Use parenthetical notes

It appears that students desperately wants to use footnotes–even when they already cite a source in a parenthetical note.

Please be aware that only ONE form of citation is used, regardless of discipline, regardless of writer, regardless of format (i.e., Chicago, MLA, APA, etc.).

The requirements for our course is PARENTHETICAL NOTES. So, use parentheticals and only parentheticals.

Instructions on the weekly calendar, in a “handout,” etc. explicitly state the requirement of parentheticals.

Students unfamiliar with Chicago format–and even many familiar with it–struggle to do footnotes correctly. Our use of parentheticals is meant to help everyone avoid additional work, frustration, and errors. So, please, follow instructions. (Besides, failure to follow instructions affects grades.)

 

Canvas and Projects

  1. On Canvas, an occasional “note” is included with a grade or number. Those notes are for my and your clarification. Please do not respond to them on Canvas as–unless I need to check for information that I do not have in my official grade sheets (a rare, if not nonexistent, occurrence)–I will never see your counter-note.
  2. Be sure to begin your project with the question that you chose to do from the list of several options provided on the calendar for each section. In case you are off-focus, I will be able to tell what you are attempting to accomplish–and it will help classmates who are unfamiliar with the assigned focus.

websites

In some cases, websites that are available in the evening will not be available the next day. The instructor has no control over such situations.

However, in many cases, particular websites are interchangeable (for example, the sites for constitutional amendments are too numerous to count).

All sites were fully available and functioning when checked by the instructor.

Problems with a site for a project might simply mean one fewer project option. As each week’s calendar is posted by 10 p.m. the preceding Friday, students are advised to check relevant information for projects so that they do not have questions or problems as deadlines approach.

Pledge and Plagiarism

A video on the Honor System, the Honor pledge, and plagiarism has been posted, as has a one-page “handout” on plagiarism, which includes paraphrasing and quoting. Both clearly indicate that the Writing Center is available to work with students on any issue related to plagiarism.

*** PLEASE NOTE THAT, IF ANYONE OTHER THAN A WRITING CENTER TUTOR HELPS IN ANY WAY WITH YOUR PROJECTS OR RESPONSES, THAT PERSON CAN DO NO MORE THAN PROVIDE GENERAL, ORAL FEEDBACK.  (If such a person provides the allowed help, he/she must be acknowledged in your Honor pledge with a brief indication of the help provided.)
RECEIVING MORE THAN THE ALLOWABLE HELP–OR NOT INDICATING IN THE PLEDGE HELP FROM SOMEONE NOT IN THE WRITING CENTER–IS A VIOLATION OF COURSE REQUIREMENTS AND CAN RESULT IN PENALTIES AS SERIOUS AS HONOR CHARGES.

Plagiarism

As indicated in the video about plagiarism and the Honor System, the Writing Center can help if you have trouble determining what needs documentation.

And, remember, if any of your work is NOT pledged it will NOT be credited. (An unpledged project will receive a zero.) It will be removed from the website, you will not have an opportunity to redo it, and you will not be able to claim it on your weekly list of course work.

http://hist314online.ferrellhistory.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/PLAGIARISM.pdf

Responses

a. Adhere to the word limit. If you do not, the instructor will “edit” your response and cut it to the assigned length–and will penalize you.

ALL WORD LIMITS HAVE A REASON–AND THAT REASON IS THE NEED TO LEARN TO THINK PRECISELY AND WRITE CONCISELY. (You do not want to spend 10 minutes reading something that should take 5 minutes; neither do your readers.)

b. Be sure to PLEDGE your entry or the instructor will delete it (and you cannot “claim” it on your weekly list).

c. Do more than congratulate each other for writing a project. Think, analyze, challenge (respectfully).

d. If the instructor (or a classmate) responds to your project (or to one of your responses), do not waste a post saying, “Thank you.” If you respond, do so substantively. Make reading your reply a useful experience for others.