There are two forms of citation allowed in this class. What are they?
What is/are MLA and APA.
There are multiple databases from the library; name three of them.
What is/are Academic Search Premiere, EBSCOhost,Gale, Onesearch, Worldcat, etc.
What is the password for BallPoint?
What is/are "chirp104".
What is/are taking self-research and connecting it to a larger issue.
There are two places students can go to on campus for help when writing that are mentioned in the syllabus. What are they?
What is/are the Writing Center and Digital Writing Studio.
What are the four parts of a "quote sandwich"? Write them IN THE CORRECT ORDER!
What is/are a topic sentence, introduce source, use and cite, and analyze.
What are two major differences in formatting between MLA and APA citations?
What is/are the year and "Retrieved from" for APA.
According to BallPoint, what is a proposal?
What is/are "a proposal is a request".
What is primary research? Give three examples.
What is/are using your own research methods to collect raw data. Examples include interviews, observations and surveys.
Where is the Writing Center located?
For an annotated bibliography, an "equation" was given as a way to define what it is; what was it?
What is/are "detailed summary + evaluation = annotated bib."
Finish the following sentence: "Sources are used to...but should never be..."
What is/are "Sources are used to enhance the author's idea or argument, but should never be the author's voice itself."
What did BallPoint mean when they said "read against the author"?
What is/are looking for flaws from that author, from writing to ideas expressed.
What are data, information and knowledge?
What is/are data is the hard facts; information is the data we collect and put into a form of structure; and knowledge is the learning and understanding of the data and information collected.
What are tone, voice and style?
What is/are tone is the attitude that is conveyed to an audience, voice is the way a writer expresses themselves, and style is the arrangement of sentences, clauses, phrases, etc. to achieve a desired effect.
There are five characteristics that a claim has; what are they?
What is/are...
1. A claim persuades, argues, convinces, proves or suggests something (to a reader who may or may not initially agree with you).
What is the full in-text citation format for APA?
What is/are (author name, year, p. #).
According to BallPoint, "Research begins..." as what?
What is/are "as curiosity".
In research composition, there are two problems that researchers focus on. What are they?
What is/are conceptual and practical.
What was the name of the women from the TEDtalk video?
What is/are Chimimanda Adichie.
The CARS Model to introductions takes sections-or "moves"-to another level. What...
1. Does CARS stand for?
2. Are the three moves?
3. Is the order of the moves?
What is/are:
1. Creating a Research Space
2 & 3. Establishing a Territory, Establishing the Niche, and Occupying the Niche.
What do you specifically have to be wary of when doing artifact analysis as a primary source?
What is/are bias from that century.
What are all the sections of am IMRD format? Write them in the correct order!
Susie Q. wants to do a research project to answer the question, "What is the butterfly migration pattern and duration of Monarchs?" What is the best research method for Susie Q. to use to best address this research question?
What is/are mix-methods.
What is the name of the librarian that helped us for Library Day?
What is/are Ms. Brenda.