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World Issues: 4 Perspectives and APA Assignment

Gr.12 CGW

Earl Haig Secondary School earlhaig.ca/library

● Pen ● Student Agenda ● Assignment sheet● Take 2 worksheets at the front

What you’ll need

p23

CGR4M Class Page on Library Blog

#1. Go to earlhaig.ca/library#2. From top menu, select

#3. Open your Google Drive

What are the overall expectations?

Assignment Expectations

● create an information chart depicting your understanding of the four geographic perspectives on a world issue you feel is most important in the world

Assignment Expectations

1. You are to choose one of 5 top world issues discussed in group work and search for an article on that world issue within the last 30 days.

2. Using the article you found, highlight the 4 perspectives3. Using the online notetaker, copy and paste direct quotes from the

article within the 4 geographic perspectives.4. Once you have filled in the perspectives, you will use the notes to create a

summary of 1 perspective. You must use direct quotes and paraphrasing to explain the perspective and how it is impacted because of that issue. Choose the most prominent perspective found in the article. Guidelines: In the geographic perspective, you should have 2 direct quote citation. The remaining ideas should be paraphrased with a citation.

What to Include:

5. Once you have completed the summaries explaining how your issue involves the 4 geographic perspectives. Copy your paragraphs into a word file document and submit it to turn-it-in. Your document should only be 2 pages in length, double 12 point font, double spaced, 1 inch margins.

6. Your written work must be submitted before class to TURN-IT-IN. 7. Also, make a print copy of your notetaker, turn-it-in paragraph work

and attached to your article.

What to Include:

#1. What is Academic Honesty? ● Plagiarism Case Studies

#2. What is an in-text citation? ● What does it look like using APA?● When do you use it?

○ Paraphrasing, & Direct Quoting

#3. Forming a List of References

DAY 1: Agenda

What is plagiarism and why do people plagiarize?

Case Studies: Is it Plagiarism?

What is plagiarism?

Definition →

Examples →

Earl Haig Policy on PlagiarismSection G of Student Agenda (p. 25-26)

Case Studies: Is it Plagiarism?Examine the case studies. Place each scenario in one of two categories:

PLAGIARISM NOT PLAGIARISM

Case Studies: Is it Plagiarism?Categories: PLAGIARISM NOT PLAGIARISM

Alexander has been researching for his History summative for three weeks. He has been taking research notes and using a variety of sources. When he begins creating his works cited for the assignment, he realizes one of his quotes is missing the source name, so he uses the source information of one of the books he still has at home from the library so that he can still use the direct quote.

Case Studies: Is it Plagiarism?categories: PLAGIARISM NOT PLAGIARISM

While completing a study on the human heart for Phys Ed., Barbara explains that the heart is necessary for movement of blood throughout the human body. She read this in many of the books she used for research but does not cite the information for these sources in her report.

Case Studies: Is it Plagiarism?categories: PLAGIARISM NOT PLAGIARISM

You’ve just written a biography on Pythagorus for your Math project and ask your older sister to edit it. She adds an extra paragraph on Pythagorus’ accomplishments and re-words other sentences to sound better. You hand in the biography with all of her changes.

Case Studies: Is it Plagiarism?categories: PLAGIARISM NOT PLAGIARISM Cheryl finds an article on a website for her Geography assignment. She copies and pastes three paragraphs of the article onto a Word document and emails it home to herself. That evening, while writing up his assignment, she realizes she forgot to record the source information for the website. She uses the information anyway and makes up the website address she thinks is pretty close to the one she used.

What are the consequences to Plagiarizing?

Consequences of Plagiarism at EHSection G of Student Agenda (p. 29-30)

Plagiarism: How Can you Avoid It?

HOW YOU USE THE SOURCE

HOW YOU WRITE IT HOW YOU CITE IT

Quoting

● Copying word for word● Quotation marks around the short quote

followed by an in-text citation● Long quotations are indented five spaces,

with no quotation marks, followed by an in-text citation

● Short Quotations:

○ In-text citation with page

number

(Author last name, year, p. #).○ Closing punctuation is placed

after the in-text citation● Long Quotations:

○ In-text citation with page

number

(Author last name, year, p. #).○ Closing punctuation is placed

before the parenthetical citation

● Include in References

Paraphrasing

● Including specific information (percentage, statistics, results, etc.) from the source

● Ideas from source written in your own voice● Taking a broader segment of the source and

condensing it slightly (into your own

words)

● If a specific segment: In-text

citation with page number

(Author last name, year, p. #)● If paraphrasing without a

specific segment: no page number

● References

Know the difference between: ● quoting● paraphrasing● summarizing

Activity: In-text Citations

Keep the following in mind:

● Format● Punctuation● Sentence

structure

In-text Citation Review:● General Format of in-text citation:

(author’s last name, year, page #)

● Two authors: (Wegener & Petty, 1994, pp.12-15)

● Three to five authors:(Kernis, Cornell, Sun, Berry, & Harlow, 1993,p.5)

○ Subsequent citation:(Kernis et al., 1993, p.5)

In-text Citation Rules:● Six or More Authors:

(Harris et al., 2001, p.10)

● Unknown Author & more than one page:Use the first word or two

(New, 2001, pp.6-10)

● Unknown year and page number:(New, n.d., para. 1)

In-Text Citations: Structure

In-Text Citations: Structure

In-Text Citations: Structure

In-Text Citations: Structures

Explanation of in-text citation

In-Text Citations: StructuresHerr Bock, a former training professor at the Ministry of State Security, explains that, above all, an informer “needed to be honest, faithful, and trustworthy” (Funder, 2010, p.200).

Louis Herman and his colleagues used hand and arm signals to communicate with the dolphins: “For instance, a pumping motion of the closed fists meant ‘hoop,’ and both arms extended overhead (as in jumping jacks) meant ‘ball’” (Morell, 2009, p. 54).

In-Text Citations: Structures

P - A clear point to support your overall idea

E - an example or detail (often a quote) to support your point

I - The importance OR connection between your point and evidence.

In-text citations usually occur in one of two places in the sentence:

1. Smith (1999) has also found that E.coli is one of the only

microbes to . . . .

2. E.coli is one of the only microbes to . . . (Smith, 1999).

In-Text Citations: Paraphrase layout

Activity: References

Keep the following in mind:

● Format● Punctuation● Font style● Spacing

References

General format:

Author(s). (Year of Publication). Title. Retrieval Information.

● List of References is to be on the back of your poster report

● The title for this section is References (not Works Cited)○ Not bolded or underlined○ Centred on page

● Alphabetical order by author’s last name is first

References

References:

One author:

Anderson, M. (2012). Acid rain. New York: Gloucester Press.

References

Two or more authors:Green, M. W., Elliman, N. A., & Rogers, P. J. (1995).

Lack of effect of short-term fasting on cognitive

function. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 29, 245–253.

References

Creating Citations (References)

APA

Get this add-on now!

Using the material presented in today’s workshop, take a look at your in-text citations submitted to turnitin and make changes!

Use resources on your class blog to help you.

Self Reflect: Review your work

1. Find a news article you are most interested in.2. Read the article. Print the article!3. In 5 sentences summarize the who, what, where, when, why of the article4. Create 1 embedded citation quote in your summary (APA format)5. Create 1 paraphrased citation in your summary (APA Format)6. Create a reference at the bottom of your summary(APA Format)7. Once you have created this, post it on turn-it-in8. Print a copy of your turn-it-in work for your records!

Ask yourself: Does this issue impact the globe?

Review your work

Day 2: Assignment●To create an informative report depicting your understanding of how your top world issue is connected to a geographic perspectives. ●You will use what you learned about APA referencing within the informative report to show your ability to cite your work properly.

1. You are to choose one of 5 top world issues discussed in group work and search for an article on that world issue within the last 30 days.

2. Using the article you found, highlight the 4 perspectives (note: you may only have 2-3)

3. Using the online note taker, copy and paste direct quotes from the article within the geographic perspectives.

Steps:

4. Once you have filled in the perspectives, you will use the notes to create a summary of 1 perspective. You must use direct quotes and paraphrasing to explain the perspective and how it is impacted because of that issue. Choose the most prominent perspective found in the article.

Guidelines: In the geographic perspective, you should have 2 direct quote citation. The remaining ideas should be paraphrased with a citation.

Steps: continued…

5. Once you have completed the summary of the 1 perspective, copy your paragraphs into a word file document and submit it to turn-it-in. Your document should only be 1 pages in length, double 12 point font, double spaced, 1 inch margins.

6. Your written work must be submitted before class to TURN-IT-IN.

7. Also, make a print copy of your note taker, turn-it-in paragraph work and attached to your article.

Steps: continued…

1. State what your issue is

2. Create a summary of the issue (from your first part of the assignment, re-do if mistakes were made on APA format or if you choose a new article

3. Fill in your article reference & APA citation 4. Copy & Past information from the article

5. Choose most prominent perspective and create a rough summary in your own words

How to fill in the note taker:

CGW 4 – in drop down menu

https://library.earlhaig.ca/cgw-4-perspectives-apa-assignment-savicki/

Work on Library Website: