LIBRARY PROJECT
I. MICROFILM:
1) Look up the issue of The New York Times newspaper on microfilm that corresponds with your date of birth.
2) Print only the front page ($.10).
II. MICROFILM-2: (typed)
1) Read one of the articles found on the above page of the New York Times.
2) Respond to the article—emotionally, intellectually, creatively—in a one-page document.
III. OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY (OED): (typed)
1) Look up each of the 5 words given to you by the instructor.
2) Record its part of speech.
3) Write a simple definition for it. (the most frequently employed definition, the common understanding)
4) Use it in an original sentence. (one that demonstrates your understanding of the meaning, more than a rewording of the definition) (“Because of his hearing impairment, Stanley does not listen to much music.”)
IV. BOOKS: (typed)
1) Look up two books in each of the following five sections (according to theLibrary of Congress classification system):
- Literature/Poetry: your author
- Science: bioethics, cloning, computer science, science + technology
- History/Government: American Revolution, Vietnam War, cold war, George Bush
- Nursing: pediatric nursing, geriatric nursing, nursing + drugs
- Health/Medicine: nutrition, AIDS, Alzheimer’s disease
** You may use 2 books on the same sub-topic: 2 “nutrition” books in the Health section (for example).
2) Record the following information:
- the call number,
- author(s),
- full title
- publisher,
- publisher’s location (city)
- copyright date (latest),
- and the first sentence of Chapter 1 (so you actually have to locate, touch, and open the book) (but you can truncate longer sentences with ellipses [. . . .]).
V. PERIODICALS: (typed)
1) Read an article in a hardcopy periodical that is related to your major (major interest).
2) Type a one-page outline of that article.
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VI. EncyclopædiaBritannica:
1) Research your GROUP PROJECT on the online version of this encyclopedia.
2) Print the relevant information only—that data germane to your group sub-topic.
VII. WEB SITES:
1) Research 5 Web sites for the GROUP PROJECT.
2) These sites must be official, professional, and authoritative. (*No wikipedia, answers, about.coms)
3) Print the relevant information only—that data germane to your group sub-topic.
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VIII. DYNIX:
1) Use the library’s online card catalogue system to look up 5 books related to your Opposing Viewpoints topic.
2) Record the publishing information. (typed—or print the screen)
IX. OPPOSING VIEWPOINTS: (this is the name of a Gale Group database)
1) Research articles on subject given to you by the instructor.
2) Select 5 of the most recent articles.
3) The articles must concern a related topic within your subject (for ex: in “human rights” see “abortion”) (*all five will argue the same point of view—5 arguing for abortion).
4) Print only the file, folder, “shopping cart” (not the articles!!).
X-IV. OPPOSING VIEWPOINTS OUTLINES:
1) Read each of the articles gathered from the Opposing Viewpoints database.
2) Type a one-page outline of each article. (5 points each)
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XV. EBSCO: (select “Academic Search Elite” and then “Continue”)
1) Look up articles about your author on this database.
2) Save the 5 best related articles in a file (related, i.e., by particular work, like reviews of Stephen King’s It).
3) Print the file, folder, “shopping cart” (not the articles!!).
XVI. WILSON WEB: (select “OmniFile Full Text,” not “Biographies”)
1) Look up articles about your author on this database.
2) Save the 5 best related articles in a file (related, i.e., by particular work, like Stephen King’s The Stand).
3) Print the file (not the articles!!).
XVII. LITERATURE ON-LINE REFERENCE EDITION (LION):
1) Look up articles about your author on LION.
2) Save the 5 best related articles in a file.
3) Print the file.
XVIII. LITERATURERESOURCECENTER (LRC) under InfoTrac: (under “Galegroup’s Infotrac”)
1) Look up your author under “Literary Criticism, Articles, and Work Reviews” (not “Biographies”).
2) Save 5 related articles.
3) Print the file.
XIX. CONTEMPORARY AUTHORS:
1) Locate database through the “Galegroup’s InfoTrac” icon on the library’s list of databases.
2) Look up your author, save, and print out his/her biography, bibliography, and sidelights (*multiple pages).
XX. “SIDELIGHTS” REPORT: (typed)
1) Read the “Sidelights” section of Contemporary Authors (Part IX).
2) Write a one-page document in which you paraphrase and summarize some particular aspect regarding the author’s writing (for example, how the works of Xiang Fu embody the PuPu movement).
3) Put as much of it into your own words, but use quotation marks around direct quotes when necessary.
* For the Literature Research Center, EBSCO, Wilson Web, and LION databases, do not employ citations that are simply the novel/work itself; the work or the author should be the subject of the article/book. In other words, do not use a citation that lists Stephen King’s It; rather, the citation should be a review of the author or the work.
* For the LiteratureResearchCenter, EBSCO, Wilson Web, and LION databases, do not use the same articles in each; there should be no overlap of citations.
* For the Literature Research Center, EBSCO, Wilson Web, and LION databases, do not use articles that concern reviews of movies, plays, or television shows; literature only.
______SETUP______
* LABEL and STAPLE each section.
* Organize the material as numbered above (put the items in the same order as above).
* Securethe entire project within a folder/binder.
* The first page will be a typedtitle page. Place the proper “essay” information in the upper right-hand corner (your name, my name, course & section #, due date, assignment), and place your author’s name in the title position (centered on the page).
- 5points per section (100 available points)
- Project counts as a test grade
- Due date:
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OUTLINING
- Create a SKELETAL view of the source.
- list the author’s (authors’) main points
- list those points in the order they appear in the source
- as if you were writing subheadings for it
- “zoom out”
- List the CLAIMS and GROUNDS.
- What points or claims does the author make?
- How does s/he support those claims?
- What type of evidence, what means of support?
- Remain OBJECTIVE.
- this is not a matter of agreeing or disagreeing
- remain impartial, neutral, unbiased, detached
- Put it in YOUR OWN WORDS as much as possible.
- do not simply change a few words
- completely process the claims and grounds and reword them
- “analyze” and “synthesize” the information
- Use the author’s EXACT WORDS whenever a point is succinctly and aptly phrased.
- place the quote within quotation marks “ ”
LIBRARY of CONGRESS CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM
A – General Works: Encyclopedias, Dictionaries, and other reference works
B – Philosophy, Psychology, Parapsychology, Religion
C – Auxiliary Sciences of History
D – History: General and Outside the Americas
E – History: United States (Chronological)
F – History: United States (by State), Canada, Mexico, Latin
America, South America
G – Geography, Anthropology, Folklore, Recreation, Sports
H – Social Sciences
J – Political Science, Government
K – Law
M – Music
N – Fine Arts, Architecture
P – Language and Literature
Q – Science: such as Mathematics, Astronomy, Physics, Chemistry,
Botany, Zoology, Human Anatomy
R – Medical Sciences: Dentistry, Nursing, Pediatrics, Psychiatry
S – Agriculture, Horticulture
T – Technology: such as Engineering, Aeronautics, Home Economics,
Astronautics, Photography
U – Military Science
V – Naval Science
Z – Bibliography, Library Science, Information Resources
AUTHORS used in the past: (choose one of these or choose one not on the list)
- Tom Clancy
- Dan Brown
- JRR Tolkien
- Nathaniel Hawthorne (no Contemporary Authors)
- JD Salinger
- Ernest Hemingway
- John Steinbeck
- Emily Dickenson (no Contemporary Authors)
- Charles Dickens (LRC)
- William Shakespeare (no Contemporary Authors)
- Flannery O’Connor
- JK Rowling
- Mary Higgins Clark (limited articles)
- Mark Twain (Samuel L. Clemens)
- Gary Paulson
- Stephen King
- Geoffrey Chaucer
- VC Andrews
- Ken Kesey
- Robert L. Heinlein
- John Grisham
- Jonathan Swift
- Nicholas Sparks (no LION)
- Roald Dahl
- Mario Puzu
- RL Stein (limited)
- Maya Angelou
- Erma Bombeck (no LION, LRC)
- Hunter S. Thompson
- Anne Rice
- Pearl S. Buck
- William S. Burroughs
- Ray Bradbury
- Andrew M. Greeley
VOCABULARY
howdah
susurrant
oxymoron
cathode
Bar Mitzvah
cantor
nirvana (not musicians)
sentinel
chinking
marmot
pathology
brazier
ominous
unpalatable
chasuble
retrospect
embroidering
philandering
nostalgia
aerial
chauvinist
victimization
disability
deformity
anomalies
mutilated
maladjusted
ministrations
millennia
injunction
erstwhile
largesse
condemnation
narcissism
mitigates
impairment
Leukemia
Multiple Sclerosis
disenfranchised
sexism
hysteria
antipathy
malady
paraplegia
anorexia nervosa
Shanghai (v)
benign
insular
semantic
posturing
incursions
ensconced
forays
formaldehyde
phenol
bromides
vacuity
putrid
edifice
remedial
despondent
leavening
criterion
oncologist
abominable
extol
internist
facilitated
barbiturates
chemotherapy
quietus
euthanasia
ensuing
arbitrary
encode
watershed
recidivist
vitriolic
proselytize
excoriate
obeisance
pram
naturalist
cacophony
ethos
fission
recession
ethereal
androgynous
patriarchal
suffragist
visceral
supposition
pendant
nonchalance
talon
tremulous
inexplicable
enchantment
ignobly
onus
pariah
dysfunctional
zenith
innuendo
dogma
unsullied
automaton
applicable
evinced
esoteric
seditious
defamatory
anomaly
assimilate
malign
proliferate
gilded
construe
apparition
ethics
civility
omnipresent
supercede
obfuscate
OPPOSING VIEWPOINTS
Abortion
Administration of Criminal Justice
Adoption
Affirmative Action
AIDS (Disease)
Alcoholism
Animal Experimentation
Animal Rights
Assisted Suicide
Athletes
Bioethics
Biological Weapons
Birth Control
Capital Punishment
Censorship
Chemical Weapons
Child Abuse
Church and State
Civil Rights
Cloning
Crime
Crime Victims
Death
Divorce
Domestic Violence
Drinking (Alcoholic Beverages)
Driving While Intoxicated
Drug Abuse
Drug Traffic
Drugs And Athletes
Eating Disorders
Education
Elderly
Emigration and Immigration
Employment
Endangered Species
Environmental Policy
Environmentalism
Ethnic Relations
Euthanasia
Family
Family Relations
Feminism
Gambling
Gangs
Genetic Engineering
Genocide
Global Warming
Gun Control
Hate Crimes
Health Insurance
Health Care Reform
Homelessness
Homosexuality
Human Rights
Illegal Immigrants
Internet
Iraq
Islamic Fundamentalism
Juvenile Alcoholism
Juvenile Drug Abuse
Juvenile Offenders
Marijuana
Marine Resources Conservation
Media Violence
Medical Care
Medical Ethics
Mental Disorders
Mental Health
Middle East
Narcotics Control
Narcotics Legalization
National Security
Nuclear Weapons
Nutrition
Oceans
Political Corruption
Pollution
Population Growth
Pornography
Poverty
Prisons
Public Assistance
Race Relations
Racism
Rape
Religion
Renewable Energy
Right of Privacy
School Violence
Sex Education
Sexual Behavior
Smoking
Social Security
Stem Cells
Suicide
Teenage Pregnancy
Teenage Sexual Behavior
Terrorism
United States Foreign Relations
Violence
War Crimes
Water Pollution
Welfare Reform
Women
Women's Rights
Working Women
Youth