A manual for writers of research papers, theses, and dissertations : Chicago style for students and researchers /
| Main Author: | |
|---|---|
| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Chicago :
University of Chicago Press,
2007.
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| Edition: | 7th ed. |
| Series: | Chicago guides to writing, editing, and publishing.
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Table of contents only Contributor biographical information Publisher description |
Table of Contents:
- A note to students
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- pt. 1. Research and writing : from planning to production / Wayne C. Booth, Gregory G. Colomb, and Joseph M. Williams
- Overview of part 1
- 1. What research is and how researchers think about it
- 1.1. How researchers think about their aims
- 1.2. Three kinds of questions that researchers ask
- 2. Moving from a topic to a question to a working hypothesis
- 2.1. Find a question in your topic
- 2.2. Propose some working answers
- 2.3. Build a storyboard to plan and guide your work
- 2.4. Organize a writing support group
- 3. Finding useful sources
- 3.1. Understand the kinds of sources readers expect you to use
- 3.2. Record your sources fully, accurately, and appropriately
- 3.3. Search for sources systematically
- 3.4. Evaluate sources for relevance and reliability
- 3.5. Look beyond the usual kinds of references
- 4. Engaging sources
- 4.1. Read generously to understand, then critically to engage and evaluate
- 4.2. Take notes systematically
- 4.3. Take useful notes
- 4.4. Write as you read
- 4.5. Review your progress
- 4.6. Manage moments of normal panic
- 5. Planning your argument
- 5.1. What a research argument is and is not
- 5.2. Build your argument around answers to readers' questions
- 5.3. Turn your working hypothesis into a claim
- 5.4. Assemble the elements of your argument
- 5.5. Distinguish arguments based on evidence from arguments based on warrants
- 5.6. Assemble an argument
- 6. Planning a first draft
- 6.1. Avoid unhelpful plans
- 6.2. Create a plan that meets your readers' needs
- 6.3. File away leftovers
- 7. Drafting your report
- 7.1. Draft in the way that feels most comfortable
- 7.2. Develop productive drafting habits
- 7.3. Use your key terms to keep yourself on track
- 7.4. Quote, paraphrase, and summarize appropriately
- 7.5. Integrate quotations into your text
- 7.6. Use footnotes and endnotes judiciously
- 7.7. Interpret complex or detailed evidence before you offer it
- 7.8. Be open to surprises
- 7.9. Guard against inadvertent plagiarism
- 7.10. Guard against inappropriate assistance
- 7.11. Work through chronic procrastination and writer's block
- 8. Presenting evidence in tables and figures
- 8.1. Choose verbal or visual representations
- 8.2. Choose the most effective graphic
- 8.3. Design tables and figures
- 8.4. Communicate data ethically
- 9. Revising your draft
- 9.1. Check your introduction, conclusion, and claim
- 9.2. Make sure the body of your report is coherent
- 9.3. Check your paragraphs
- 9.4. Let your draft cool, then paraphrase it
- 10. Writing your final introduction and conclusion
- 10.1. Draft your final introduction
- 10.2. Draft your final conclusion
- 10.3. Write your title last
- 11. Revising sentences
- 11.1. Focus on the first seven or eight words of a sentence
- 11.2. Diagnose what you read
- 11.3. Choose the right word
- 11.4. Polish it off
- 11.5. Give it up and print it out
- 12. Learning from your returned paper
- 12.1. Find general principles in specific comments
- 12.2. Talk to your instructor
- 13. Presenting research in alternative forums
- 13.1. Plan your oral presentation
- 13.2. Design your presentation to be listened to
- 13.3. Plan your poster presentation
- 13.4. Plan your conference proposal
- 14. On the spirit of research
- pt. 2. Source citation
- 15. General introduction to citation practices
- 15.1. Reasons for citing your sources
- 15.2. The requirements of citation
- 15.3. Two citation styles
- 15.4. Citation of electronic sources
- 15.5. Preparation of citations
- 15.6. A word on citation software
- 16. Notes-bibliography style : the basic form
- 16.1. Basic patterns
- 16.2. Bibliographies
- 16.3. Notes
- 16.4. Short forms for notes
- 17. Notes-bibliography style : citing specific types of sources
- 17.1. Books
- 17.2. Journal articles
- 17.3. Magazine articles
- 17.4. Newspaper articles
- 17.5. Additional types of published sources
- 17.6. Unpublished sources
- 17.7. Informally published electronic sources
- 17.8. Sources in the visual and performing arts
- 17.9. Public documents
- 17.10. One source quoted in another
- 18. Parenthetical citations-reference list style : the basic form
- 18.1. Basic patterns
- 18.2. Reference lists
- 18.3. Parenthetical citations
- 19. Parenthetical citations-reference list style : citing specific types of sources
- 19.1. Books
- 19.2. Journal articles
- 19.3. Magazine articles
- 19.4. Newspaper articles
- 19.5. Additional types of published sources
- 19.6. Unpublished sources
- 19.7. Informally published electronic sources
- 19.8. Sources in the visual and performing arts
- 19.9. Public documents
- 19.10. One source quoted in another
- pt. 3. Style
- 20. Spelling
- 20.1. Plurals
- 20.2. Possessives
- 20.3. Compounds and words formed with prefixes
- 20.4. Line breaks
- 21. Punctuation
- 21.1. Period
- 21.2. Comma
- 21.3. Semicolon
- 21.4. Colon
- 21.5. Question mark
- 21.6. Exclamation point
- 21.7. Hyphen and dashes
- 21.8. Parentheses and brackets
- 21.9. Slashes
- 21.10. Quotation marks
- 21.11. Multiple punctuation marks
- 22. Names, special terms, and titles of works
- 22.1. Names
- 22.2. Special terms
- 22.3. Titles of works
- 23. Numbers
- 23.1. Words or numerals?
- 23.2. Plurals and punctuation
- 23.3. Date systems
- 23.4. Numbers used outside the text
- 24. Abbreviations
- 24.1. General principles
- 24.2. Names and titles
- 24.3. Geographical terms
- 24.4. Time and dates
- 24.5. Units of measure
- 24.6. The Bible and other sacred works
- 24.7. Abbreviations in citations and other scholarly contexts
- 25. Quotations
- 25.1. Quoting accurately and avoiding plagiarism
- 25.2. Incorporating quotations into your text
- 25.3. Modifying quotations
- 26. Tables and figures
- 26.1. General issues
- 26.2. Tables
- 26.3. Figures
- Appendix : Paper format and submission
- A.1. General format requirements
- A.2. Format requirements for specific elements
- A.3. Submission requirements
- Bibliography
- Authors
- Index.