6. Topic: American’s Paranoia Direct Quote: “It's a crazy world out there, or so it would seem. Just scan the newspapers, surf the Internet, or go to the movies--paranoia and conspiracy theories are as easy to find as theories on who killed Nicole Simpson. We in the U.S. seem to be fearful of everything, from federal agencies to pesticides in apples” (Hendricks). Paraphrase: ( ). MLA Citation:
7. Topic: American Paranoia Direct Quote: “It's a crazy world out there, or so it would seem. Just scan the newspapers, surf the Internet, or go to the movies--paranoia and conspiracy theories are as easy to find as theories on who killed Nicole Simpson. We in the U.S. seem to be fearful of everything, from federal agencies to pesticides in apples” (Hendricks). Paraphrase: ( ). Hendricks, Melissa. "What, Me Paranoid?." Johns Hopkins Magazine. Sept. 1995: 56-61. SIRS Researcher. Web. 29 Sep 2011. MLA Citation:
11. Attribute the author and page numberdirectly after the summarized text.Roosevelt’s Plan In response to the attack on Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt assembled his top three advisors to begin planning the U.S. counterattack (Bradley 98). Topic Works Cited Bradley, James. Flyboys: A True Story of Courage. Little Brown and Company; New York, 2003. Summary
15. Attribute the author and page numberdirectly after the summarized text."Are Americans growing more preoccupied with Things Out To Get Us? That depends on who you ask. Hopkins psychiatrists say that one thing's for sure, though: `Paranoia' has become an overused term that has little to do with what they actually see at the clinic." (JOHNS HOPKINS MAGAZINE) A clinically paranoid patient is riddled with "idiosyncratic delusions" that someone or something is trying to cause him personal harm. According to this definition, Adolf Hitler and militia groups are not classified as paranoid. Cited are cases of clinical paranoia and Sigmund Freud's views on the subject (Hendricks). Summary
16. Topic: American Paranoia Direct Quote: Summary: "Are Americans growing more preoccupied with Things Out To Get Us? That depends on who you ask. Hopkins psychiatrists say that one thing's for sure, though: `Paranoia' has become an overused term that has little to do with what they actually see at the clinic." (JOHNS HOPKINS MAGAZINE) A clinically paranoid patient is riddled with "idiosyncratic delusions" that someone or something is trying to cause him personal harm. According to this definition, Adolf Hitler and militia groups are not classified as paranoid. Cited are cases of clinical paranoia and Sigmund Freud's views on the subject (Hendricks). Hendricks, Melissa. "What, Me Paranoid?." Johns Hopkins Magazine. Sept. 1995: 56-61. SIRS Researcher. Web. 29 Sep 2011. MLA Citation:
27. Paraphrase 90% of the time. *use your own words *not substituting one word for another *make a new phrase/ sentence structure Include main idea/topic. Main idea/topic helps you organize the your note cards later. If quoting (10% of time), use quotation marks. “” Notes fit your essential question. Note the page number (if book) and identify the source. You might not use everything you write down.
28. Works Cited Bradley, James. Flyboys: A True Story of Courage. Little Brown & Company; New York, 2003. Hendricks, Melissa. "What, Me Paranoid?." Johns Hopkins Magazine. Sept. 1995: 56-61. SIRS Researcher. Web. 29 Sep 2011. The Purdue OWL. Purdue U Writing Lab, 2010. Web. 07 Oct 2010.