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A Manual for Writers of Research Papers , Theses, and Dissertations , Ninth Edition : Chicago Style for Students and Researchers / Kate L. Turabian

عدد النسخ: 1 عدد النسخ المعارة : 0 عدد النسخ المتاحة للاعارة : 1
رقم التسجيلة 9389
نوع المادة book
الموقع الالكتروني https://www.joeteacher.org/uploads/7/6/3/0/7630382/turabian_manual_9th_ed.pdf
ردمك 9780226430577
رقم الطلب

LB 2369 .T87

المؤلف Turabian, Kate

العنوان A Manual for Writers of Research Papers , Theses, and Dissertations , Ninth Edition : Chicago Style for Students and Researchers / Kate L. Turabian
بيان الطبعة Ed. 9
بيانات النشر Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2018.
الوصف المادي 462 P
بيان السلسلة Chicago guides to writing, editing, and publishing
المحتويات / النص

  1. Part I   Research and Writing
  2. Overview of Part I
  3. 1  What Research Is and How Researchers Think about It
  4. 1.1  What Research Is
  5. 1.2  How Researchers Think about Their Aims
  6. 1.3  Conversing with Your Readers
  7. 2  Defining a Project: Topic, Question, Problem, Working Hypothesis
  8. 2.1  Find a Question in Your Topic
  9. 2.2  Understanding Research Problems
  10. 2.3  Propose a Working Hypothesis
  11. 2.4  Build a Storyboard to Plan and Guide Your Work
  12. 2.5  Join or Organize a Writing Group
  13. 3  Finding Useful Sources
  14. 3.1  Three Kinds of Sources and Their Uses
  15. 3.2  Search for Sources Systematically
  16. 3.3  Evaluate Sources for Relevance and Reliability
  17. 3.4  Look beyond the Usual Kinds of References
  18. 3.5  Record Your Sources Fully, Accurately, and Appropriately
  19. 4  Engaging Your Sources
  20. 4.1  Read Generously to Understand, Then Critically to Engage
  21. 4.2  Take Notes Systematically
  22. 4.3  Take Useful Notes
  23. 4.4  Review Your Progress
  24. 4.5  Manage Moments of Normal Anxiety
  25. 5  Constructing Your Argument
  26. 5.1  What a Research Argument Is and Is Not
  27. 5.2  Build Your Argument around Answers to Readers’ Questions
  28. 5.3  Turn Your Working Hypothesis into a Claim
  29. 5.4  Assemble the Elements of Your Argument
  30. 5.5  Prefer Arguments Based on Evidence to Arguments Based on Warrants
  31. 5.6  Assemble an Argument
  32. 6  Planning a First Draft
  33. 6.1  Avoid Unhelpful Plans
  34. 6.2  Create a Plan That Meets Your Readers’ Needs
  35. 6.3  File Away Leftovers
  36. 7  Drafting Your Paper
  37. 7.1  Draft in the Way That Feels Most Comfortable
  38. 7.2  Develop Effective Writing Habits
  39. 7.3  Keep Yourself on Track through Headings and Key Terms
  40. 7.4  Quote, Paraphrase, and Summarize Appropriately
  41. 7.5  Integrate Quotations into Your Text
  42. 7.6  Use Footnotes and Endnotes Judiciously
  43. 7.7  Show How Complex or Detailed Evidence Is Relevant
  44. 7.8  Be Open to Surprises
  45. 7.9  Guard against Inadvertent Plagiarism
  46. 7.10  Guard against Inappropriate Assistance
  47. 7.11  Work Through Chronic Procrastination and Writer’s Block
  48. 8  Presenting Evidence in Tables and Figures
  49. 8.1  Choose Verbal or Visual Representations of Your Data
  50. 8.2  Choose the Most Effective Graphic
  51. 8.3  Design Tables and Figures
  52. 8.4  Communicate Data Ethically
  53. 9  Revising Your Draft
  54. 9.1  Check for Blind Spots in Your Argument
  55. 9.2  Check Your Introduction, Conclusion, and Claim
  56. 9.3  Make Sure the Body of Your Report Is Coherent
  57. 9.4  Check Your Paragraphs
  58. 9.5  Let Your Draft Cool, Then Paraphrase It
  59. 10  Writing Your Final Introduction and Conclusion
  60. 10.1  Draft Your Final Introduction
  61. 10.2  Draft Your Final Conclusion
  62. 10.3  Write Your Title Last
  63. 11  Revising Sentences
  64. 11.1  Focus on the First Seven or Eight Words of a Sentence
  65. 11.2  Diagnose What You Read
  66. 11.3  Choose the Right Word
  67. 11.4  Polish It Up
  68. 11.5  Give It Up and Turn It In
  69. 12  Learning from Comments on Your Paper
  70. 12.1  Two Kinds of Feedback: Advice and Data
  71. 12.2  Find General Principles in Specific Comments
  72. 12.3  Talk with Your Reader
  73. 13  Presenting Research in Alternative Forums
  74. 13.1  Plan Your Oral Presentation
  75. 13.2  Design Your Presentation to Be Listened To
  76. 13.3  Plan Your Poster Presentation
  77. 13.4  Plan Your Conference Proposal
  78. 14  On the Spirit of Research
  79. Part II   Source Citation
  80. 15  General Introduction to Citation Practices
  81. 15.1  Reasons for Citing Your Sources
  82. 15.2  The Requirements of Citation
  83. 15.3  Two Citation Styles
  84. 15.4  Electronic Sources
  85. 15.5  Preparation of Citations
  86. 15.6  Citation Management Tools
  87. 16  Notes-Bibliography Style: The Basic Form
  88. 16.1  Basic Patterns
  89. 16.2  Bibliographies
  90. 16.3  Notes
  91. 16.4  Short Forms for Notes
  92. 17  Notes-Bibliography Style: Citing Specific Types of Sources
  93. 17.1  Books
  94. 17.2  Journal Articles
  95. 17.3  Magazine Articles
  96. 17.4  Newspaper Articles
  97. 17.5  Websites, Blogs, and Social Media
  98. 17.6  Interviews and Personal Communications
  99. 17.7  Papers, Lectures, and Manuscript Collections
  100. 17.8  Older Works and Sacred Works
  101. 17.9  Reference Works and Secondary Citations
  102. 17.10  Sources in the Visual and Performing Arts
  103. 17.11  Public Documents
  104. 18  Author-Date Style: The Basic Form
  105. 18.1  Basic Patterns
  106. 18.2  Reference Lists
  107. 18.3  Parenthetical Citations
  108. 19  Author-Date Style: Citing Specific Types of Sources
  109. 19.1  Books
  110. 19.2  Journal Articles
  111. 19.3  Magazine Articles
  112. 19.4  Newspaper Articles
  113. 19.5  Websites, Blogs, and Social Media
  114. 19.6  Interviews and Personal Communications
  115. 19.7  Papers, Lectures, and Manuscript Collections
  116. 19.8  Older Works and Sacred Works
  117. 19.9  Reference Works and Secondary Citations
  118. 19.10  Sources in the Visual and Performing Arts
  119. 19.11  Public Documents
  120. Part III   Style
  121. 20  Spelling
  122. 20.1  Plurals
  123. 20.2  Possessives
  124. 20.3  Compounds and Words Formed with Prefixes
  125. 20.4  Line Breaks
  126. 21  Punctuation
  127. 21.1  Periods
  128. 21.2  Commas
  129. 21.3  Semicolons
  130. 21.4  Colons
  131. 21.5  Question Marks
  132. 21.6  Exclamation Points
  133. 21.7  Hyphens and Dashes
  134. 21.8  Parentheses and Brackets
  135. 21.9  Slashes
  136. 21.10  Quotation Marks
  137. 21.11  Apostrophes
  138. 21.12  Multiple Punctuation Marks
  139. 22  Names, Special Terms, and Titles of Works
  140. 22.1  Names
  141. 22.2  Special Terms
  142. 22.3  Titles of Works
  143. 23  Numbers
  144. 23.1  Words or Numerals?
  145. 23.2  Plurals and Punctuation
  146. 23.3  Date Systems
  147. 23.4  Numbers Used outside the Text
  148. 24  Abbreviations
  149. 24.1  General Principles
  150. 24.2  Names and Titles
  151. 24.3  Geographical Terms
  152. 24.4  Time and Dates
  153. 24.5  Units of Measure
  154. 24.6  The Bible and Other Sacred Works
  155. 24.7  Abbreviations in Citations and Other Scholarly Contexts
  156. 25  Quotations
  157. 25.1  Quoting Accurately and Avoiding Plagiarism
  158. 25.2  Incorporating Quotations into Your Text
  159. 25.3  Modifying Quotations
  160. 26  Tables and Figures
  161. 26.1  General Issues
  162. 26.2  Tables
  163. 26.3  Figures
  164. Appendix:  Paper Format and Submission
  165. A.1  General Format Requirements
  166. A.2  Format Requirements for Specific Elements
  167. A.3  File Preparation and Submission Requirements

المستخلص

"This new edition of the classic reference work on writing research papers recognizes recent developments in information literacy--including finding, evaluating, and citing a wide range of digital sources--and the evolving use of software for citation management, graphics, and paper format and submission while continuing to reflect best practices for research and writing, as adapted from the most recent editions of The Craft of Research and The Chicago Manual of Style."

المواضيع Dissertations, Academic - Handbooks, manuals, etc
Academic writing - Handbooks, manuals, etc