Intellectual Property - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 13
About This Presentation
Title:

Intellectual Property

Description:

'Dr. Brooke thinks that children need love' 'Dr. Brooke interprets the data to mean that children need love' ... quotes; quotations embedded within quotations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:99
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 14
Provided by: Melanie4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Intellectual Property


1
Intellectual Property Using Sources
  • Chapters 19 20
  • Everythings an Argument

2
Sources That Dont Need to be Acknowledged
(reprise)
  • Common knowledge specific information that most
    readers will know
  • Facts available from a wide variety of sources
    (the date of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, for
    example)
  • Your own findings from field research should be
    simple announced as your own
  • EVERYTHING ELSE MUST BE DOCUMENTED!!

3
Assessing Print Sources (I)
  • Relevance Is it closely related to your thesis?
    Check the index, contents, abstract, c.
  • Credentials of source Is the author an expert?
    Is s/he biased? If published by a group, what is
    their agenda? If published in a magazine, what
    kind of magazine is it? Does this evidence need
    to be balanced or expanded?

4
Assessing Print Resources (II)
  • Date of publication Does your subject require
    new or historical sources?
  • Level of specialization Probing arguments often
    require specialized works, but these may be
    incomprehensible to your readers prepare to
    translate
  • Audience Was it written for a general audience?
    For specialists? For advocates or opponents?

5
Assessing Print Resources (III)
  • Cross-referencing Is the source mentioned in
    other sources? If yes, with respect?
  • Length Is it long enough to provide the detail
    you need? (Or alternately, too long and only
    tangentially relevant)
  • Availability Do you have access to the source?
    If not, find another.
  • Omissions What is missing from the text? Does
    this impair its credibility or require you to
    fill in the gaps?

6
Assessing Electronic Sources (I)
  • Source Who has posted the site? An individual,
    interest group, company or govt agency? (The URL
    may give you clues - .org vs .com)
  • Credibility Can the information be verified in
    the document or other sources? How accurate and
    complete is it?
  • Accountability Who can be held responsible for
    the sites content? Does it credit its own
    sources?

7
Assessing Electronic Sources (II)
  • Date of publication How current is the site?
    Avoid outdated materials
  • Design How effectively is the site designed?
    Are its links helpful? How does the design
    affect the content?
  • Bias What perspectives are represented? Do
    they need to be balanced or expanded?

8
Assessing Field Research
  • Have you examine your conclusions for accuracy?
  • Have you identified the exact time, place
    participants in your research?
  • Have you made clear what role you played in the
    research how that may have influenced your
    findings?
  • Do you have your subjects permission to use the
    data you collected about them?

9
Using Sources
  • You may want to introduce important sources in
    your text. Be sure to identify their
    significance. (Noted child psychologist
    Dorothea Brooke said)
  • You can subtly influence the credibility of the
    quote via signal verb choice
  • Dr. Brooke said, children need love.
  • According to Dr. Brooke, children need love
  • Dr. Brooke believes that children need love.

10
Using Sources Signal Verbs
  • Acknowledges, advises, agrees, allows, asserts,
    believes, charges, claims, concurs, criticizes,
    declares, disagrees, discusses, disputes,
    emphasizes, expresses, lists, objects, observes,
    offers, opposes, remarks, replies, responds,
    states, suggests
  • Dr. Brooke thinks that children need love
  • Dr. Brooke interprets the data to mean that
    children need love
  • Dr. Brooke concluded that children need love
  • Dr. Brooke reveals that children need love
  • Dr. Brooke confirms that children need love

11
Quotations
  • Copy the quotations carefully, precisely copying
    spelling, capitalization and punctuation.
  • Preface the quotation with a transitional
    sentence or phrase. The pattern is often
  • General Claim
  • Transition Phrase or Sentence
  • Quotation
  • Explanation
  • The Good Ol Boys Inc Airline has been dogged by
    accusations of carelessness and mismanagement
    (1). One company memo, for example (2), claimed
    that minimizing pre-flight safety protocols is a
    good way to save time and money. (3) This
    cavalier attitude towards safety, many allege, is
    typical of the companys management style (4).

12
Punctuating Quotations
  • Use brackets around material that you insert
  • Enclose quotations in quotation marks
  • Molly Gibson said that the award was a great
    honor for her.
  • Use ellipses to indicate omitted material
  • How do I love thee? I love thee with the
    breath, smiles, tears of all my life

13
Punctuating Quotations II
  • Commas and periods go inside the closing
    quotation marks question marks, semi-colons,
    colons, and exclamation points are placed
    according to the logic of the sentence
  • Do you know how to sing God Save the Queen?
  • People always ask me, How do you keep your
    garden in bloom all year round?
  • Bart exclaimed, Ay, caramba!
  • Then the jerk told me he needed more space!
  • Quotations are enclosed in double quotes
    quotations embedded within quotations are
    indicated by single quotes
  • She said, This so-called free and fair
    election is a travesty of justice.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com