Books
Miscellaneous
Journal/Scholarly Article
Web based Content
Review
100
It is worth 30% of your final grade.
What is the documented argument?
100
5-8. At least two must come from scholarly sources.
How many sources are required for the DA?
100
The required course texts.
What are Writing Matters, They Say/I Say, Paideia 15, and Engaging Questions?
100
Allows you to make up one absence.
What is spending one hour at the writing center? (Clara Belle Williams Hall, 102)
100
The rhetorical triangle.
What is the combination of author, audience, and text?
200
This page and numbered section would help you find how to cite a printed book by one author. Locate the page, and read the example.
What is the foldout tab or page 164. Morrison Tony. Home. New York, Knopf. 2012. Print.
200
This page and numbered section would help you find how to cite a newspaper article. Once located, read the example given.
What is: page 175, section 26a. Richtel, Matt and Julie Bosman. "To Serve the Young, E-Book Fans Prefer Print." New York Times 21 Nov. 2011: B1. Print.
200
This page and numbered section would help you find how to cite a scholarly article. Once located, read the example given.
What is: Page 173, section 24a. Weaver, Karen. "A Game Change: Paying for Big-Time College Sports." Change 43.1 (2011): 14-21. Print.
200
This page and numbered section would help you find how to cite a website. Once located, read the example given.
What is: Page 177, section 31. McGann, Jerome J., ed. The Complete Writings and Pictures of Dante Gabriel Rossetti: a Hypermedia Archive. Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, U of Virginia, and Networked Infrastructure for Nineteenth-Century Electronic Scholarship, 2018. Web. 15 Feb. 2012.
200
The three rhetorical appeals, and their definitions.
What are ethos (author's credibility), pathos (emotion), and logos (logic)?
300
Reorganize the paperclip pieces to reflect a correct citation for a single author book.
What is: Levine, Gail Carson. The Two Princesses of Bamarre. New York: HarperCollins, 2001. Print.
300
This page and numbered section would help you find how to cite an interview. Once located, read the example given.
What is: page 185, section 55. Harberg, Amanda. Personal Interview. 11 Feb, 2012.
300
This page and numbered section would help you find how to cite an article in a magazine. Once located, read the example given.
What is: Fuller, Alexandra. "Her Heart Inform Her Tongue: Language Lost and Found." Harpers. Jan. 2012: 60-64. Print.
300
This page and numbered section would help you find how to cite a photo / reproduction of a work of art. Once located, read the example given.
What is: Page 183, section 48b. Lichtenstein, Roy. Whaam! 1963. Acrylic on canvas. Tate Gallery, London. Responding to Art: Form, Content and Context. By Robert Bersson. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004. Print.
300
List two examples of scholarly sources. (What makes a source "scholarly?")
Specialized dictionaries and encyclopedias. Scholarly (peer-reviewed) journals.
400
Reorganize the paperclip pieces to reflect a correct citation for a multiple author and edition other than the first book.
What is: Graff, Gerald and Cathy Birkenstein. They Say, I Say: The Moves that Matter in Academic Writing. 2nd. ed. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2010. Print.
400
Reorganize the paperclip pieces to reflect a correct citation for a YouTube video/online video clip.
What is: Fallon, Jimmy and Justin Timberlake. ""#Hastag" with Jimmy Fallon and Justin Timberlake." YouTube. YouTube, 24 Sept. 2013. Web. 17 Nov. 2013.
400
Reorganize the paperclip pieces to reflect a correct citation for a scholarly journal article accessed through a database.
What is: Hawdon, James and John Ryan. "Social Relations that Generate and Sustain Solidarity After a Mass Tragedy." Social Forces 89.4 (2011): 1363-1384. JSTOR. Web. 17 Nov. 2013.
400
Reorganize the paperclip pieces to reflect a correct citation for an advertisement.
What is: Campbells. Advertisment. Campbellsoup.com Web. 17 Nov. 2013.
400
Name three examples of questions you might ask to figure out if a source is reliable.
Who is the author? Who published the source? How recent is the source? How good are the source's sources? Will your readers find the source authoritative?