You should have turned in 10 bibliography cards by now. Although you will only need 7-8 sources for your research paper, it's good to have some wiggle room.
You will now begin take notes from each of your sources. Write one idea per card. Use as many note cards as necessary. You may take a lot of notes from some sources and a few notes from another. (You may need to buy note cards.)
Due Friday: 20 note cards
Monday, November 2, 2009
Friday, October 23, 2009
Are You an Intellectual?
Other small learning communities encourage their students to choose research topics that pertain to their SLC. As School for Advanced Studies students, you are free to choose nearly anything, but it should be intellectual.
According to Dictionary.com, the word intellectual as an adjective means:
1. appealing to or engaging the intellect: intellectual pursuits.
2. of or pertaining to the intellect or its use: intellectual powers.
3. possessing or showing intellect or mental capacity, esp. to a high degree: an intellectual person.
4. guided or developed by or relying on the intellect rather than upon emotions or feelings; rational.
5. characterized by or suggesting a predominance of intellect: an intellectual way of speaking.
–noun
6. a person of superior intellect.
7. a person who places a high value on or pursues things of interest to the intellect or the more complex forms and fields of knowledge, as aesthetic or philosophical matters, esp. on an abstract and general level.
8. an extremely rational person; a person who relies on intellect rather than on emotions or feelings.
9. a person professionally engaged in mental labor, as a writer or teacher.
Those of you whose topics are less intellectual by nature will need to find a way to treat your topic in an intellectual manner.
According to Dictionary.com, the word intellectual as an adjective means:
1. appealing to or engaging the intellect: intellectual pursuits.
2. of or pertaining to the intellect or its use: intellectual powers.
3. possessing or showing intellect or mental capacity, esp. to a high degree: an intellectual person.
4. guided or developed by or relying on the intellect rather than upon emotions or feelings; rational.
5. characterized by or suggesting a predominance of intellect: an intellectual way of speaking.
–noun
6. a person of superior intellect.
7. a person who places a high value on or pursues things of interest to the intellect or the more complex forms and fields of knowledge, as aesthetic or philosophical matters, esp. on an abstract and general level.
8. an extremely rational person; a person who relies on intellect rather than on emotions or feelings.
9. a person professionally engaged in mental labor, as a writer or teacher.
Those of you whose topics are less intellectual by nature will need to find a way to treat your topic in an intellectual manner.
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