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Formatting Rules Each section of the report will appear on a separate page Each page must have the proper title All quotes used in the paper must be properly cited Typed in Times New Roman, 12 pt. font For final copy, sections must be placed in order, as directions state to get full credit This is a FORMAL paper. ALL FORMAL WRITING RULES APPLY AND WILL BE TAKEN INTO GRADING!!!!!
Citation preview
EIII Research EIII Research PaperPaper
Spring 2011Spring 2011Author studyAuthor study
Research Project Research Project Parts…Parts…
• Part 1: Title Page • Part 2: Author Biography• Part 3: Historical Context• Part 4: Theme Analysis• Part 5: Character Analysis• Part 6: Style Analysis• Part 7: Personal Response• Part 8: Works Cited • Part 9: Oral Presentation on
two aspects of your project• Part 10: Daily productivity log
Formatting RulesFormatting Rules• Each section of the report will
appear on a separate page• Each page must have the proper
title• All quotes used in the paper must
be properly cited • Typed in Times New Roman, 12
pt. font• For final copy, sections must be
placed in order, as directions state to get full credit
• This is a FORMAL paper. ALL FORMAL WRITING RULES APPLY AND WILL BE TAKEN INTO GRADING!!!!!
Part One- Title PagePart One- Title PageThis can be designed however you
want. It MUST, however, include the following items somewhere on the page:
• Your name• Your teacher’s name• The author’s name• The title of your text (novel titles
need to be underlined or italicized.)
• The date• A design, picture,
or graphic of some sort
Mary SmithMrs. BrownMark Twain
Huckleberry FinnDate
EXAMPLE:
Part 2- Author BiographyPart 2- Author BiographyYour project will begin with a biography on
the author you choose.Criteria: • Two to three paragraphs (min. 15
sentences)• Include Important Author Information-
1. Birth and Death (Dates and Places)2. Family and Educational Backgrounds3. Places where he/she lived and/or wrote4. Any writing styles or subjects their writing
favors 5. Major Life events or Jobs that affected
him/her (MOST IMPORTANT)• Include at least three quotes from
secondary sources in this section.• Center Author Biography as the title for
this section.
Author Biography
Hawthorne was born in….
EX:
Part 3- Historical ContextPart 3- Historical Context• This section is to be two paragraphs (min. 10
sentences). • Research the following:
– When was your novel written? – What was going on in the U.S. during the decade in
which it was written? (Look up some on-line timelines for help with this activity.)
– Find two events from the timeline to further research and write in your paper how those events affected your story or your author.
• The point here is to find what was going on around the author when this text was created. (Ex. If the story were written in 1862, the Civil War would have been in full swing and would have affected any writing being done.)
• Then apply your findings to the work and tell how historical timeframe directly affected the work.
• Center Historical Context as a title for this section.
Part 4- Theme AnalysisPart 4- Theme Analysis• You will discuss the theme of the work in
this section.• This is to be at least two paragraphs.• Look at what you saw in the author bio
and the historical context. • Consider:
– What message could the author be trying to get across to readers?
– What is the point of the story?– Does the tone of the story say anything
about the theme?– What about life, people, or the world is
the story pointing out?• You must include AT LEAST FOUR quotes
from secondary sources to support this section and prove your point.
• Center Theme as the heading for this section.
Part 5- Character AnalysisPart 5- Character Analysis• Write ONE to TWO pages giving brief
descriptions of each of the important characters. (You must have at least TWO characters! You do not have to do more than five)
• THERE MUST BE A SEPARATE PARAGRAPH FOR EACH CHARACTER!
• You must include TWO quotes from the story for each character expressing :– A physical aspect of the character (how they look)– An emotional aspect of the character (what kind
of person they are)• Give the character’s name and explain what
part the character plays in the novel (protagonist, antagonist, foil, etc.)
• Tell whether that character was necessary to the story, how, and what, if anything, the character added to an overall understanding of the story.
• How would the story be different without them?
• What makes them important or unimportant?
• Center Characters as the header for this section.
Part 6- Part 6- Style AnalysisStyle Analysis• In this section, discuss your opinion of
the author’s writing STYLE in the work. (What did you think about it?)– Which literary devices are used?
(diction, syntax, tone, symbols, patterns, imagery, figurative language, etc.) Give examples.
– Are they effective? Give your reasons why or why not.
– Was the writing difficult to understand? Give examples and reasons “why” it is or is not.
– What rhetorical devices, if any, would you change to make it better? (Give your specific ideas here.)
• Give plenty of detail (specifics/quotes from the story) to explain WHY you like the author and/or the style.
• Must be 3 paragraphs (15 sentences) in length and must include min. 5 quotes from the story
• Center Style as this section’s title.
Part 7- Personal ResponsePart 7- Personal Response• The last section (4 paragraphs min.-20 sentences)
is for your personal response to the story.• Write in this section:
– Did you learn anything about yourself, the world, or people? What is it? Tell how the story affected you or your attitudes about things in life.
– Did you relate to the characters in any way? Which ones and how?
– Was there an element in the story that you think applies to all readers? What and how?
– What ideas in the text seem logical or just completely crazy to you? Justify your answer.
• THEN, be sure to include a paragraph describing what you would do if you were in a similar situation to the main character of your story.
• Center Personal Response as this section’s title
Part 8: Works CitedPart 8: Works Cited
Book:Author’s Last Name, First Name. Title of Book. Place of Publication: Publisher Name, Year.
Website:Author of the site. Last update date. Site Title or Name. Retrieval date. <full web address>.
Article on a website:Author Last, First. “Article Title.” Name of Site. Publication Date. Retrieval Date. <full website address>.
Book with various articles and parts:Author Last, First. “Article Name.” Full Work Title.
Publication City: Publisher Name, Year. Page Numbers.
Your project MUST have a Works Cited Page at the end. This will be the alphabetical listing of all the sources that you use for your project. The format is very specific; please follow it exactly!
SampleSampleWorks Cited Page:Works Cited Page:
Works Cited
Kerry, Tim. The truth of Twain. Colorado: Smith Publishing,
1954.
Manis, Kim. Samuel Clemens: the Real Story. New York:
Princeton U P, 1912.
Timmons, Sam. “Writing Like Twain.” American
Encyclopedia. Vol. 4 New York: Smith Publishing, 1925.
Sanders, Helen. “Twain, Mark.” Wikipedia: the free
encyclopedia. Retrieved on 10-31-06.
<www.wikipedia.com/authors/twain.htm>.
Checklist for Project Checklist for Project Elements:Elements:
__Title Page__Author Bio Section__Historical Context Section__THEME Section__CHARACTER Section__Style Analysis Section__Personal Response to story__Works Cited Page__Format and Formal Writing
Rules Followed__ TOTAL (approx. 10 Pages)
GRADING SCALE:GRADING SCALE:Section PointsFormat (MLA Style) 10FORMAL WRITING RULES 25
Title Page 10Author Bio 10Historical Context 10Theme Analysis 10Character Sketches 10Author’s Style 10Personal Response 10Works Cited 10Oral Presentation 10Daily productivity log 75_________________________Total 200