1. Support your arguments. 2. Provide background. 3. See what other’s have done.
Keywords in your topic What is your topic trying to prove or illustrate? Current issues or stories related to your topic. Local articles that can tie in with national research or global issues.
5 sources minimum. 2 of which can be “open” web sources. The other three items need to be either books, articles or reference works. Open web sources are sites found by using a search engine, such as “Google.” Offline or digitized information is considered equivalent to their printed format (Ebsco, Britannica, Oxford).
Connect keywords found in your bibliographic worksheet Create an outline of what you want each paragraph to describe. Think about what “concepts” your experiment or project illustrates.
Use keywords in a phrase to access relevant articles. For example. “global warming” “global warming and ocean” “global warming and ocean and effects” Later, limit by date, full text or specific journal.
A form of citing sources of information used in academic work. For example Book: [Author last name], [First initial]. [Middle initial]. ([Publication year]). [Title of work]. [Location]: [Publisher]. ◦ Barrie, J. M. Peter Pan New York, Bantam, (c1911).
Article: [Author last name], [First initial]. [Middle initial]. ([Publication year]). [Title of article]. [Title of journal], [Volume number]([Issue number]), [Page number starts]-[ends]. [Document Object Identifier] ◦ Brown, Jackie. Picture Perfect. Dog World. Dec2011, Vol. 96 Issue 12, p4-4, 2/3. e&db=ulh&AN= &site=src-live