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Introduction to Research Workshop

Introduction to Research Workshop . Breakthrough New York February 4, 2013. Do Now . Sit at your nametag, fold it to stand up (like a tent). Put everything away except a writing utensil. Stick a label on your folder and write your name & group A or B.

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Introduction to Research Workshop

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  1. Introduction to Research Workshop Breakthrough New York February 4, 2013

  2. Do Now • Sit at your nametag, fold it to stand up (like a tent). • Put everything away except a writing utensil. • Stick a label on your folder and write your name & group A or B. • Review the Syllabus at your desk silently. Sally Group A

  3. Welcome to Research Workshop! • Hannah (& Natalie) • You’ll learn Research Skills in this Workshop! • How to research a chosen topic • How to organize your thoughts • How to write a full-length research paper • High School skills! • Monday: Lesson, Wednesday: Work Day • Some homework

  4. When the work’s all done…. We’re going CAMPING in May!! (Details to follow)

  5. This was Hannah when we didn’t have BT. Meet Greet and FREEZE.

  6. FREEZE! Find a partner and answer: What is your favorite Breakthrough memory?

  7. FREEZE! Find a partner and answer: What was the best part of the Superbowlthis year?

  8. FREEZE! Find a partner and answer: What would you call yourself if you could choose your own name?

  9. FREEZE! Find a partner and answer: If you could have ANY animal (real or fantasy) for a pet, what would you choose and why?

  10. Thanks for playing! Take your seat! 

  11. Workshop Norms • Be Prepared • Be Professional • Be Positive

  12. Procedures • Entering / Exiting • When entering the classroom, (1) go directly to your seat, (2) take out any homework for the day and (3) begin the Do Now • When exiting, turn in Exit Slips to the tray on your way out • Folder Ownership • This is YOUR folder, and YOU are responsible. • High School Preparation • If unprepared, be independent and figure out how to make the best use of the day– take extra notes, ask to look on with a partner, etc. • If unprepared 1 time, will have a call home • If unprepared 2 times, will have a call home, conference with Natalie, and a contract • If unprepared 3 times, will no longer be eligible for the trip • Turning In Materials • research@btny.org (research@breakthroughnewyork.org) • Assignments will be tracked on chart, keep up! • If you missed something, check the BLOG! More on that later…

  13. Pair Read – Syllabus • Read with a partner, taking turns with each section • Read loud enough to be heard, but not so loud to disturb other pairs • Pause at the end of reading and come up with a question about what you read. • As a pair, write 1 question on the white board. • Sit quietly to show you are done!

  14. Plagiarism, and how NOT to do it • Word Origin: • The word “plagiarism” comes from the Greek word “plagiarius” which means to kidnap.

  15. Plagiarism, and how NOT to do it • Concept: • To plagiarize means to take the words, work, or ideas of someone else and claim them as your own. • This act combines lying, cheating, and stealing and is a very serious offense.

  16. Plagiarism, and how NOT to do it • Consequences: • Middle School— Zero on an assignment, parent meeting • High School—Zero on assignment, possible suspension • College— Fail the class, possible expulsion • Job— Fired immediately

  17. Plagiarism, and how NOT to do it • Examples: • You copy something from the internet or a book and paste it into your own paper • Taking someone else’s idea and using it as your own without giving them credit • Letting someone else write your own work

  18. Plagiarism, and how NOT to do it • Non-Examples: • You use the internet or a book for information and properly explain where you found what you used • You explain someone else’s idea and give them credit • You ask a peer to help you revise your work and they give you suggestions about wording

  19. Plagiarism, and how NOT to do it • How to Avoid: • Find reliable (trustworthy) sources • Take detailed notes (quote, paraphrase, summarize) • Use citations in paper (explain where any information came from that is not your own) • Include a Bibliography or Works Cited page

  20. Scenarios • With your partner, follow these steps: • Read the scenario and discuss (2 minutes) • Write your own thoughtful response (1 minute) • Share out with the group (1 minute)

  21. Closure • Homework for Wednesday: • Take out your planner and write this down! (* Tell Hannah if you don’t have one) • Finish Student Survey • Get syllabus signed and bring back • Complete Writing Diagnostic • Exit Slip

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