gt.
  • Ashley, Leonard R.N. The Grapes of Wrath
    Overview. Reference Guide to American
    Literature. 3rd ed. Ed. Jim Kamp. St. James
    Press, 1994. Literature Resource Center.
    EBSCOhost. CEHS Library. 8 Feb. 2006
    lthttp//galenet.galegroup.com/gt.

21
Works Cited Examples Online Databases
  • A CHAPTER FROM A BOOK REPRINTED IN A REFERENCE
  • SOURCE THEN REPRINTED AGAIN IN A LIBRARY
  • SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE
  • Adams, Linda. "Narrative Technique in East of
    Eden." Rediscovering Steinbeck. Ed. Doug Lewis
    and Janet James. U Chicago Press, 1979. 75-104.
    Contemporary Literary Criticism. The Gale Group,
    1997. Literature Resource Center. EBSCOhost. CEHS
    Library. 6 Feb. 2003 lthttp//galenet.galegroup.co
    m/gt.

22
Works Cited Examples Online Databases
  • A JOURNAL ARTICLE REPRINTED IN A REFERENCE
  • SOURCE THEN REPRINTED AGAIN IN A LIBRARY
  • SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE
  • Fox, Stephen D. "Barbara Kingsolver and Keri
    Hulme Disability, Family, and Culture."
    Critique Studies in Contemporary
  • Fiction. 454. (2004) 405-20. Contemporary
    Literary Criticism. The Gale Group, 1997.
    Literature Resource Center. EBSCOhost. CEHS
    Library. 6 Jan. 2007 lthttp//galenet.
    galegroup.com/gt.

23
Works Cited Examples Discovering Authors
  • CRITICISM
  • Fitzgerald, Karen. "A Major New Talent." MS Vol.
    37, No. 4, 15 April 1992 29 excerpted and
    republished in Discovering Authors Modules.
    CD-ROM. Detroit Gale Research, 1996.
  • BIOGRAPHY, INTRODUCTION OR PERSONAL DATA
  • Biography of Barbara Kingsolver. Discovering
    Authors Modules. CD-ROM. Detroit Gale Research,
    1996.

24
The Connection
  • This sets the tone for her adventures in the
    first half of
  • the novel, in which James refers to her almost
    exclusively
  • as a girl (Weisen 18). She is yet young and
    still bases.
  • --------------------------------------------------
    -----------------------------
  • Works Cited
  • Stone, Edward, ed. Henry James Seven Stories
    and Studies. New York Appleton-Century-Crofts,
    1961.
  • Wiesen, Joseph. "A Woman in The Portrait of a
    Lady." The Henry James Review Winter-Spring
    1986 18-28.
  •  

25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com