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GEL 101 Library Module (Goldman)

Judith Downie
Humanities Librarian
KEL 3424
(760) 750-4374
jdownie@csusm.edu

Office hours: by appointment or stop by whenever my door is open.

What is the GEL Library Module?

The Library Module will introduce you to the basics of college-level research. The skills you learn during the module will help you for these main reasons:

  • learn the college-level skills needed to produce ethical and accurate research as demonstrated by an annotated bibliography.
  • apply those skills to the final project you will do for this class.
  • incorporate the research from this module into your final project.
  • in general, for the papers and projects you will be expected to do
    for the rest of your college career.

Schedule, Topics and Assignments

The Library Module covers a great deal of information in only 9 classes, so attendance and participation are important. 

  • Students who are excessively or regularly late will not receive credit for attendance.
  • Appropriate classroom behavior is required (e.g. no iPods, text messaging, eating, etc).
  • Each in-class activity and homework assignment is for credit and must be completed on time.
  • NO late work will be accepted without prior arrangements.
  • Homework must be typed.
  • You must do your own work--do not turn in the same assignment as another student unless you are instructed to work as a group.
  • Plagiarism and other forms of cheating, as defined here in the General University Catalog, will result in zero credit for each plagiarized assignment. Plagiarism on the final annotated bibliography will result in ZERO points for the library module.

 In-class activities

 25 pts

 Homework assignments

 55 pts

 Annotated bibliography assignment

 40 pts

 Quiz

 30 pts

 Total

 150 points

Note: The Office of Disabled Student Services provides a variety of services and resources to students. Students with disabilities should contact me immediately to ensure appropriate accommodations are made during the Library Module.

The instructor reserves the right to make changes as necessary, to assignments outlined in the syllabus. However, no changes will be made in the nature of weighting of assignments given in class, nor will any schedule changes shorten the amount of time that students have to work on any written assignment.

Day 1- Mon. Sept. 17  KEL2303

 Intro to college level research - Assignment Calculator
 Finding background information - Focusing your research topic
 In class activity: Topic brainstorm

Day 2-Wed. Sept. 19  KEL2303

 Advanced internet searching: Guess the Google
 Evaluating websites
 In-class activity: Evaluating websites
 Homework assignment #1  

Day 3- Fri. Sept. 21  KEL2303

 Plagiarism, what it is, how to avoid, consequences
 Writing annotations
 In class activity: Annotations vs. Abstracts--The Smackdown
 Homework assignment #2

Day 4-Mon. Sept. 24  KEL2303

 Finding background information - using reference sources
 Library call #s and subject headings 
 In-class activity: Library Catalog 
 Homework assignment #3

Day 5-Wed. Sept. 26  KEL2303

 Asking scholarly disciplinary questions
 Scholarly articles: What is scholarly?
 What's in a database? Choosing the right one
 In class activity: Group consultations

Day 6-Fri.  Sept. 28  KEL2303

 Getting what you need from the databases
 In class activity: Article in a Research database
 Homework assignment #4

Day 7-Mon.  Oct. 1  KEL2303

 APA style and citations:
     UCLA Success with Less Stress site "Citing and Documenting Sources"
     Diana Hacker's site on documentation and citation
 In class activity: Cite Right

Day 8-Wed.  Oct. 3  KEL2303

 Developing and writing a thesis: Ozline
 Review
 Homework assignment #5

Day 9-Fri.  Oct. 5  KEL2303

 Click here to evaluate this module
 Quiz
 Final annotated bibliography due on Oct. 12 paper (I'll pick them up in your regular classroom)


 

Homework Assignment #1 (10 pts)

From your own Internet searching, you probably realize there is an overwhelming amount of information available online. When searching for information, whether a web page, book or article, you can plug keywords related to your topic into Google or another search engine... but doing this and using the first few results for your paper does not constitute research!

Anyone can put up a website. How do you know that its information is accurate, legitimate or current? Learn how to evaluate a web site before choosing to include the information you find in your research project.

Locate a scholarly, or at least, reputable, website on your topic. Print the first page of the site with the URL clearly printed in the bottom margin (write in by hand if it is a PDF file, but browser and printer settings can be adjusted to print the URL on other types of pages) Write your name clearly on the top of the page. See the Widener University website tutorial as a reminder of what you are evaluating.

On the back of the page, write down an item of evidence you found for each of the following:

  1. Authority
  2. Accuracy
  3. Currency
  4. Objectivity

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Homework Assignment #2 (15 pts)

The temptation to plagiarize is strong with the pressures of so many assignments combined with social life and work responsibilities. Or may have occurred accidentally at one time or another. Any form of academic dishonesty (see the CSUSM Academic Honesty Policy) can have serious repercussions that you don't want to suffer.

Read through the CSUSM Plagiarism Tutorial's 4 sections and complete the checkpoint at the end of each of these sections:
  • "What is Plagiarism",
  • "How to Avoid It"
  • "How to Credit Sources"

Email the results of each checkpoint to me at jdownie@csusm.edu. Make sure your name is on the checkpoint as there is a time-stamp but no email address unless you type it in. NO credit given for checkpoints not received before class meets at 9:00 AM on Monday September 24.

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Homework Assignment #3 (10 pts)

The library catalog is not intended to be a barrier to finding information, although it may feel that way. The labels that will locate material most precisely have been developed by experts in the various subject areas and they use precise terminology that you need to become acquainted with in order to be successful. This exercise will help you develop the skills to investigate and open the doors to the information you need from the catalog.

Refer to the homework model for both required format and required information. Provide the information as indicated on your topic, keywords, subjects and how the material you found will be useful.

Using the keyword search function in the CSUSM Library catalog and the keywords you used, locate at least ONE book that you might use for your research (it must be a book!) Open that item record and examine the subject headings at the bottom and list two subject headings that will be useful to locate other materials.

Remember, this must be typed.

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Homework Assignment #4 (15 pts)

The Research Databases are by far our most popular information source. But we have a ever-growing list of databases and not all will be suitable to all research needs. Make sure you are looking in an appropriate database, and when in doubt, consult with your professor or the librarian!

Using the keywords from your homework #3 or new keywords that you have decided on, use a research database to locate a SCHOLARLY article. It must meet the standards we covered in class or will not count. Recommended places to look, besides Academic Search Premier that we looked at in class are:

Print the article and write your name in the top margin. Read through the article and highlight or underline THREE key ideas or statements that you could use in your paper. Bring to class--NO credit for emailing to me or not bringing a hard copy to class. We will be using the article in class.

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Homework Assignment #5 (5 pts)

Any paper worth a good grade will have a thesis statement. (That is a simple thesis statement right there!) It should not be a paragraph long, but should be in the first paragraph of the paper so the reader knows what is going to come.

Using the tools you have and the knowledge you have gathered to this point, write a thesis statement that won't embarrass you or me and email to me at jdownie@csusm.edu with a subject line of GOLDMAN and your name. Don't just use the thesis builder and turn what comes out in the first try, you will need to polish the grammar and check the spelling before sending.

Don't think this is the final statement you will anchor your work on, but it should still be good work at this stage. Good writers will polish the statement as they analyze and develop their thoughts while writing the paper.

DUE BEFORE OUR CLASS MEETING ON October 5.

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Annotated Bibliography (40 pts)

Here are the guidelines and link to a sample annotated bibliography. This is due October 12 in your regular classroom.

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Catalog: Finding the Subject Headings

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Scholarly vs. Popular

Scholarly (peer-reviewed, refereed, empirical)

Non-scholarly (popular)

Audience

academic readers

general audience

Author

researchers, experts, specialists

journalists, free-lance writers, generalists

Language

professional jargon; may be difficult to read

common; easy to understand

Style

specific structure (e.g. abstract, methodology, data, results, conclusion, references)

structured like a story; can look glossy with pictures and ads

Sources

long list of bibliography, references, footnotes

no bibliography or references listed

Examples Ethnic and Racial Studies; Gender & Society; International Migration Review; American Journal of Public Health; Latin American Perspectives Time; Newsweek; Business Week;
US News & World Report; New York Times; Christian Science Monitor

Some databases provide a 'peer-reviewed' or 'scholarly only' limit function that can narrow the results, but will still bring back non-scholarly materials that were published in a scholarly journal (e.g., editorials, letters to the editor, book reviews.) When in doubt, ask a librarian!  --From G. Sonntag September 2007

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Quoting, Summarizing and Paraphrasing

  What is it? Tips
Quoting Using the author's exact words. Always cite it and use "quotation marks." Some good reasons to include a quote are:  
  • You want to support or add credibility to your arguments
  • The original is difficult to rephrase
  • The original is so good that you want to preserve the language

Quoting in moderation is acceptable, but stringing a bunch of quotes together without analysis and well-crafted transitions is bad. A paper is supposed to be your work, so limit quoting to the minimum needed as per the above reasons.
 

Summarizing Condensing the author's words or ideas without altering the meaning or providing interpretation—you use your own words for this. Basically, presenting the original information in a nutshell.

When you summarize, you must always cite the author of the material you are summarizing.
In academic writing, there are a few things to keep in mind when summarizing outside sources:
  • Use your own words
  • Include the key relevant elements of the original and keep it brief—you're just going for the original's essence
  • Do not include your interpretation/analysis within the summary—make a clear distinction between your thoughts and someone else's
  • Vary how you introduce or attribute your sources, like "according to…," or "so-and-so concludes that..." so your readers don't get bored
  • Always include a citation.
Paraphrasing Restating, in your own words, the author's words or ideas without altering the meaning or providing interpretation. Paraphrases are about the same length as the original.


When you paraphrase, you must always cite the author of the material you are paraphrasing.
Paraphrasing is similar to summarizing in that you: Paraphrasing differs from summarizing in that you:
  • Do NOT include your interpretation/analysis within the paraphrase—make a clear distinction between your thoughts and someone else's
  • Should vary how you introduce or attribute your sources, like "according to…," or "so-and-so concludes that..."
  • Always include a citation
  • Usually write about the same length as the original
  • Use your own words, but you may occasionally want to include a sequence of words or a brief quote from the original (Remember to use "quotation marks" if you decide to include any sequence of words from the original.)

---From G. Sonntag, September 2007



Citation Guides and Tools

APA: Publication manual of the American Psychological Association.  5th ed. Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, 2001.

Other sources for help: