Posts

Showing posts from April, 2014

May 13th lesson

Dear  students, Today you will start classification. Kind regards, Chris Elvin Note about in-text citation: In MLA style, writers place references to sources in the paper to briefly identify them and enable readers to find them in the Works Cited list. These parenthetical references should be kept as brief and as clear as possible. Give only the information needed to identify a source. Usually the author's last name and a page reference. Place the parenthetical reference as close as possible to its source. Insert the parenthetical reference where a pause would naturally occur, preferably at the end of a sentence. Information in the parenthesis should complement, not repeat, information given in the text. If you include an author's name in a sentence, you do not need to repeat it in your parenthetical statement. The parenthetical reference should be before the punctuation mark that concludes the sentence, clause, or phrase that contains the cited material. Electroni

April 29th lesson

Dear students, Today you will practice summarising, paraphrasing and quoting using MLA style for in-text citations and "Works Cited". Please bring something to class that you would like to use for your summaries / paraphrases / quotes. You may bring several sources if you wish. If you would like to learn more about MLA, here is a handout: http://www.eflclub.com/aogaku/ie3/MLA.pdf If you would like to generate MLA formatted "Works Cited" automatically, please check out "bib me"  ( http://www.bibme.org ) or  "Son of Citation" ( http://www.citationmachine.net/mla/cite-a-book ). Kind regards, Chris Elvin

April 22nd lesson

Dear students, Today, please show me your completed homework (summary, opinion, in-text citation, works cited). In-text Citations MLA style requires brief citation information to be included in the text of your paper, and most often in parentheses at the end of your summary, paraphrase or quotation. This will signal to the reader that the writing is not  your own, and that the original source can be found in your "Works Cited" at the end of your paper. Works Cited At the end of your paper, you must provide an alphabetical list of all the works that you have cited in your paper. This requirement includes summaries, paraphrases and quotations. If you are citing a book, for example, the MLA format will look like this: Author's last name, first name. Title of book. City of publication: publisher, date. Please do not be too overwhelmed at the moment. By the end of the semester you should all be quite capable. Kind regards, Chris Elvin

Welcome to Chris Elvin's IE3 Aoyama University Writing Class

Dear students, Thank you for coming to class yesterday. Please subscribe to this blog, or bookmark it, or visit it before coming to class. For our lesson on April 15th 2014, you will read your completed group essays to two other groups. After that, we will start to practice summarising, paraphrasing, and quoting other sources. Please bring a book to class for these exercises. (For example, a Harry Potter story, Great Expectations, Hiroshima, A Brief History of Time, etc.) Kind regards, Chris Elvin