Source # ___
ONLINE DATABASE
Name______________________________ Per.____
Example:
Shinozuka, Yoshio. "Japan's Experiments on Prisoners." Contemporary Issues Companion: Biological Weapons. Ed. Clay Farris Naff. San Diego:
Greenhaven Press, 2006. Opposing Viewpoints Resource Center. Gale. Merced High North Campus (CA). Web. 16 Feb. 2010.
Database:
Author Last Name, First Name. “Title of Article.” Name of Publication. Publication City: Publishing House, Year Published. Name of Database. School Name. Web. Date Accessed.
Follow the punctuation of the examples exactly.
Build your own: "Freud, Sigmund." Compton's by Britannica, v 6.0. 27 Jan. 2009. eLibrary. Web. 27 May. 2010.
Notes: The noted Viennese physician Sigmund Freud was one of the first to
Response: Freud was one of the first physicians to suggest
suggest workable cures for mental disorders. Although Freud's theories were at
first disputed, his work became the foundation for treating psychiatric disorders
by psychoanalysis. In more recent times his theories have once again been
challenged. Sigmund Freud was born on May 6, 1856, in Freiberg, Moravia
(now Príbor, Czech Republic), the son of a wool merchant. His family moved to
Vienna, Austria, when he was 4, and he lived there in the same house for the
next 78 years. A youthful interest in science and human personality led him to
enter the University of Vienna medical school in 1873. He took his degree in
medicine in 1881. After serving as intern and resident physician in a hospital, he
further studied the nervous system. In 1885 he was awarded a fellowship for a
year's study in Paris. There he worked under Jean-Martin Charcot, a leading
authority on hysteria. He returned to Vienna in 1886 and began medical
practice, specializing in nervous diseases. The case histories of Freud's patients
provided material for brilliant investigations. He began to be convinced that
sexual causes played a major role in many forms of neurosis. He developed the
theory known as the Oedipus complex, which focuses on emotional and sexual
complications between parents and children. This was fully described in one of
his major works, ‘The Interpretation of Dreams', published in 1900. In 1902
Freud invited four colleagues, including his later rival Alfred Adler, to form what
became known as the Vienna Psycho-Analytical Society. It grew to include
many notable people, including Carl Jung, but by 1911 differences had become
bitter, and the group began to break apart. Freud was Jewish, and when the
Nazis invaded Austria in 1938, they burned his books and banned his theories.
Friends got him out of Austria to England. He died of cancer of the jaw and
palate in London on Sept. 23, 1939.
workable cures for mental disorders. Freud’s theories were first
disputed, but his work eventually became the foundation for
treating psychiatric disorders by psychoanalysis. Sigmund Freud
was born on May 6, 1856 in modern day Príbor, Czech Republic.
A youthful interest in science and human personality led him to
enter the University of Vienna medical school in 1873. He worked
under Jean-Martin Charcot, a leading authority on hysteria. Freud
specialized in nervous system diseases. He developed the theory
known as the Oedipus complex, which focuses on emotional and
sexual complications between parents and children. In 1902
Freud invited four colleagues, including his later rival Alfred Adler,
to form what became known as the Vienna Psycho-Analytical
Society. Freud died of cancer of the jaw and palate in London on
Sept. 23, 1939.