1 / 28

RECAP

RECAP. Talkie Time: Research Facts. Lesson 8 , Objectives : The learner. Group Activity: Discuss in your group the answer to these questions? What is the importance of a Review of Literature? What will happen if you don’t cite sources that you borrow? How do you cite sources?.

adriel
Download Presentation

RECAP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RECAP Talkie Time: Research Facts

  2. Lesson 8, Objectives : The learner

  3. Group Activity: Discuss in your group the answer to these questions?What is the importance of a Review of Literature?What will happen if you don’t cite sources that you borrow?How do you cite sources?

  4. REVIEW OF LITERATURE The review of related literature or theoretical background consists of a collection of pertinent reading, published or unpublished, in local or foreign settings.

  5. Two parts: 1. THEORETICAL BACKGROUND – non-research reference materials written by authorities on the subject that embody experiences, viewpoints and interpretations of the subject of the research study. These are published materials like books, journals, magazines, pamphlets.

  6. 2. Related Studies – are from unpublished materials like theses, research reports, seminar papers, and dissertations and have bearing on the research study being undertaken.

  7. What is the purpose of the Review of Literature?

  8. PURPOSES: • It helps the researcher look for possible theories, concepts or principles to support his investigation. • It can reveal investigations similar to your own, and it can show you how the collateral researchers handled these situations. • It is essential in formulating a sound research problem or research title, hypotheses or assumptions.

  9. It can reveal to you sources of data that you may not have known existed. • It enlightens the researcher as to the direction of the study. • It proves that the study is researchable and posses novelty. • It helps to identify the statistical instruments to be used in the study. • 8. It serves as a guide to writing the findings, conclusions and recommendations.

  10. Why Use Citation? • Allows readers to cross-reference your sources easily • Provides consistent format within a discipline • Gives you credibility as a writer • Protects you from plagiarism

  11. Avoiding Plagiarism • Academic honesty and integrity! • Proper citation of your sources can help you avoid plagiarism, which is a serious offense. It may result in anything from failure of the assignment to expulsion from school.

  12. You are academically dishonest if: • Someone writes your paper for you • You purchase a paper • You copy a paper from online • You fail to cite your sources • Your present someone else’s ideas as your own

  13. Academic Paper Formats MLA (Modern Language Association) - used in literature, arts management, business and the humanities APA (American Psychological Association) - used in social sciences, such as psychology and education and natural sciences CMS (Chicago Manual Style) -The Chicago Manual of Style, also often called “TurabianStyle”. Used in Social sciences and natural & physical sciences, but most commonly in the humanities—literature, history, and the arts.

  14. Citation Locations Sources used to write a paper are acknowledged in two different places within the paper: • As in-text citations within the text of the paper • In the Works Cited page at the end of the paper .

  15. Why Source Integration? • Quotations, paraphrases, and summaries • provide support for claims or add credibility to your writing • refer to work that leads up to the work you are now doing • give examples of several points of view on a subject • call attention to a position that you wish to agree or disagree with • highlight a particularly striking phrase, sentence, or passage by quoting the original • distance yourself from the original by quoting it in order to cue readers that the words are not your own • expand the breadth or depth of your writing

  16. Choosing Text to Integrate • Read the entire text, noting the key points and main ideas. • Summarize in your own words what the single main idea of the essay is. • Paraphrase important supporting points that come up in the essay. • Consider any words, phrases, or brief passages that you believe should be quoted directly.

  17. Summarizing • When you summarize, you put the main idea(s) into your own words, including only the main point(s). • Summarized ideas must be attributed to the original source. • Summaries are significantly shorter than the original. • Summaries take a broad overview of source material.

  18. Paraphrasing • Paraphrasing involves putting a passage from source material into your own words. • Attribute paraphrases to their original sources. • Paraphrases are usually shorter than, but may be the same length as, the original passage. • Paraphrases take a more focused segment of the source and condense it slightly.

  19. Quoting • Quotations must be identical to the original. • Quotations use a narrow segment of the source. • They must match the source document word for word and must be attributed to the original author. • Use quotes when the actual words are so integral to the discussion that they cannot be replaced. • Use quotes when the author’s words are so precisely and accurately stated that they cannot be paraphrased.

  20. Comparing In-Text Citations • In-text citations are used when you need to give credit to an author for using a quote (exact wording), paraphrasing (rewording), or discussing his/her ideas. Example: (Mathis and Jones, 2009, pg. 74) • All in-text citations for MLA, APA, CMS must reference the author’s name. • Reference to the page number or publication year depends on the situation and citation style. • When using APA, always give the year of publication. • When quoting, always give the page number in MLA & APA. • When paraphrasing or simply referencing, no page number is needed for either style. • CMS General Form: (Author Last Name Year of Publication, Page #)

  21. Example: “The study provided no significant findings regarding the relationship of Math and Science skills in research study.” Source: Johnson, Thomas and Arlene Maiden. Studies in College. New York: McGraw- Hill. 2003. Print. (p 34) Paraphrase MLA: As stated by Johnson and Maiden, the research showed that there was… APA:As stated in Johnson & Maiden (2003), the research showed that… CMS: As stated by Johnson and Maiden, the research showed that there was… Quote (In text) MLA:As Johnson and Maiden explained, their “study…classes” (34). APA: As Johnson & Maiden (2003) explained, their “study…classes” (p. 34). CMS:As Johnson and Maiden explained, their “study…classes” 34. Quote (no incorporation in text) MLA:“…in research classes” (Johnson and Maiden 34). APA: “…in research classes” (Johnson & Maiden, 2003, p. 34). CMS: “…in research study” (Johnson & Maiden 2003, 34).

  22. Parenthetical Citations Multiple Authors • 2 authors – cite both names separated by & Example: (Rubin & Roessler, 2002, p. 127) • 3-5 authors – cite major author’s first time; after first time, use et al. Example: (Chan et al., 20) • 6 or more authors – cite first author’s name and et al.Example: (Rosenthal et al., 1992, p 23)

  23. Comparing References • At the end of each research paper, a section must be devoted to listing the information for each resource that you used in the paper. This includes all resources that you quoted, paraphrased, or mentioned. • If you have done your citing correctly, you should have mentioned each reference work at least once in your paper and each cited resource should have a reference citation.

  24. Application Source: STEC. STEC SHS Code. Lapu-Lapu City: DepEd Publishing. 2016. Print. (p 99) “The STEC strictly adheres to its commitment as explained in the STEC SHS Code: We are the STEC Senior High Students. Independent and self-reliant. We are committed to develop ourselves the 21st century skills: critical thinking, creativity, communication and collaboration. We are the future, We are the leaders of STEC Senior High School. “ Paraphrase MLA: APA: CMS Quote (incorporation in text) MLA: APA: CMS Quote (non incorporation in text) MLA: APA: CMS

  25. Application Source: STEC. STEC SHS Code. Lapu-Lapu City: DepEd Publishing. 2016. Print. (p 99) “The STEC strictly adheres to its commitment as explained in the STEC SHS Code: We are the STEC Senior High Students. Independent and self-reliant. We are committed to develop ourselves the 21st century skills: critical thinking, creativity, communication and collaboration. We are the future, We are the leaders of STEC Senior High School. “ Paraphrase MLA: As stated by STEC, the statement on the STEC adheres… APA: As stated by STEC (2016), statement on the STEC strictly adheres… CMS : As stated by STEC, the statement on the STEC adheres… Quote (incorporation in text) MLA: As explained by STEC in STEC SHS Code, “The STEC… School” (99). APA: As explained by STEC (2016) in STEC SHS Code, “The STEC… School” (p. 99). CMS :As explained by STEC in STEC SHS Code, “The STEC… School” 99. Quote (non incorporation in text) MLA: “The STEC…School” (STEC 99). APA: “The STEC…School” (STEC, 2016, p. 99). CMS: “The STEC…School” (STEC 2016, 99).

  26. SAMPLE RRL

  27. Groupings: Minimum Required Citations & References1. Theory (1)/Sub Theories (2)2. Discussion of Variables (all)3. Related studies (International 5)4. Local studies (5)append the Referencessubmit soft copies for Plagiarism detector test

More Related