Title: Research-Based Writing
1Research-Based Writing
Dr. Elaine Kromhout Indian River Community College
- In History, Philosophy, Literature and the Fine
Arts - Managing Sources and Ideas
- In the MLA Paper
2APA or MLA?
- The student writing for any course should
follow the instructions of his instructor. If
the instructor expresses no preference, gives no
guidelines, and/or distributes no style sheet,
then the student should document an assigned
research paper according to these guidelines - APA for social sciences, natural
- sciences, business,
technology - MLA for history, philosophy, literature,
- fine arts.
3The Stuff of MLA
- For the MLA research-based paper, the student
must formulate an observation based on ideas.
Usually, rather than discussing objective or
clinical fact, the researcher/writer addresses
themes, diction, symbols and/or values, ethics,
trends, tastes. - The material gathered usually has less in the
way of data (numbers, graphs, charts), case
studies, clinical reviews, or the like, and more
in the way of movements, changing definitions of
concepts, and value statements.
4Gathering Evidence for the MLA Research-based
Paper Where to Look
-
- Databases, including Arts Humanities,
Biography, Electronic Books, and Literature, all
found at this URL - http//www.ircc.edu/portal/layout_web1.aspx?Admin
EditFalsePortalPageID913 -
- Also, E-books and journals found at this URL
-
- http//www.ircc.edu/portal/layout_web1.aspx?Admin
EditFalsePortalPageID913 - Access to this URL requires a library card/bar
code.
5Gathering Evidence for the MLA Research-based
Paper Where to Look continued
- 2. Learning resources stacks --book
magazines, journals s, references held in the
library - Holdings in other libraries (through
inter-library loan), the form for which can be
found at this URL - http//www.ircc.edu/portal/layout_web1.aspx?Porta
lPageID676 - 4. Internet sites online at college/university,
museum, and musical conservatory sites
6Gathering Evidence for the MLA Research-based
Paper What NOT to Use
- The student developing any college-level,
research-based essay should NEVER quote from a
general purpose encyclopedia. - Heres why General encyclopedias are
compendiums, sources good for getting an overview
of the topic but often filled with errors.
However, the student may use the bibliography of
articles as a guide to authors and writings on
his topic. With the approval of an
instructor, a student MAY quote directly from a
recent edition of an electronic encyclopedia such
as Encarta. The student should ASK first! - Use of encyclopedias published for specialized
purposes, such as The Encyclopedia of Medical
Terminology or Shakespeare A to Z, is absolutely
acceptable.
7Gathering Evidence for the MLAPaper in
Literature or the Fine Arts
- Evidence for a literary or fine arts paper may
include - 1. original texts, such as librettos, sheet
music,musical notation verse lines, narrative
and/or dialogue from short or long fiction
stage directions or dialogue from drama - 2. related writings, such as other musical
compositions or other verse, drama, or fiction
by the same artist/author or by other creators in
the same field, movement, or period - 3. academic writings in journals, casebooks, and
textbooks
8Gathering Evidence for the MLAPaper in
Literature or the Fine Arts(cont.)
- 3. dictionaries or encyclopedic dictionaries of
specialized terms, such as the NCTE Dictionary of
Literary Terms or Harmon Holmans A Handbook to
Literature - 4. critical reviews of original texts, often
found in newspapers and literary magazines - 5. biographical or autobiographical materials,
journals diaries - 6. interviews with artists and or performers,
poets, dramatists, fiction writers, lectures,
reviewers, aficionados, museum guides,
collectors.
9Gathering Evidence for the MLA Paper in History
or Philosophy
Evidence for a history or philosophy paper may
include 1. academic writings in journals and
textbooks 2. original writings, such as
government declarations, laws, decrees,
communiqués, or essays and treatises 3.
critical reviews of original writings 4.
related writings, such as writings by the same
philosopher or from the same or opposing
political entities, failed proposals,
writings for propaganda
10Gathering Evidence for the MLA Paper in History
or Philosophy (cont.)
- 5. Internet resources, including databases
- https//www.linccweb.org/index.asp?lib_codeflcc1
200screenSubject - 6. discussions/interpretations of artifacts,
such as buttons, flags, medals, tapestries,
hand-written notes/ journals, pottery shards or
other such archaeological materials - 7. biographical/autobiographical writings,
journals, diaries - 8. interviews with historians, philosophers,
academics who have traveled or done research in
the area of interest.
11Thesis for the MLA Paper
- As any thesis should, the thesis for the MLA
research-based paper must - 1. identify the topic,
- 2. indicate the writers organizational
- approach to treatment of the topic, and
- 3. express the writers attitude toward the
material.
12SAMPLE MLA THESIS forHistory/Philosophy
- Critical review of the events leading to Bastille
- Day confirm that internal and international
- political unrest and economic deprivation led to
the - events of 1789-1793 which history calls the
- French Revolution.
- ____________________________________________
- 1. organizational approach
- 2. strong verb indicating attitude and
approach - 2. attitude (agreement with critics/academics)
- 3. general topic
13Thesis for Critical Review or Analysis of
Literature/Fine Arts
- Often, the thesis for an MLA paper considers
- 1. critical reception of a literary or creative
- work or
- 2. reviews/evaluates a literary aspect of a
writing - or
- 3. reviews/evaluates a technical aspect of a
work - of fine art.
- If so, the thesis nearly always identifies the
work and its artist/author.
14Sample Thesis for MLA Paperon Literature or the
Fine Arts
- A comparison of the critical events in Pat
- Conroys Prince of Tides and Beach
- Music helps the reader understand how growing
- up in the Deep South of the middle twentieth
- century could affect adult responses to human
- suffering.
- 1. organizational approach
- 2. attitude
- 3. topic
- 4. author title(s) of work(s) for analysis
15Writing the MLA Thesis (continued)
- The thesis statement for consideration of
- history, philosophy, literature, or the fine arts
- need NOT offer specific points, as in the three
- point thesis statement common to expository/
- utility writing. However, if the student feels
- comfortable with that approach, he may use it
- to lay out a plan by which he will develop his
- paper--primarily as a tool for his own
- guidance as the project develops.
16Working from the MLA ThesisDelivering Its
Promises
- The content which this thesis promises to the
reader - 1. definition of critical events
- 2. description/definition of
- growing up in Deep South
- 3. examples of human suffering
- and character responses
- 4. value statements/opinions on how the
character responses emerge/ evolve from the fact
of the - Southern rearing of characters in
- Conroys Prince and Beach.
- developed first and foremost by use of
quoted evidence from the Conroy books
The Thesis A comparison of the critical events
in Pat Conroys Prince of Tides and Beach Music
helps the reader understand how growing up in the
Deep South of the middle twentieth century could
affect adult responses to human suffering.
17The Structure of the MLA Paper
- For the MLA under-graduate paper, the writer
should offer at least one outside source for
every 250-300 words that is, - IN ADDITION to the text under analysis, he
should find and use at least five sources for
every 1000-1250 words.
- The MLA paper offers an introduction, body, and
conclusion developed to these proportions - 10-15 introduction
- 70-80 body
- 10-15 conclusion
18The Structure of the MLA PaperContinued
- Because MLA papers often address such issues as
theme or dominant imagery or character
development or elements of plot or setting that
reflect (or do not reflect) known historical
fact, the nature of the writing differs from that
of APA. APA writing offers many facts, requiring
many citations and quoted passages. MLA offers
interpretations and examples from text, reducing
the number of citations and directly quoted
passages. - Thus, judge your MLA texts development
- based on the 70/30 rule
- 70 interpretation/30 quoted evidence.
- These percentages are, of course approximations,
but an MLA paper that offers fifty percent quoted
evidence is more a patchwork quilt than a paper!
19Documentation Practices for MLA Research-based
Writing
- Evidence of any age/publication date may be used
- (unlike in APA research-based writing, for
which the information base should be as young
as possible and, most desirably, no older than
five years.) - In-text MLA citation requires use of parenthesis,
last name of author and page number, with no p
and no comma - or if the source is unattributed (has no
identifiable author), cite the source by title
and page number in the text.
20- SAMPLE MLA IN-TEXT CITATIONS
- Standard
- Conroy has admitted that the character of
- Savannah Wingo developed from experiences
- shared by his own sister and schizophrenic
- brother (Smith 28).
- Unattributed
- When he decided to use worm holes as
- vehicles for time travel in Contact, Sagan sent
- the chapters to a scientist friend for review
- (Good Science, Good Fiction18).
21Sample MLA Works Cited Entries
- Alphabetized
- Good Science, Good Fiction,Omni (1992) 28.
- (unattributed book review, magazine)
- Smith, Sarah. Autobiography and Conroys
Prince. New York Times Book Review 17 April
1991 18. - (attributed book review, newspaper magazine
published and distributed both with the newspaper
or by subscription) -
22Sample MLA Works Cited Entry In-Text Citation
for a Casebook Article
- Works Cited Entry
- Slack, Dorothy. Bradley and Mysticism.
- College English 443.3 (Spring 1987) 82-
- 96. Rpt. in Essays on Marion Zimmer
- Bradley. Ed. Sarah Gomez Jones. Chicago
- Transvent, Inc., 1990. 127-136.
- In-Text Citation
- Bradley started her noteworthy career as a writer
of science fiction (Slack 129).
23Sample MLA Works Cited Entry From an Electronic
Resource
- Works Cited Entry
- Jansey, James. Arthurs Women." Magill Book
Reviews. Academic Abstracts Full-Text Elite.
CD-ROM. EBSCO Apr. 1997. Item 9412097027. - In-Text Citation
- New treatments of the Arthurian legends look at
- Arthurs decline as a product of feuding women
- (Jansey n.p.).
- See the IRCC site for the complete guide to MLA
documentation of electronic resources - http//www.ircc.edu/portal/layout_web1.aspx?AdminE
ditFalsePortalPageID681