elizabethan research: “a how-to”. choosing your topic… ask yourself what kinds of things could...
TRANSCRIPT
Choosing Your Topic…
• Ask yourself what kinds of things could you research about the Elizabethan Era.
Government, Economy, Agriculture, Law and Order, Trade, Transportation, Religion, Healthcare, Childcare, Leisure, Astrology, Marriage Customs, Death and Burial Rites, Music and Dance, Fashion, Disease, Torture, The Monarchy, Festivals, Food, Education, Entertainment,(not theatre) etc.
Research• Before you touch a keyboard…• Think about 3 areas you would like to look at.• Ask Yourself: Why you think others would be
interested in these Topics?* Think of 3 Questions that you might answer with your research
Search Query: “Elizabethan Poets”
Google: About 773,000 resultsHHSS Virtual Library: 142
results using EBSCO Database
vs.
Google Results:
• Finding this quality information on the open web, relying totally on Google’s indexed results, took me on a 27 page search through 223 separate results to my final destination where I saw this…
First a note about:
• Academic Honesty and “giving props” to the people who helped you with your assignment.
What is plagiarism?
The Oxford Canadian Dictionary defines it as follows:“The action or practice of taking someone else's work, idea, etc., and passing it off as one's own; literary theft.”
Barber, Katherine. Student's Oxford Canadian dictionary. Don Mills, Ont: Oxford University Press, 2004. Print.
PlagiarismWhy do we plagiarize?• We’re pressed for time.• It doesn’t seem like a big
deal.• Other people write better
than we do.• We’re not sure what
plagiarism is all about, so we take a chance.
• We believe most teachers don’t have the time to check on us.
• We believe most teachers don’t have the Internet skills to figure out what we did.
Questions…
Does this mean I shouldn’t quote from, or refer to anyone else’s writing?
Of course not. Knowing about, and including what someone else has already written/said makes you smarter, more humble, and improves the overall quality and scope of your work.
You can, and should use other people’s work if you follow the right rules.
How Does Proper In-Text citation Look?
• If you have not mentioned the author already…• The continuing controversy around whether or
not Shakespeare actually wrote his own plays continues to swirl. Add to this the speculation that other playwrights often collaborated and co-wrote scripts for the Elizabethan stage. This supposition makes “Christopher Marlowe Shakespeare’s perfect ghostwriter”(Hornby 716).
In-Text Citation cont’d
If you have mentioned the author’s name:The continuing controversy around whether or not Shakespeare actually wrote his own plays continues to swirl. The assertion that other playwrights often collaborated and co-wrote scripts for the Elizabethan stage perseveres even today. This supposition, is repeated by scholars like Glen Hornby in his essay, Much Ado About Everything when he asserts that “Christopher Marlowe Shakespeare’s perfect ghostwriter”(716).
Paraphrasing
Original text:• According to Hornby, Marlowe “paints Edward as a
flat character who never surprises us. The viewer watches a highly predictable chain of action and reaction until the final curtain”(718).
Paraphrased Version:• As Hornby explains, Marlowe writes his main
character Edward as a one dimensional figure whose trajectory through the narrative can be easily predicted until the fall of the final curtain(718).
Works CitedHow to Format Your Work
• 12pt• Times New Roman• Double-spaced
Works CitedHornby, Richard. "Marlowe And Shakespeare." Hudson
Review 66.4 (2014): 715. Advanced Placement Source. Web. 26 Feb. 2014.
The Citation Blues
• Don’t cry about it:• Crafting proper citation says a lot of good
things about who you are.• Do you give credit where credit is due?• It doesn’t have to be difficult…
IntegrityHonesty
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