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Using NoodleTools

Using NoodleTools. A complete citation, notecard, and outlining tool. START. About this Tutorial. This tutorial will walk you through the steps of creating a project with NoodleTools.

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Using NoodleTools

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  1. Using NoodleTools A complete citation, notecard, and outlining tool START

  2. About this Tutorial • This tutorial will walk you through the steps of creating a project with NoodleTools. • To move on in the program, click the NEXT button. If you need to go back, use the navigation in the bottom left corner to select a slide. • After each section, you will have the option to move ahead or return to the main menu. NEXT

  3. Choose a Topic Below Starting a Project Managing Sources Creating Notecards From Notecards to Outline Drafting Your Paper

  4. Starting a Project NEXT

  5. Access NoodleTools from the library’s Source Citation page. Enter your login information. Personal ID = 10-digit student number Password = blazer Step One: Logging In NEXT

  6. Create a New Project NEXT

  7. Citation Style and Title Choose a citation style and give your paper a name. NEXT

  8. Access the different parts of your project—the bibliography, notecards, outline, and paper—here. This is where you will add your research question and thesis statement. When you share your project with others, they can leave comments, which will appear here. You can create a list of tasks and due dates for yourself by clicking here. The DashboardClick to see the different parts of the dashboard. The Dashboard shows general information about your project and its various components. DONE NEXT

  9. Managing Sources NEXT

  10. Creating a New Citation When you begin looking at a research source, create a citation for it so you can keep track of where different information in your paper comes from. Begin by selecting the type of resource from the pull-down menu, then answer any additional questions about your source. This will help NoodleTools choose the right type of citation. NEXT

  11. The pattern for your citation is color-coded so you can see what it will look like. Enter the information about your research source into the spaces provided. You may not have information for every field, but you should have entries in most fields. When you are done, click . then Filling in the Citation NEXT

  12. Adding Additional Information You can choose to add additional information about the research source in the “Annotation” field. This is required for an annotated bibliography, and can help you to keep track of the format and general characteristics of each source in case you want to refer to them later. DONE NEXT

  13. Creating Notecards NEXT

  14. In the olden days of research, you kept track of your sources and the facts you found in each one on handwritten notecards. These could then be spread out on a tabletop and sorted into piles to represent the different parts of a paper, as well as to remind the researcher which source each idea came from. Citation managers take care of all of these things for you, eliminating the need for handwritten cards. What are notecards? NEXT

  15. Open a new Notecard • When you’re ready to take some notes from a research source, click “new” under Notecards next to that source. NEXT

  16. New Notecard Give your notecard a name that will help you remember what information is there. Adding a URL will create a link back to the original source from your notecard. You can add tags to help you later when you are sorting cards. After you add tags to a card, you can choose from the dropdown menu to give other notecards the same tag. NEXT

  17. Pull direct quotations from your source and paste to the dialog box. You can also add pictures from electronic resources. If formatting is a problem, you have a text-only option for pasting. The text box has many of the same features as a word processor—find and replace, different font styles, various text alignments, special characters, and highlighting text. Direct Quotations NEXT

  18. Paraphrase Take another look at the section you just copied to your notecard, and put it into your own words. Try to give as complete a rundown as possible. NEXT

  19. Further Questions The last text box asks you to think about the information you’ve found. • What does it mean for your research? • Why is it important? • Does it reveal any other ideas that need to be researched? • How does this connect to other information you’ve already found? You can highlight, underline, or italicize points you know you want to come back to. NEXT

  20. Viewing Notecards from the Citation List From the source list, click “show” to view summaries of all notes for that source. Click “hide” to remove these from view. DONE NEXT

  21. From Notecards to Outline NEXT

  22. You can sort your cards in this area, putting them in groups. This box holds any new notecards you haven’t yet put onto the table. If you have more notecards than can be seen at one time, this box shows you which area of the tabletop you are looking at. If two notecards provide information about the same concept, you can put them together in a pile. When you’ve sorted your notecards, use this window to set up your outline. The TabletopClick to see the different parts of the tabletop. • This is the tabletop, where you can see the different threads of your research all at the same time. NEXT

  23. Organizing Notecards The simplest way to sort your notecards is by dragging them around the tabletop. Hold the cursor over a notecard to see its full title and a short summary. Double-click to edit the notecard. You can put similar cards together, or even drag a card on top of another one to create a pile. Holding the cursor over a stack will remind you which cards are in that pile. NEXT

  24. Tagging Notecards It’s easy to add visual cues to your notecards, too. CTRL-click to select a notecard, then pull down the Tags menu. From there, you can color-code, change tags, or add visual cues to help you keep track of your information. You can add multiple colors or visual cues to each notecard. NEXT

  25. Creating an outline will help you to organize the parts of your paper into a clear and logical order. Create your outline using the outline toolbar. With the buttons, you can add a heading, make a heading into a subheading, move headings up and down, delete a heading, or print the entire outline. Double-click to change the names of the different sections. Creating the outline NEXT

  26. Drag notecards over to the appropriate sections of the outline. Use the up/down button to change the order of the notecards. Notecards that have been added will show a check mark in the upper corner. Adding Support NEXT

  27. Printing the Outline • When your outline is finished, you have several options for publishing. You can print the outline with or without the information from your notecards, or convert the outline to a file type that you can edit with a word processor. DONE NEXT

  28. Drafting Your Paper NEXT

  29. In the Outline window, choose the Print button. Select the Convert to RTF option. Rather than sending a document to the printer, this option will convert your outline to a format that can be read by a word processor. Exporting the Outline NEXT

  30. You can include or exclude many of the elements of your notecards. You will probably want to include at least the page numbers, quotations, paraphrases, and your own ideas. These will help you write your paragraphs and cite the sources correctly without having to refer back to your notecards while you are writing. Export Options NEXT

  31. Open Your Outline • You will have the option to either save your file or open it immediately. NEXT

  32. Now What? • When you open your outline, it will look like this. You have several options from this point: • Open a new document for your draft and click back and forth as you write. • Begin typing paragraphs or parts of paragraphs directly into the outline. • Reformat the document into a Word outline and type paragraphs right into it. NEXT

  33. Typing Straight Into the Outline • If you choose to draft your paragraphs directly into the outline, you can make it easier to tell the draft from the outline by • Eliminating extra line spacings • Color-coding • Highlighting • Using different fonts NEXT

  34. Google Docs • One of the best places to put your draft is on Google Docs. You will need a Google account to do this. • The advantages to using Google Docs for storing your files are: • Files are accessible from any web-connected computer. • You only have one version of the file floating around—no more figuring out which is the one you were working on last time. • A full-featured, built-in word processor means you can edit your file on a computer that doesn’t have Word, or open your file no matter what program or version you have. NEXT

  35. You’re Done! Press to exit the tutorial.

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