Think of this as coaching on how to meet this requirement. If you need for me to talk with you about this, just ask.
1 |
For your source of facts, you use only sources your professor (or boss)
accepts as reliable. |
Read
the right stuff—the right time and the right place and the
right person or type of persons--for the question:
·
If I did
not specify pages to read, use your index to locate the content. ·
If you
still cannot find the pages, ask for help. (Distance learning classes also
have ways to ask questions in the Discussion tool.)
·
Do not tell yourself the fib that
you are just checking the Internet to make something clearer to yourself. ·
Do not let bad data in a good mind. Read
to understand (to figure out, not just repeat
mindlessly) the evidence that the author is providing you:
·
If you
remember something being true, do not
use it until you carefully verify it in the required source. ·
If you
cannot find it to verify it, ask me for help in finding it or do not say it. FYI: I work to bring in multiple senses into this process. For me,
that helps. If it does not help you, then do not do it.
·
You
are not summarizing or
paraphrasing a section of words. ·
Instead,
you are figuring things out so you
can briefly answer a question in a common sense way. Just because some fact is in
that section of words does not
mean it belongs in your answer. |
Copyright C. J. Bibus, Ed.D. 2003-2014 |
WCJC Department: |
History – Dr.
Bibus |
Contact
Information: |
281.239.1577 or bibusc@wcjc.edu
|
Last Updated: |
2014 |
WCJC Home: |