Research Paper Where do I begin? Your outline is your guide. • If you can’t follow your outline, then change it. It is not set in stone. • Remember each Roman Numeral is not just one (1) paragraph. • Each subpoint should create at least one (1) paragraph by itself. Adjusting your outline • If you add something that your first outline does not include, add it to your final outline. • Do the same for information that you delete. Remove it from your outline. When writing… • Write in third person. • Give credit to someone else’s work. This even applies to paraphrasing! • Save everything periodically. Introduction • Catch the reader’s attention. • Clearly indicate what your paper is about. Do not merely tell facts about your author unless those facts contribute to your main idea. • Your thesis should be in your introduction somewhere. (If you change your thesis wording, please change it on your outline.) Introduction continued… • • • • • • Don’t by funny Don’t repeat the title Don’t directly state your purpose The purpose of this paper is… OR Hi. I am a senior at Barren County High School. Body • To mark your source information, mark your bibliography card’s number in parenthesis after the information. • Write in present tense • Each paragraph should include a topic sentence and supporting details for that topic sentence. Conclusion Ideas • • • • • Offer a judgment Make a final comment or observation End with a quote that pulls it all together Summarize your main idea(s) Refer to your introduction (bring it full circle) Do NOT forget parenthetical documentation… A parenthetical citation contains JUST ENOUGH information to help the reader locate the source in the Works Cited list. Works Cited, References, and Bibliography The basic citation includes author’s last name and page number. The Oklahoma migrants found “not a Promised Land but a manblighted Eden” (Crockett 195). Basic citation with author’s name in text. As H. Kelly Crockett has pointed out, the Oklahoma migrants found “not a Promised Land but a man-blighted Eden” (195). Citation of an anonymous work One contributor wrote that the novel contained “ a number of factual errors” (“Some Factual Errors” 647). Citation of an encyclopedia or a similar reference One cause of the Dust Bowl was misuse of the land (“Dust Bowl”). Citation of a work by two or three authors Very little is now known about how dolphins and whales communicate (Akmajian, Demers, and Harnish 36). Citation of a work by more than three authors Scientists are still debating whether the higher apes can be taught to create “sentences” in sign language (Kim et al. 427). Citation of an internet source Treat internet sources as unpaginated sources, unless the source is a PDF document, which should have page numbers. The California Highway Patrol opposes restrictions on the use of phones while driving, claiming that distracted drivers can already be prosecuted (Jacobs). Long literary quotations • If a direct quote is five or more lines long, indent the quote one inch or ten spaces. • The parenthetical citation will go after the final mark of punctuation for the quote. • Do not type quotation marks for a long quote. The special indention signifies that it is, in fact, a direct quote Long prose quotations • Long prose is more than four typed lines A Pocket Style Manual • Refer closely to page 116 • This is chapter 31 and it deals with integrating literary quotations into a research paper. Using ellipsis mark • Ellipsis marks are used to condense a quoted passage. • When you omit a full sentence or more within a quote, place a period before the three ellipsis marks. • Do not use ellipsis marks at the beginning or end of a quoted passage. Using brackets • Brackets allow you to insert words of your own into quoted material in order to clarify matters or to keep a sentence grammatical in your context.