research about

1. What community do you belong to?

(study abroad)

2. What is your research question?

(provide more jobs for those how graduate)

3. Write a well-developed paragraph that

· explains how your question is problematic and significant

· shows why you are interested in the question

· presents the background on1 the issue

Create the Works Cited Entry for this source

Introduce your first source by explaining specifically how you found it (googling, database search,

bibliography of something else, recommendation, etc.).

Then write a one-paragraph summary that includes the A+B+C (topic and thesis) information and

the main ideas.

And address how the source will help you answer your question. Be specific. Include paraphrases

and quotations of important ideas. Explain what isn’t in the source that you still need to know and

where you plan to go from here.

Create the Works Cited Entry for this source

Introduce your first source by explaining specifically how you found it (googling, database search,

bibliography of something else, recommendation, etc.).

Then write a one-paragraph summary that includes the A+B+C A=athur,and titel. B=verb c=completw the thout (topic and thesis) information and

the main ideas.

Briefly describe the rhetorical situation of your first source (answer these questions):

· Can you trust this source to provide good information? How do you know?

· Who is the audience for this source? Is it popular or scholarly?

· What is the purpose of the source?

And address how the source will help you answer your question. Be specific. Include paraphrases

and quotations of important ideas. Explain what isn’t in the source that you still need to know and

where you plan to go from here.

Create the Works Cited Entry for this source

Introduce your first source by explaining specifically how you found it (googling, database search,

bibliography of something else, recommendation, etc.).

Then write a one-paragraph summary that includes the A+B+C (topic and thesis) information and

the main ideas.

Briefly describe the rhetorical situation of your first source (answer these questions):

· Can you trust this source to provide good information? How do you know?

· Who is the audience for this source? Is it popular or scholarly?

· What is the purpose of the source?

And address how the source will help you answer your question. Be specific. Include paraphrases

and quotations of important ideas. Explain what isn’t in the source that you still need to know and

where you plan to go from here.

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