28.11.2014 Views

Writing Manual & Sea King Capstone - Palos Verdes High School

Writing Manual & Sea King Capstone - Palos Verdes High School

Writing Manual & Sea King Capstone - Palos Verdes High School

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

PALOS VERDES HIGH SCHOOL<br />

600 Cloyden Road • <strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> Estates, CA 90274<br />

310-378-8471 • www.pvhigh.com<br />

<strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong><br />

&<br />

<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong><br />

Revised: August 26, 2012<br />

1


Table of Contents<br />

WRITING MANUAL<br />

Overview: <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong> 1<br />

<strong>Writing</strong> Format 2<br />

<strong>Writing</strong> Terminology 3<br />

One-Paragraph Essay 4<br />

Shaping Chart 5<br />

Multi-Paragraph Essay 6<br />

Introduction and Conclusion Paragraph Chart 7<br />

Shaping Chart 3 Chunks 8-10<br />

<strong>Writing</strong> Terminology 11<br />

Prewriting 12<br />

Hook/Lead-in 13<br />

Transition 13<br />

Thesis Statement 14<br />

Concrete Detail 15<br />

Commentary 16-17<br />

Conclusion 17<br />

Citation Styles 18<br />

MLA and APA 19<br />

Modern Language Association (MLA) Manuscript Format 20-21<br />

MLA Documentation 22-23<br />

MLA In-Text Citation 24<br />

Sample Paper: MLA 25-27<br />

American Psychological Association (APA) Manuscript Format 28-29<br />

APA Documentation 30-31<br />

APA In-Text Citation 32<br />

Resources 33<br />

Anti-Plagiarism 34<br />

Local Libraries 35-36


Table of Contents<br />

SEA KING CAPSTONE<br />

Overview: <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> 37<br />

<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Process 38<br />

<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Timeline 39<br />

English Grade Requirements 40<br />

Research 41<br />

Research Requirements 42<br />

Sample: Research Topics and Fieldwork 43<br />

Annotated Bibliography 44<br />

Sample: Annotated Bibliography 45-46<br />

Abstract 47<br />

Introduction 47<br />

Literature Review 48<br />

Method 48<br />

Results and Discussion 49<br />

Conclusion 49<br />

References/Works Cited 49<br />

Appendices 49<br />

Sample: <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> 50-58<br />

Portfolio 59<br />

Portfolio Requirements 60<br />

Portfolio Cover Page 61<br />

Letter to the Judges 62<br />

Sample: Letter to the Judges 63<br />

Resume Guide 64<br />

Sample: Resume 65<br />

Portfolio Reflections 66<br />

Presentation 67<br />

Presentation Format: Tier 1 68<br />

Presentation Format: Tier 2 and Tier 3 68<br />

Presentation Outline: Tier 2 and Tier 3 69-70<br />

Technology Tips and Guidelines 71<br />

Dress Requirements 72<br />

Forms 73<br />

<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Strand Proposal 74<br />

Parent or Guardian Liability Release Form 75<br />

Faculty Mentor Form 76<br />

Fieldwork Time Sheet 77<br />

Rubrics 78<br />

Resume Rubric 79<br />

Annotated Bibliography Rubric 80<br />

Research Paper Rubric 81-82<br />

Portfolio Rubric 83<br />

Presentation Rubric: Tier 1 84<br />

Presentation Rubric: Tier 2 and Tier 3 85


<strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> <strong>High</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

<strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong><br />

Overview: <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong><br />

The PVHS English Department developed the <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong> to standardize the essential<br />

guidelines for writing essays and research papers. Jane Schaffer, an English teacher, from San<br />

Diego, California, developed the writing terminology. The <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong> provides all PVHS<br />

teachers and students to have a common language when discussing essays and research papers.<br />

Information in the <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong> includes format, policies, and procedures, which the English<br />

Department follows to ensure consistency among all students.<br />

1


<strong>Writing</strong> Format<br />

2


Introductory Paragraph<br />

Hook/Lead-in<br />

Transition<br />

Thesis<br />

Body Paragraph<br />

Topic Sentence (TS)<br />

Body Point (BP)<br />

Concrete Detail (CD)<br />

Commentary (CM)<br />

<strong>Writing</strong> Terminology<br />

The first paragraph in a multi-paragraph essay. It includes the<br />

thesis, most often at the very end of the paragraph.<br />

Interesting, catchy opener that gains the reader’s attention.<br />

Sentences that relate a general idea to the work being<br />

analyzed. Connects one idea to another.<br />

The central argument of the essay. Limited to one sentence. A<br />

sentence with a topic and an assertion (commentary).<br />

• One-paragraph essay: First sentence of paragraph<br />

• Multi-paragraph essay: Last sentence of introductory<br />

paragraph.<br />

Middle paragraph that supports the thesis.<br />

TS → 3 Chunks → CS<br />

The first sentence in a body paragraph within a multiparagraph<br />

essay. It has a topic and an opinion (commentary),<br />

which directly supports the thesis. The TS is the focus of the<br />

body paragraph.<br />

A commentary sentence that directly supports/proves the<br />

thesis and TS. It is the topic of the paragraph “chunk.”<br />

Specific details or facts that prove the assertions forming the<br />

backbone or core of the body paragraphs. Use CDs to prove or<br />

support ideas.<br />

Synonyms: facts, specifics, examples, descriptions, support,<br />

proof, evidence, quotations, paraphrasing, summary, plot<br />

references.<br />

Opinions about the topic. Explains the connection between the<br />

thesis, TS, and CDs.<br />

Synonyms: insight, analysis, interpretation, inference,<br />

evaluations, explication, reflection.<br />

Concluding Sentence (CS) • One-paragraph essay: Last sentence of the paragraph.<br />

Restates the thesis.<br />

• Multi-paragraph essay: Last sentence of a body paragraph.<br />

Gives a finished feeling to the paragraph and may provide<br />

transition to the next paragraph.<br />

Concluding Paragraph<br />

Contains generalization.<br />

• One-paragraph essay: Last sentence of the essay. Restates<br />

the thesis (without repeating key words).<br />

• Multi-paragraph essay: Last paragraph of the essay. May<br />

sum up ideas, reflect on the essay, offer more commentary<br />

about the topic, or give a personal statement about the<br />

topic.<br />

• Refers back to the introduction.<br />

3


One-Paragraph Essay<br />

Sentence # Name Purpose/Content<br />

1 Thesis/Topic<br />

• Contains topic (literary work) and opinions on the<br />

topic.<br />

• State author and title of the topic.<br />

• Focus of entire paragraph.<br />

• Proves the topic.<br />

Chunk #1<br />

2 Body Point #1 The most important point directly to prove the thesis.<br />

3 Concrete Detail Quotation or example to prove BP #1 and thus the thesis.<br />

4-5 Commentary<br />

Two or more sentences that analyze how the quote or<br />

example proves BP #1 and thus the thesis.<br />

Chunk #2<br />

6 Body Point #2<br />

The second point to prove the thesis. Begin the sentence<br />

with a transition.<br />

7 Concrete Detail Quotation or example to prove BP #2 and thus the thesis.<br />

8-9 Commentary<br />

Two or more sentences that analyze how the quote or<br />

example proves BP #2 and thus the thesis.<br />

Chunk #3<br />

10 Body Point #3<br />

The third point to prove the thesis. Begin the sentence<br />

with a transition.<br />

11 Concrete Detail Quotation or example to prove BP #3 and thus the thesis.<br />

12-13 Commentary<br />

Two or more sentences that analyze how the quote or<br />

example proves PB #3 and thus the thesis.<br />

Final<br />

14 Conclusion Restates the thesis and summarizes the body paragraph.<br />

4


One-Paragraph Essay<br />

Shaping Chart<br />

Title of Essay: _________________________________________________________________<br />

Sentence # Name Purpose/Content<br />

1 Thesis/Topic<br />

2 Body Point #1<br />

Chunk #1<br />

3 Concrete Detail<br />

4 Commentary #1<br />

5 Commentary #2<br />

6 Body Point #2<br />

Chunk #2<br />

7 Concrete Detail<br />

8 Commentary #1<br />

9 Commentary #2<br />

10 Body Point #3<br />

Chunk #3<br />

11 Concrete Detail<br />

12 Commentary #1<br />

13 Commentary #2<br />

14 Conclusion<br />

5


Multi-Paragraph Essay<br />

Paragraph # Sentence # Name Purpose/Content<br />

1<br />

Introduction<br />

2-4<br />

Body<br />

5<br />

Conclusion<br />

1-3 Hook/Lead-in<br />

4-6 Transition<br />

7 Thesis<br />

1 Topic Sentence<br />

Chunk #1<br />

2 Body Point #1<br />

3 Concrete Detail<br />

4-5 Commentary<br />

Chunk #2<br />

6 Body Point #2<br />

7 Concrete Detail<br />

8-9 Commentary<br />

Chunk #3<br />

10 Body Point #3<br />

11 Concrete Detail<br />

12-13 Commentary<br />

14<br />

Final<br />

Concluding<br />

Sentence<br />

1-2 Thesis<br />

3-5 Transition<br />

6-7<br />

Lead-out<br />

Reflection<br />

Designed to peak the interest of the reader and introduce<br />

the topic in a general, philosophical manner. Ideas<br />

presented here need to coincide with the major ideas of<br />

the thesis.<br />

Bring up author and title to connect the ideas presented<br />

in the hook to the ideas in the novel. Also helpful to set<br />

up the literary work to be analyzed (brief summary).<br />

Contains the topic (literary work) and an idea about the<br />

topic. The central focus of the entire paper must now<br />

have proof.<br />

Directly supports/proves the thesis. Perhaps contains<br />

some concrete detail, but mostly commentary. Entire<br />

body paragraph now used to support this statement.<br />

Commentary that directly supports/proves the topic<br />

sentence in this paragraph. May start with “for<br />

example.”<br />

Quotation, example, or paraphrase to prove the idea in<br />

BP #1.<br />

Two or more sentences that analyze the above CD.<br />

Explain how the CD supports the TS.<br />

This is the second point to prove the TS. This sentence<br />

may begin with “additionally,” or “furthermore.”<br />

Quotation, example, or paraphrase to prove the idea in<br />

BP #2.<br />

Two or more sentences that analyze the above CD.<br />

Explain how the CD supports the TS.<br />

The final point to prove the TS. This sentence may<br />

begin with “finally.” Introduces quote.<br />

Quotation, example, or paraphrase to prove the idea in<br />

BP #3.<br />

Two or more sentences that analyze the above CD.<br />

Explain how the CD supports the TS.<br />

The last sentence of the body paragraph. It gives a<br />

finished feeling to the paragraph and may provide<br />

transition to the next paragraph.<br />

Restate the thesis and major ideas of paper using<br />

different wording from the introduction and body of the<br />

essay.<br />

More summary on topic. Ideas should get more general<br />

and less specific, ultimately leading to final<br />

generalization.<br />

Should follow naturally, logically, philosophically from<br />

thesis, body of paper, and literary work. Needs to leadout<br />

and discuss the significance of the topic within the<br />

paper.<br />

6


Multi-Paragraph Essay<br />

Introduction and Conclusion Paragraph Chart<br />

Topic: ________________________________________________________________________<br />

Introduction<br />

1. Hook/Lead-in: ______________________________________________________________<br />

__________________________________________________________________________<br />

_______________________________________________________________________<br />

____________________________________________________________________<br />

2. Transition (include title/author): _____________________________________<br />

______________________________________________________________<br />

___________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________<br />

_____________________________________________________<br />

3. Thesis: __________________________________________<br />

_______________________________________________<br />

____________________________________________<br />

_________________________________________<br />

______________________________________<br />

___________________________________<br />

________________________________<br />

Conclusion<br />

1. Thesis (restate): ________________<br />

__________________________________<br />

_____________________________________<br />

________________________________________<br />

___________________________________________<br />

______________________________________________<br />

_________________________________________________<br />

2. Transition: _________________________________________<br />

_______________________________________________________<br />

__________________________________________________________<br />

_____________________________________________________________<br />

________________________________________________________________<br />

3. Lead-out/Reflection: __________________________________________________<br />

_______________________________________________________________________<br />

__________________________________________________________________________<br />

______________________________________________________________________________<br />

7


Multi-Paragraph Essay<br />

Shaping Chart 3 Chunks<br />

Title of Essay: _________________________________________________________________<br />

Paragraph #1: Introduction<br />

#1-3 Hook<br />

Lead-in<br />

#4-6 Transition<br />

#7 Thesis<br />

8


Paragraph #2-4: Body Paragraph<br />

#1 TS<br />

#2 BP #1<br />

#3 CD<br />

#4 CM<br />

#5 CM<br />

#6 BP #2<br />

#7 CD<br />

#8 CM<br />

#9 CM<br />

#10 BP #3<br />

#11 CD<br />

#12 CM<br />

#13 CM<br />

#14 CS<br />

9


Paragraph #5: Conclusion<br />

#1-2 Thesis<br />

#3-5 Transition<br />

#6-7 Lead-out<br />

Reflection<br />

10


<strong>Writing</strong> Terminology<br />

11


Prewriting<br />

Prewriting helps to organize an essay.<br />

Four ways to prewrite:<br />

1. Bubble Cluster<br />

2. Spider Diagram<br />

3. Outline<br />

4. Columns<br />

1. Bubble Cluster 2. Spider Diagram<br />

#3<br />

see my brothers and sisters<br />

more often during the day<br />

#3<br />

barbecues in the<br />

backyard<br />

#2<br />

family<br />

#3<br />

go on vacations to<br />

Disneyland and the beach<br />

#3<br />

see my brothers and sisters<br />

more often during the day<br />

#3<br />

barbecues in the<br />

backyard<br />

#2<br />

family<br />

#3<br />

go on vacations to<br />

Disneyland and the beach<br />

#1<br />

SUMMERTIME<br />

#1<br />

SUMMERTIME<br />

#2<br />

daily routine<br />

#3<br />

stay up late<br />

and sleep in<br />

#2<br />

daily routine<br />

#3<br />

stay up late and<br />

sleep in<br />

#3<br />

more time to do<br />

pleasure reading<br />

#3<br />

catch up on<br />

movies I missed<br />

#3<br />

more time to do<br />

pleasure reading<br />

#3<br />

catch up on<br />

movies I missed<br />

3. Outline<br />

4. Columns<br />

1. Picking one out (#2)<br />

GETTING A COMPUTER (#1)<br />

#1 MY TWO BEST FRIENDS<br />

#2 CHERYL JOE<br />

A. Shopping around at different stores to compare (#3)<br />

• known me since we<br />

• lives down the street<br />

B. Talked to salespeople about what I needed (#3)<br />

were in kindergarten<br />

from me<br />

2. Setting it up (#2)<br />

#3<br />

• we have four classes<br />

• we will be taking<br />

A. Tried to read the manual but gave up (#3)<br />

together each day<br />

driver’s training<br />

B. Friend came to get it started and teach me (#3)<br />

together next summer<br />

12


Hook/Lead-in<br />

A hook/lead-in attracts the attention of the reader. Suggestions include using any of the<br />

following ideas to promote interest in the topic:<br />

Anecdotes<br />

Dialogue<br />

Startling Information<br />

All Commentary<br />

Transition<br />

Transitions are necessary and without them, writing often feels choppy. The following transitions<br />

help to begin Body Point sentences:<br />

Consequently<br />

Even so<br />

For example<br />

Furthermore<br />

In addition<br />

In fact<br />

Moreover<br />

Of course<br />

On the other hand<br />

Still<br />

Therefore<br />

13


Thesis Statement<br />

A well-written thesis statement must contain a subject and an assertion (opinion). The thesis is<br />

the backbone of the essay. It includes the following: a specific topic, a bias for the topic, and an<br />

arguable reason for the stance on the topic. The thesis statement, a single sentence, appears at the<br />

end of the introductory paragraph and becomes the foundation of the essay.<br />

A strong thesis statement is not a fact; it takes a firm stand on a topic and makes a logical<br />

argument for that choice.<br />

Statement of Fact<br />

The media has infiltrated our everyday lives.<br />

General Thesis Statement<br />

Today’s media messages manipulate youth into making mindless choices based loosely<br />

on facts due to weak analytical skills.<br />

A strong thesis statement uses precise vocabulary to convey intent and clearly focuses on a<br />

specific bias for the chosen topic and the reason for that stance.<br />

Broad Statement<br />

Today’s media messages manipulate youth into making mindless purchases, which are<br />

based loosely on facts, due to weak analytical skills.<br />

Strong Thesis Statement<br />

The latest cellular communication innovations manipulate adolescents, through carefully<br />

designed advertisements, to make product choices based on promises of increased social<br />

status in order to increase sales of merchandise.<br />

14


Concrete Detail<br />

There are three ways to structure concrete detail in a literature-based essay. All the examples are<br />

from the book, Of Mice and Men. Ellen Gilmore, an English teacher at West Hills <strong>High</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

in Santee, California, created this explanation.<br />

Paraphrase<br />

Any type of paraphrase needs to be cited if there is any reference to the initial source.<br />

Example: After George kills Lennie, Slim tells him that he did the right thing.<br />

Quotations<br />

It is permissible to use quotations (words, phrases, or sentences from the story) as concrete<br />

detail. However, when using quotations, integrate (blend) the quotation into your writing and<br />

include a smooth lead-in to the quote. The following guidelines will help to incorporate<br />

quotations into essays effectively:<br />

Do not overuse quotations. Incorporate quoted phrases into the sentence structure and<br />

avoid having two quotations in a row.<br />

Ineffective: Lennie’s strength overpowered Curley. “The next minute Curley was flopping like a fish<br />

on a line, and his closed fist was lost in Lennie’s big hand.” “Curley was white and<br />

shrunken by now, and his struggling had become weak. He stood crying, his fist lost in<br />

Lennie’s paw.”<br />

Effective: Lennie’s strength so overpowered Curley that Curley looked “like a fish on a line” with<br />

his “fist lost in Lennie’s paw.”<br />

Work the quotation smoothly into the sentence structure.<br />

Ineffective: Steinbeck describes Lennie in animal-like terms by saying, “Lennie dabbled his paw in<br />

the water.”<br />

Effective: Like a big bear, “Lennie dabbled his paw in the water.”<br />

Alter a quote for clarity by placing the change in brackets.<br />

Original: George said, “That mouse ain’t fresh, Lennie; and besides, you’ve broken it pettin’ it.”<br />

Changed: Steinbeck foreshadows Lennie’s troubles early in the novel when Lennie has “broken [the<br />

mouse] pettin’ it.”<br />

If omitting any material, mark the omission with three periods (called an ellipsis) with a<br />

space between each (. . .). There is no need to use these at the beginning and end of the<br />

quotations. It is understood that passages are from a longer work.<br />

Original: “Curley was white and shrunken by now, and his struggling had become weak. He stood<br />

crying, his fist lost in Lennie’s paw.”<br />

Ellipsis: As Lennie continued to crush Curley’s fist, he turned “white and shrunken . . . his fist lost<br />

in Lennie’s paw.”<br />

Paraphrase and Quotations<br />

It is permissible to include both paraphrase and quotations in a concrete detail.<br />

Example: After George kills Lennie, Slim “[comes] directly to George” and says, ‘A guy got to<br />

sometimes” (107) as they leave the river’s edge.<br />

15


Commentary<br />

Commentary is the analysis, interpretation, evaluation, and reflection about a concrete detail in<br />

an essay.<br />

1. To show what commentary sounds like, read the following paragraph that describes an<br />

experience. This paragraph has a topic sentence, three sentences of concrete details, and a<br />

concluding sentence. It has commentary in sentences #1 and #5 (underlined) but not in<br />

sentences #2, #3, or #4.<br />

1 Driving in the fog to Sacramento was a frightening experience. 2 For example, no signs<br />

were visible from the freeway, so I could not see if there were any gas stations nearby to fill my<br />

near-empty tank. 3 In addition, it was 12:00 noon and the fog was so thick that I could not read the<br />

exit signs until I started passing them. 4 Furthermore, a police car suddenly appeared ahead and<br />

drove at forty miles per hour for the next thirty minutes and none of us were allowed to pass him.<br />

5 When I finally reached Sacramento that day, a great sense of relief permeated my body and<br />

mind.<br />

2. The paragraph below is a rewritten version of the one on the previous page. It has<br />

commentary sentences inserted after each sentence of concrete detail. The commentary is<br />

underlined.<br />

1 Driving in the fog to Sacramento was a frightening experience. 2 For example, no signs<br />

were visible from the freeway, so I could not see if there were any gas stations nearby to fill my<br />

near-empty tank. 3 I panicked at the thought of being stranded alone in a strange place. 4 I kept<br />

hoping to see a station materialize in the fog and felt incapable of making a decision. 5 In addition,<br />

it was 12:00 noon and the fog was so thick that I could not read the exit signs until I started<br />

passing them. 6 I realized I had driven on for hours, dreading the never-ending blurring lines on<br />

the horizon. 7 I was afraid that the weather would never lift and let me get back on schedule.<br />

8 Furthermore, a police car suddenly appeared ahead and drove at forty miles per hour for the next<br />

thirty minutes and none of us were allowed to pass him. 9 It was as though an invisible force field<br />

had been thrown up behind the patrol car. 10 No one felt brave enough to dare going around him<br />

and so we lingered behind for what seemed like hours. 11 When I finally reached Sacramento that<br />

day, a great sense of relief permeated my body and mind.<br />

3. The original sentences are still there, after each concrete detail. Notice that for every<br />

sentence of concrete detail, there are two sentences of commentary.<br />

CD:CM<br />

1:2 +<br />

16


4. Here is another example of a paragraph that has commentary in the first and last<br />

sentences but not in the middle. The commentary is underlined.<br />

1 Saturday morning cartoons are often criticized by public officials because of their<br />

violence and themes. 2 For example, critics describe coyotes jumping off cliffs, dogs and cats<br />

blackening each other’s eyes, and Martians planning to destroy Earth. 3 In addition, these same<br />

animals try to capture birds, carrots, or territory. 4 Furthermore, when the fights are over, these<br />

same animals get food, toys, or candy as a reward for their behavior. 5 Children’s programming<br />

needs to be changed to avoid the messages that do nothing but harm those who watch them every<br />

week.<br />

5. The paragraph below is a rewritten version of the one above. It has commentary<br />

sentences inserted after each sentence of concrete detail. The commentary is underlined.<br />

1 Saturday morning cartoons are often criticized by public officials because of their<br />

violence and themes. 2 For example, critics describe coyotes jumping off cliffs, dogs and cats<br />

blackening each other’s eyes, and Martians planning to destroy Earth. 3 This violence may be<br />

realistic, but there is no accompanying realistic blood, pain, or mutilation. 4 These scenes<br />

emphasize destruction and winning through physical harm to others. 5 In addition, these same<br />

animals try to capture birds, carrots, or territory. 6 The theme of these actions-greed and<br />

selfishness-is not appropriate for young children. 7 The wrong values are encouraged and children<br />

do not see any examples of peaceful resolution to problems. 8 Furthermore, when the fights are<br />

over, these same animals get food, toys, or candy as a reward for their behavior. 9 The idea that<br />

showing greed or inflicting pain is rewarded in any way, large or small, is a subtly distasteful<br />

message. 10 If children see this behavior being successful on television, they have no reason not to<br />

try it themselves. 11 Children’s programming needs to be changed to avoid the messages that do<br />

nothing but harm those who watch them every week.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The conclusion is the last paragraph in the essay. It is all commentary. It does not include<br />

concrete detail, and it does not repeat key words from the paper. It may sum up the writer’s<br />

ideas, reflect on the content of the essay, or give a personal statement about the topic. An<br />

additional explanation for a conclusion is to summarize, review, or restate the thesis in different<br />

words.<br />

17


Citation Styles<br />

18


MLA and APA<br />

Modern Language Association (MLA)<br />

The MLA style is the most common format to write papers and to cite sources within liberal arts<br />

and humanities. The PVHS <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong>, updated to reflect the MLA Handbook for Writers of<br />

Research Papers (7th ed.), offers examples for the general format of MLA research papers, intext<br />

citations, and the Works Cited page.<br />

*For more examples, consult the teacher, librarian, or the MLA handbook.<br />

MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 7th ed. New York:<br />

Modern Language Association of America, 2009. Print.<br />

American Psychological Association (APA)<br />

The APA style is the most common format to write papers and to cite sources within social<br />

sciences. The PVHS <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong>, updated to reflect the Publication <strong>Manual</strong> of the American<br />

Psychological Association (6th ed. second printing), offers examples for the general format of<br />

APA research papers, in-text citations, and the Reference page.<br />

*For more examples, consult the teacher, librarian, or the APA publication manual.<br />

Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (6th ed.).<br />

(2010). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.<br />

19


Modern Language Association (MLA)<br />

Manuscript Format<br />

The following guidelines are consistent with advice given in the MLA Handbook for Writers of<br />

Research Papers, 7th ed.<br />

FORMAT OF THE PAPER<br />

Materials<br />

Use only white 8½ x 11 inch paper.<br />

Margins<br />

Leave one-inch margins at the top, bottom, right, and left sides of the page.<br />

Text Formatting<br />

The paper must be typed in black ink using Times New Roman font size 12. Type double-spaced<br />

and use only one side of the page.<br />

Heading and Title<br />

MLA does not require a title page. On the first page of the paper and flush with the left margin,<br />

type your first and last name, teacher’s name, subject and period, and the due date on separate<br />

lines, double-spacing between the lines. Double-space again and center the title. For example:<br />

Brilliant Student<br />

Ms. Toombs<br />

English 2A, Period 1<br />

19 October 2012<br />

Orwell’s Use of Metaphor in 1984<br />

Page Numbers<br />

Insert the page number following your last name in the upper right corner of each page, one-half<br />

inch from the top and flush with the right margin. Use Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3, and so on).<br />

Line Spacing and Paragraph Indents<br />

Double-space throughout the paper including the heading. Do not add extra line spaces above or<br />

below the title of the paper or between paragraphs.<br />

Indent the first line of each paragraph one-half inch (tab) from the left margin.<br />

20


Long Quotations<br />

When a quotation is longer than four typed lines of prose or three lines of verse, set it off from<br />

the text by indenting the entire quotation one inch (or ten spaces) from the left margin. Doublespace<br />

the indented quotation, and do not add extra space above or below it.<br />

Quotation marks are not needed when a quotation has been set off from the text by indenting.<br />

Web Addresses<br />

When a Web address (URL) is mentioned in the text of the paper and it must be divided at the<br />

end of a line, do not insert a hyphen (a hyphen could appear to be part of the address).<br />

Visuals<br />

MLA classifies visuals as tables and figures (figures include graphs, charts, maps, photographs,<br />

and drawings. Label each table with an Arabic numeral (Table 1, Table 2, and so on) and provide<br />

a clear caption that identifies the subject. The label and caption should appear on separate lines<br />

above the table, flush left. Below the table, give its source in a citation.<br />

For each figure, place a label (Figure) and a caption below, flush left, single-spaced. They need<br />

not to appear on separate lines. Include source information following the caption.<br />

Place the visual as close as possible to the parts of the text to which they relate.<br />

FORMAT OF WORKS CITED<br />

Begin the list of works cited on a new page at the end of the paper. Center the title Works Cited<br />

one inch from the top of the page. Double-space throughout.<br />

Alphabetizing the List<br />

Alphabetize the list by the last names of the authors (or editors); if the work has no author or<br />

editor, alphabetize by the first word of the title other than A, An, or The.<br />

If the list includes two or more works by the same author, use the author’s name only for the first<br />

entry. For subsequent entries, use three hyphens followed by a period. List the titles in<br />

alphabetical order.<br />

Indenting<br />

Type the first line of an entry flush left and indent any additional lines one-half inch (tab) from<br />

the left margin.<br />

Web Addresses<br />

When a URL must be divided, break it after a slash or before a period. Do not insert a hyphen.<br />

Also, insert angle brackets around the URL.<br />

Since most computer programs automatically highlight web addresses in hotlinks (by underlining<br />

and highlighting in blue), remove the hyperlink.<br />

21


MLA Documentation<br />

Book, one author<br />

McCorker, Frank. Storymaking and Mythtelling: Comic Literary and Film Images. New York:<br />

Penguin, 1992. Print.<br />

Book, two or more authors<br />

Bondanulla, Peter, Julia Stickaway, and Giorgio K. Tacchi, eds. Dictionary of Siculo-Albanian<br />

Literature. Eastport: Greenforest, 1993. Print.<br />

*Note: For more than three authors, list the first author and add et al., or give all the names in full<br />

Work in an Anthology<br />

Yorbach, Erich. “Odysseus Wonderful.” The Representation of Fantasy and Adventure in<br />

Western Literature. Ed. Polly Feemis. Ithaca: Syracuse UP, 1943. 3-23. Print.<br />

Anonymous Book<br />

The Dictionary of Ancient Etruscan Civilization. London: Menvra, 1986. Print.<br />

*Note: alphabetize title by D, not T<br />

Article in a Reference Book<br />

Mrwebe, Asele. “Dagon Religion.” Encyclopaedia Eclectica: Macropaedia. 16th ed. 1998. Print.<br />

Journal Article<br />

Monk, Maria. “The Devil’s Daughters: Problems with the Catholic Feminine Image in English<br />

Gothic Fiction.” Musaic 13.3 (1990): 3-27. Print.<br />

Newspaper Article<br />

Livvet, Glenn. “Brendan Behan’s Decline and Fall.” Gotham Times 21 Nov. 1973, late ed.:<br />

B17+. Print.<br />

22


E-book<br />

Bloom, Leopold. A Quite Long Day with Jimmy Joyce. Dublin: DeValera Press, 2005.<br />

netLibrary. Web. 16 June 2007.<br />

Web site<br />

Quade, Alex. “Elite Team Rescues Troops behind Enemy Lines.” CNN.com. Cable News<br />

Network, 19 Mar. 2007. Web. 15 May 2008.<br />

*Note: The first date is the date of publication; the second is the access date. An edition or version can also be given<br />

after the Web site title.<br />

Journal Article (from a Library Database)<br />

Jauch, Joseph. “When Friends Argue: Galileo, Urban VIII and What Really Happened.” Journal<br />

of Cosmology and Theology 14.2 (1951): 26-45. JSTOR. Web. 14 July 2008.<br />

Newspaper Article (from Publisher’s Web site)<br />

Chin, Celia. “National Portrait Gallery Today.” D.C. Post Online. 30 May 2009: n.pag. Web. 31<br />

May 2009.<br />

Interview<br />

Bundy, Robin. Personal interview. 10 May 2008.<br />

Thomas, David. Telephone interview. 10 May 2008.<br />

Source<br />

MLA Style Quick Guide. LibGuides at Loyola Marymount University. Loyola Marymount<br />

University. 2009. PDF file.<br />

23


MLA In-Text Citation<br />

In MLA style, in-text documentation is done through parenthetical citation, allowing the reader<br />

to locate the source in the Works Cited. As a general rule, keep parenthetical citations as brief as<br />

possible, and try to incorporate most of the information into the text.<br />

Basic Forms:<br />

According to Gullans in his book Poetic Form, the importance of structure…(23).<br />

*Page number only, when author and work is evident from text.<br />

In the book Poetic Form, importance of structure... (Gullans 23).<br />

*Author and Page, when only work cited is evident from text.<br />

…importance of structure (Gullans, Poetic Form 23).<br />

*Author + Title + Page, when none is evident from text.<br />

Source<br />

MLA Style Quick Guide. LibGuides at Loyola Marymount University. Loyola Marymount<br />

University. 2009. PDF file.<br />

24


Sample: MLA Paper<br />

Daly 1<br />

Angela Daly<br />

Ms. Duncan<br />

English 4A, Period 1<br />

9 January 2005<br />

Title is centered<br />

A Call to Action: Regulate Use of Cell Phones on the Road<br />

When a cell phone goes off in a classroom or at a concert, we are irritated, but at least our<br />

lives are not endangered. When we are on the road, however, irresponsible cell phone users are<br />

more than irritating: They are putting our lives at risk. Many of us have witnessed drivers so<br />

distracted by dialing and chatting that they resemble drunk drivers, weaving between lanes, for<br />

example, or nearly running down pedestrians in crosswalks. A number of bills to regulate use of<br />

cell phones on the road have been introduced in state legislatures, and the time has come to push<br />

Hook to catch<br />

reader’s attention<br />

for their passage. Regulation is needed because drivers using phones are seriously<br />

impaired and because laws on negligent and reckless driving are not sufficient to punish<br />

Thesis answers<br />

research question<br />

offenders.<br />

Use a clear<br />

topic<br />

sentence<br />

No one can deny that cell phones have caused traffic deaths and injuries. Cell phones<br />

were implicated in three fatal accidents in November 1999 alone. Early in November, a driver<br />

distracted by his cell phone killed two-year-old Morgan Pena. Morgan’s mother, Patti Pena,<br />

reports that the driver “ran a stop sign at 45 mph, broad sided my vehicle and killed Morgan as<br />

she sat in her car seat” (4). A week later,<br />

Signal phrase names<br />

the author of the<br />

quotation to follow.<br />

No page number is<br />

available for this Web<br />

source.<br />

25


Author’s<br />

name given in<br />

parentheses;<br />

no page # is<br />

available<br />

corrections officer Shannon Smith, who was guarding prisoners by the side of the road, was<br />

killed by a woman distracted by a phone call (Besthoff). On Thanksgiving weekend that same<br />

Daly 2<br />

month, John and Carole Hall were killed when a Naval Academy midshipman crashed into their<br />

parked car. The driver said in court that when he looked up from the cell phone he was dialing,<br />

he was three feet from the car and had no time to stop<br />

(Stockwell B8).<br />

Page number<br />

given when<br />

available<br />

Use clear topic<br />

sentences<br />

throughout he<br />

paper.<br />

Expert testimony, public opinion, and even cartoons suggest that driving while phoning is<br />

dangerous. Frances Bents, an expert on the relation between cell phones and accidents, estimates<br />

that between 450 and 1,000 crashes a year have some connection to cell phone use (Layton C9).<br />

In a survey published by Farmers Insurance Group, 87% of those polled said that cell phones<br />

affect a driver’s ability, and 40% reported having close calls with drivers distracted by phones.<br />

Scientific research confirms the dangers of using phones while on the road. In 1997, an<br />

important study appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine. Redelmeier and<br />

Tibshirani, studied 699 volunteers who made their cell phone bills available in order to<br />

confirm the times when they had placed calls. The participants agreed to report any nonfatal<br />

collision in which they were involved. By comparing the time of a collision with the phone<br />

Summary<br />

& long<br />

quotation<br />

are<br />

introduced<br />

with a<br />

signal<br />

phrase<br />

naming the<br />

authors<br />

records, the researchers assessed the following dangers of driving while phoning:<br />

Long quotation is<br />

set off from text;<br />

quotation marks<br />

are omitted<br />

We found that using a cellular telephone was associated with a risk of having a<br />

motor vehicle collision that was about four times as high as that among the same<br />

drivers when they were not using their cellular telephones. (456)<br />

26


Daly 7<br />

Works Cited<br />

Besthoff, Len. “Cell Phone Use Increases Risk of Accidents, but Users Willing to Take<br />

the Risk.” WRAL Online. 11 Nov. 1999. Web.12 Jan. 2001.<br />

Farmers Insurance Group. “New Survey Shows Drivers Have Had ‘Close Calls’ with<br />

Cell Phone Users.” Farmers Insurance Group. 8 May 2000. Web. 12 Jan. 2001.<br />

Layton, Lyndsey. “Legislators Aiming to Disconnect Motorists.” Washington Post 10<br />

Dec. 2000: C1+.<br />

Pena, Patricia N. “Patti Pena’s Letter to Car Talk.” Cars.com. Car Talk, 10 Jan. 2001. Web. 12<br />

Jan. 2001.<br />

Redelmeier, Donald A., and Robert J. Tibshirani. “Association between Cellular<br />

Telephone Calls and Motor Vehicle Collisions.” New England Journal of<br />

Medicine 336 (1997): 453-58. Print.<br />

Stockwell, Jamie. “Phone Use Faulted in Collision.” Washington Post 6 Dec. 2000: B1+.<br />

27


American Psychological Association (APA)<br />

Manuscript Format<br />

The following guidelines are consistent with advice given in the Publication <strong>Manual</strong> of the<br />

American Psychological Association, 6th ed.<br />

FORMAT OF THE PAPER<br />

Materials<br />

Use only white 8½ x 11 inch paper.<br />

Margins<br />

Leave one-inch margins at the top, bottom, right, and left sides of the page.<br />

Title Page<br />

The APA manual does require a title page. The title should be typed in uppercase and lowercase<br />

letters, centered between the left and right margins, and positioned in the upper half of the page.<br />

The recommended length for a title is no more than 12 words. Following the title, type your first<br />

name, middle initial, and last name. On the third line, type the name of your school.<br />

Page Numbers and Running Head<br />

The title page is numbered as page 1. In the upper right-hand corner of each page, type a short<br />

version of the title, followed by the page number. Number all pages, including the title page.<br />

Line Spacing and Paragraph Indents<br />

Double-space throughout the paper.<br />

Indent the first line of each paragraph one-half inch (tab) from the left margin.<br />

Long Quotations<br />

When a quotation is longer than 40 words, offset the text by indenting one-half inch (or five<br />

spaces) from the left margin. Double-space the quotation. Remove quotation marks when a<br />

quotation is set off from the text.<br />

Abstract<br />

If the teacher requires one, include an abstract immediately after the title page. Center the word<br />

Abstract one inch from the top of the page; double-space the abstract the same as the body of the<br />

paper.<br />

An abstract is a 150-250 word paragraph that provides readers with a quick overview of the<br />

essay. It should express the main idea and the key points; it might also briefly suggest any<br />

implications or applications of research within the paper.<br />

28


Visuals<br />

APA classifies visuals as tables and figures (figures include graphs, charts, maps, photographs,<br />

and drawings. Label each table with an Arabic numeral (Table 1, Table 2, and so on) and provide<br />

a clear caption that identifies the subject. The label and caption should appear on separate lines<br />

above the table, flush left. Below the table, give its source in a citation.<br />

For each figure, place a label (Figure) and a caption below, flush left, single-spaced. They need<br />

not to appear on separate lines. Include source information following the caption.<br />

Place the visual as close as possible to the text to which they relate unless the teacher prefers it in<br />

an appendix.<br />

FORMAT OF REFERENCES<br />

Begin the list of references on a new page at the end of the paper. Center the title References one<br />

inch from the top of the page. Double-space throughout.<br />

Alphabetizing the List<br />

Alphabetize the list by the last names of the authors (or editors); if the work has no author or<br />

editor, alphabetize by the first word of the title other than A, An, or The.<br />

If a list includes two or more works by the same author, use the author’s name only for the first<br />

entry. For subsequent entries, use three hyphens followed by a period. List the titles in<br />

alphabetical order.<br />

Indenting<br />

Type the first line of an entry flush left and indent any additional lines one-half inch (tab) from<br />

the left margin.<br />

Authors’ Names<br />

Invert all authors’ names and use initials instead of first names. With two or more authors, use an<br />

ampersand (&) before the last author’s name. Separate the names with commas. Include names<br />

for the first six authors; if there are additional authors, end the list with “et al.” (Latin for “and<br />

others”).<br />

Titles of Books and Articles<br />

Italicize the titles and subtitles of books. Do not use quotation marks around titles of articles.<br />

Capitalize only the first word of the title and subtitle (and all proper nouns) of books and articles.<br />

Abbreviations<br />

Abbreviations for “page” and “pages” (“p.” and “pp.”). Abbreviation for “paragraph” (para.).<br />

Web Addresses<br />

When a URL must be divided, break it after a slash or before a period. Do not insert a hyphen.<br />

Since most computer programs automatically highlight web addresses in hotlinks (by underlining<br />

and highlighting in blue), remove the hyperlink.<br />

29


APA Documentation<br />

Book<br />

DeCarbo, M. A., & Lustiger, I. V. (1969). Mentorship among older and younger college<br />

students. Berkeley, CA: University of California.<br />

*Note: For more than seven authors, please consult the APA guide 6.27 (page 184)<br />

Chapter in Book or Entry in Reference Book<br />

Francisco, J. P. (2001). The role of development. In M. E. Marcsh & C. L. Noble (Eds.), The new<br />

encyclopedia of psychology (pp. 325-338). New York, NY: Amicus.<br />

Anonymous Book<br />

The dictionary of therapeutic methods. (1986). London: Menvra.<br />

*Note: alphabetize by the first significant word, in this case “D.” If a work is signed “Anonymous,” begin the entry<br />

with the word Anonymous spelled out and alphabetize under “A.”<br />

Journal Article<br />

Monk, M. T., Brown, J. T., & Stone, C. C. (2006). Depths of perception. Journal of Neurology,<br />

32(2), 34-46.<br />

Newspaper Article<br />

Stilner, J. (2009, May 30). Bullying among children. The Washington Post, pp. B1, B6.<br />

Dissertation or Thesis<br />

Hoffnen, C. (2008). Collective memories: Building a community-based archive (Doctoral<br />

dissertation). Retrieved from ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database. (AAT<br />

3354271)<br />

E-book (Electronic version of a print book)<br />

Bloom, K. (1982). Love and myth in Freud [ebrary version]. Retrieved from http://linus.lmu.edu<br />

30


E-book (Electronic only book)<br />

O’Hare, D. T. (n.d.). The handbook of computer addiction. Retrieved from<br />

http://onlineoriginalbooks.com/item3225<br />

Web site<br />

Qualke, A. (2008, April 3). Revisiting Columbine. Colorado Online News. Retrieved May 8,<br />

2008, from http://www.con.com<br />

Online Journal Article (with DOI)<br />

Prdziebylo, I. L., Korzybski, C. L., & Gimpelowicz, Z. (1991). Interpersonal cognition and<br />

sibling rivalry in large families. Polish Journal of Psychology, 74, 329-348.<br />

doi: 10.1037/2078-6133.25.2.233<br />

Online Journal Article (without DOI)<br />

Light, G. T., & Love, T. R. (2002). Emotional intelligence in primates. Journal of Cognitive<br />

Psychology, 4(3), 33-46. Retrieved from http://0-www.jstor.org.linus.lmu.edu/<br />

Interview<br />

Bundy, R. (2008, May 10). Interview by T. O’Neill [Personal interview].<br />

Thomas, D. (2008, May 10). Interview by T. O’Neill [Telephone interview].<br />

Source<br />

APA Style Quick Guide. LibGuides at Loyola Marymount University. Loyola Marymount<br />

University. 2009. PDF file.<br />

31


APA In-Text Citation<br />

In APA style, in-text documentation is done through an author-date citation system, allowing the<br />

reader to locate the source in the References.<br />

If the name of the author appears in the text, cite only the year of publication in parentheses<br />

(example 1). Otherwise, place both the author’s name and date of publication in parentheses,<br />

separated by a comma (example 2). If both the author and year appear in the text, do not include<br />

a parenthetical citation.<br />

Example 1: Jenkins (2003) described the beginning stages...<br />

Example 2: In the beginning stages… (Jenkins, 2003)<br />

For 2 authors: Cite both names every time.<br />

For more than 2 authors: Cite all authors the first time, then only the first author plus et al.<br />

subsequently.<br />

Source<br />

APA Style Quick Guide. LibGuides at Loyola Marymount University. Loyola Marymount<br />

University. 2009. PDF file.<br />

32


Resources<br />

33


Anti-Plagiarism<br />

Important Information to Remember<br />

• Document all information from other sources, which includes direct quotations and<br />

paraphrases, as well as ideas gained from these sources. However, there is some<br />

information referred to as public domain, or common knowledge, which does not need<br />

documentation. Examples of public domain include well-known phrases or proverbs such<br />

as, “What goes around comes around.” It also consists of such common knowledge as,<br />

“George Washington was the first President of the United States.” However, be cautious.<br />

If there is any doubt, about whether something is public domain or not, it is best to cite it.<br />

• If information includes numbers, cite it. Double-check the information for accuracy.<br />

• The pulp tabloids (i.e., National Enquirer, Star) demonstrate that just because<br />

information is in print, does not mean it is true. Also, be sure to check the validity of<br />

information from the Internet. Anyone can write anything and put it online.<br />

• Double-check any questionable or controversial information.<br />

• It is less likely to use another author’s words when more sources are available. Additional<br />

sources give enough information to:<br />

1. Realize that different sources give different data<br />

2. Make comparisons and contrasts<br />

3. Make connections between different pieces of information<br />

4. Draw conclusions<br />

• The less research information available makes it more difficult to write about the research<br />

topic. Therefore, when relying on fewer sources, it may lead into plagiarism.<br />

Document all information from primary and secondary sources<br />

Primary sources include:<br />

• Personal interviews (in person, on the phone, and online)<br />

• Surveys<br />

• Notes<br />

• A work of literature<br />

• An autobiography<br />

Secondary sources include:<br />

• Textbooks<br />

• Articles<br />

• Reference books<br />

• Literary criticism<br />

• Any writing discussing any primary source<br />

34


Local Libraries<br />

<strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> Library District<br />

Location<br />

Peninsula Center Library<br />

701 Silver Spur Road<br />

Rolling Hills Estates, CA 90274<br />

310-377-9584<br />

http://www.pvld.org/<br />

Miraleste Library<br />

29089 <strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> Drive East<br />

Rancho <strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong>, CA 90275<br />

310-377-9584 ext. 452<br />

Malaga Cove Library<br />

2400 Via Campesina<br />

<strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> Estates, CA 90274<br />

310-377-9584 ext. 551<br />

Annex<br />

627 Silver Spur Road, Suite 210<br />

Rolling Hills Estates, CA 90274<br />

(Village Shopping Center)<br />

310-377-9584 ext. 301<br />

Hours<br />

Monday-Thursday: 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Monday-Friday: 11:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: Closed<br />

Monday-Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: Closed<br />

Staffed by PVLD<br />

Monday-Thursday: 3:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m.<br />

Monday-Thursday: 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. (<strong>School</strong> Holidays)<br />

Staffed by Freedom4U<br />

Friday: 3:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. (<strong>School</strong> Holidays)<br />

*Open to 6th-12th graders with valid student I.D.<br />

Redondo Beach<br />

Location<br />

The Main Library<br />

303 North Pacific Coast <strong>High</strong>way<br />

Redondo Beach, CA 90277<br />

http://www.redondo.org/library<br />

The North Branch<br />

2000 Artesia Boulevard<br />

Redondo Beach, CA 90278<br />

Hours<br />

Monday-Thursday: 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.<br />

Saturday: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Monday, Wednesday, Thursday: 12:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Saturday: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, Friday: Closed<br />

35


Torrance<br />

Location<br />

Hours<br />

Katy Geissert Civic Center Library<br />

3301 Torrance Boulevard<br />

Torrance, CA 90503<br />

310-618-5959<br />

www.library.torranceCA.gov<br />

El Retiro Branch Library<br />

126 Vista Del Parque<br />

Redondo Beach, CA 90277<br />

310-375-0922<br />

Henderson Branch Library<br />

4805 Emerald Street<br />

Torrance, CA 90503<br />

310-371-2075<br />

North Torrance Branch<br />

3604 Artesia Boulevard<br />

Torrance, CA 90504<br />

310-323-7200<br />

Southeast Branch Library<br />

23115 South Arlington Avenue<br />

Torrance, CA 90501<br />

310-530-5044<br />

Walteria Branch Library<br />

3815 West 242nd Street<br />

Torrance, CA 90505<br />

310-375-8418<br />

Monday-Thursday: 10:00 a.m.-9 p.m.<br />

Friday: 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday: 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. (September through June)<br />

Monday-Thursday: 11:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: Closed<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: Closed<br />

Monday-Thursday: 11:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: Closed<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: Closed<br />

Monday-Thursday: 11:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: Closed<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: Closed<br />

Monday-Thursday: 11:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: Closed<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: Closed<br />

Monday-Thursday: 11:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.<br />

Friday: Closed<br />

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday: Closed<br />

36


<strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> <strong>High</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong><br />

Overview: <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong><br />

Research is an integral part of Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and 21 st century<br />

innovation and collaboration skills. The implementation of the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> will prepare<br />

PVHS students with the 21 st century skills in order to meet the CCSS requirements. <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong><br />

<strong>Capstone</strong> focuses on relevance and manageability. The <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> will enhance to<br />

relationship to College and Career Pathways.<br />

37


<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Process<br />

The <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> process will utilize a three-tiered approach which will be coordinated<br />

through English classes that will focus on CCSS writing. All seniors will be required to complete<br />

Tier 1.<br />

Tier 1<br />

Seniors will complete a written report about their capstone. All seniors will present their<br />

capstone to a presentation board with an open audience in the MPR/GYM during a <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong><br />

<strong>Capstone</strong> Bronze Exhibition. District officials, industry partners, faculty and community<br />

members will grade the capstones and presentations with a scoring rubric. This portion of the <strong>Sea</strong><br />

<strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> is mandatory for all seniors with the graded results incorporated into their English<br />

class grade.<br />

Students will be paired with a faculty mentor and provided opportunities to connect with an<br />

industry leader. Each career pathway will have an advisory board that will consist of faculty and<br />

industry sector partners (Each pathway, or “academy” will have an Academy Coordinator; an<br />

Academy Director will oversee all 5 academies). Students will receive guidance during<br />

Interdisciplinary Team Meeting Days on Late Start Wednesday. Students may work individually<br />

or with a partner to create a capstone.<br />

<strong>Capstone</strong> preparation will consist of students selecting a design from College and Career<br />

Pathways by industry sector:<br />

• Arts, Media & Entertainment<br />

• Education, Psychology & Public Service<br />

• Engineering & Environmental Science<br />

• Health Sciences & Medical Technology<br />

• Business, Marketing & Sales<br />

(Sectors were adapted from career pathways identified through Linked Learning Initiative)<br />

Tier 2<br />

A total of 50 seniors will be selected from the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Silver Exhibition scoring and<br />

will be invited by stakeholders (faculty, industry leaders, and district staff) to compete in a panel<br />

presentation. The 50 seniors will be grouped into industry sectors and a panel specific to each<br />

industry sector will judge the capstones. These seniors will receive a special graduation cord.<br />

Tier 3<br />

From the 50 seniors scored by the panels, the top 5 students or pairs will compete in front of a<br />

mixed-industry panel in the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Gold Exhibition with the opportunity to compete<br />

for scholarships. In addition, finalists will be provided a unique graduation sash.<br />

38


<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Timeline<br />

English 4<br />

2012-2013<br />

Semester 1<br />

A B<br />

August 29 30 Print <strong>Writing</strong> <strong>Manual</strong> & <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> from school website<br />

September 12 13 <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Strand Proposal<br />

September 18 19 Resume; Parent or Guardian Liability Release Form<br />

September 26 Faculty Mentor assigned<br />

October 17 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

October 24 25 Annotated Bibliography<br />

November 14 15 Introduction<br />

November 28 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

December 12 13 Literature Review and References/Works Cited<br />

December 19 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

January 9 10 Method<br />

Semester 2<br />

A B<br />

January 23 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

January 29 30 Letter to the Judges<br />

February 20 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

February 27 28 Results and Discussion; Fieldwork Time Sheet<br />

March 11 12 Conclusion, Appendices, and Abstract<br />

March 13 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

March 19 20 Final Paper & Submit to turnitin.com<br />

April 17 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

April 24 25 Portfolio<br />

May 1 Meet with Faculty Mentor<br />

May 3 Tier 1: <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Bronze Exhibition<br />

May 23 Tier 2: <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Silver Exhibition (Top 50)<br />

May 31 Tier 3: <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Gold Exhibition (Top 5)<br />

39


English Grade Requirements<br />

The first semester English grade requirements of the capstone is worth 40% of the Reading and<br />

<strong>Writing</strong> Skills grade, 30% of the regular English grade, and 20% of the AP English grade with<br />

the completion of forms and assignments by the required dates. This facet of the capstone may<br />

take on various forms. One option is to volunteer through a community organization. If, for<br />

example, your capstone is pertains to Alzheimer’s disease, you might volunteer at a retirement<br />

home for Alzheimer’s patients. Another possible capstone course of direction is to create a<br />

manufactured product. A student interested in woodworking might research Shaker furniture<br />

design and then, for the capstone, build a chair in that style. Other capstones may include<br />

learning a new skill such as playing an instrument. Whichever capstone you choose, you must<br />

complete a minimum of 15 hours with verification from an adult who is familiar with the topic.<br />

Students go into action as they enter the fieldwork segment of the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong>. Essential<br />

in this phase is selecting a capstone, which challenges the student to demonstrate a time for<br />

reflection. During this time of reflection, the student should select a capstone never before<br />

accomplished or a capstone, which forces the student to build upon previous skills or<br />

accomplishments.<br />

Fieldwork may fall into five major categories. However, students often combine types for a<br />

stronger capstone. The following types have been successful capstones:<br />

1. Physical: Modeling a roller coaster, computer program, fashion outfit, architectural<br />

design, collection of pottery.<br />

2. Written: <strong>Writing</strong> a short story, book of poetry, novelette, journal of reflective essays.<br />

3. Performance: Choreographing a dance, musical video, magic show, instrumental recital.<br />

4. Teaching or Leadership: Teaching a middle school class about eating disorders,<br />

coaching a little league team, starting a tutorial group for students who are limited in<br />

English proficiency.<br />

5. Career-related: Volunteering at a local veterinarian clinic or hospital, viewing and<br />

documenting medical procedures.<br />

40


Research<br />

41


Research Requirements<br />

English teachers and faculty mentors will explain the research paper format and requirements.<br />

All papers:<br />

The capstone will be an APA or MLA style research paper.<br />

APA: Psychology, education, nursing, and other social sciences<br />

MLA: Literature, arts, and humanities<br />

Components of the research paper will include:<br />

• Title Page<br />

• Abstract (APA only and 150-250 words)<br />

• Introduction (2 pages)<br />

• Literature Review* (3-4 pages)<br />

• Method (2-3 pages)<br />

• Results and Discussion (1-2 pages)<br />

• Conclusion (½-1 page)<br />

• References/Works Cited (5 or more sources)<br />

• Appendices<br />

• Annotated Bibliography (5 sources minimum)<br />

*Seniors will investigate current research on a topic and synthesize this information in the<br />

literature review. Students must use at least 5 peer reviewed journals from a scholarly online<br />

database from the PVHS library or public library.<br />

Students are required to upload their capstone research paper to turnitin.com on the assigned due<br />

date, as well as submit a spiral bound portfolio to their English teacher.<br />

Turnitin.com<br />

English teachers and/or faculty mentors reserve the right to utilize electronic means to help<br />

prevent plagiarism subject to submission for textual similarity review to turnitin.com.<br />

For most assignments, you are required to submit to turnitin.com.<br />

42


Sample: Research Topics and Fieldwork<br />

The ancient Greek philosopher Plato is credited for saying, “The beginning is the most important<br />

part of the work.” Below are three examples of general capstone topics, which have been<br />

narrowed to more specific areas of focus. Related examples for a <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> selection<br />

are also listed.<br />

General Topic Specific Topic Choices Fieldwork<br />

President Kennedy Assassination was a • Staging mock trial of Oswald Stage a mock trial<br />

“Russian” conspiracy • Teaching social studies classes<br />

about the assassination theories<br />

• Compiling a portfolio reflecting<br />

Technological Literacy<br />

Photography<br />

The application of<br />

technology widens the<br />

economic gap between<br />

counties<br />

Special effects of<br />

photography<br />

the history of the “cold war” era<br />

• Build a robot<br />

• Teach software program design<br />

• Make a video showing how<br />

technology is impacting law<br />

enforcement<br />

• Create a slide show teaching use<br />

of special effects in photography<br />

• Film a video incorporating<br />

special effects photography<br />

• Design a digital series showing<br />

photographic enhancement<br />

Build a robot<br />

Film a video using<br />

special effects<br />

photography<br />

Additional samples<br />

General Topic<br />

Finding the common thread in religions<br />

How to play the stock market game<br />

Pottery as a history of cultures<br />

Blues music<br />

Effects of second-hand smoke<br />

Eating healthy and exercise<br />

Alternative medicine<br />

The plight of dolphins<br />

Bipolar disorder and creativity<br />

How CPR saves lives<br />

Fieldwork<br />

Attend services for three different religious groups<br />

and teach a youth group at a local organization<br />

Design a portfolio and map progress of stocks<br />

Design and make pottery to reflect individual<br />

history<br />

Take lessons, learn to play the harmonica and<br />

perform for an elementary school class<br />

Work on school-wide anti-smoking campaign<br />

Take class and earn professional trainer’s license<br />

Investigate acupuncture treatments to improve<br />

ailment<br />

Work at marine science center with scientists<br />

Hyper studio program of great music masters<br />

Earn CPR training license and give a demonstration<br />

43


Annotated Bibliography<br />

An annotated bibliography gives an account of the research that has been done on a given topic.<br />

Like any bibliography, an annotated bibliography is an alphabetical list of research sources. In<br />

addition to bibliographic data, an annotated bibliography provides a concise summary of each<br />

source and some assessment of its value or relevance.<br />

Selecting the sources:<br />

The quality and usefulness of your bibliography will depend on your selection of sources.<br />

Define the scope and limits of your research carefully so that you can make good judgments<br />

about what to include and exclude.<br />

Summarizing the argument of a source:<br />

An annotation briefly restates the main argument of a source. An annotation of an academic<br />

source, for example, typically identifies its thesis (or research question, or hypothesis), its major<br />

methods of investigation, and its main conclusions. Keep in mind that identifying the argument<br />

of a source is a different task than describing or listing its contents.<br />

The following reading strategies can help you to identify the argument of a source:<br />

• Identify the author’s thesis (central claim or purpose) or research question. Both the<br />

introduction and the conclusion can help you with this task.<br />

• Look for repetition of key terms or ideas, especially those occurring in the thesis. Follow<br />

them through the text and examine what the author does with them.<br />

• Notice whether and how a theory is used to interpret evidence. Identify the method used<br />

to investigate the problem/s addressed in the text.<br />

• Notice how the text is laid out and organized. What are the main sections? What is<br />

emphasized? Why? Accounting for why will help you move beyond listing contents and<br />

toward accounting for argument. Look also for paragraphs that summarize the argument.<br />

Assessing the relevance and value of a source:<br />

Your annotation should now go on to briefly assess the value of the source to an investigation of<br />

your research question. Briefly identify how you intend to use the source and why.<br />

Knott, D. (2004). New College <strong>Writing</strong> Centre. Equity Studies Program, New College.<br />

44


Sample: Annotated Bibliography<br />

PVHS graduate, Nicholas Fine, grants permission to the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> to publish his APA<br />

Annotated Bibliography.<br />

45


Abstract<br />

(APA only, new page, center, not bold)<br />

The abstract is a concise summary of the key points the paper. (Do not indent the first line). The<br />

abstract is between 150-250 words.<br />

Introduction<br />

The introduction section is approximately 2 pages and includes the following:<br />

(new page, title, center, bold)<br />

The introduction provides an overview of the capstone. It sets the stage, establishes the overall<br />

area of concern, and communicates the information that follows. This section does not include<br />

technical details. The thesis is stated here.<br />

Background and Statement of the Problem (title, left align, bold)<br />

The purpose of this section is to provide a discussion and background about the problem. The<br />

background serves to underscore why you are engaging in this capstone and how it relates to<br />

previous work. It presents the big picture, provides the context of previous studies, and relates it<br />

to the present research for your capstone. Consider the following areas in your discussion; Issues<br />

and problems, e.g., statistics, literature, and research from a classroom or program, local (school<br />

or district), regional or state, and national perspective. If appropriate, provide literature<br />

describing the lack of relevant literature.<br />

Purpose (title, left align, bold)<br />

Describe the purpose of the study using the research cited in the preceding Background section<br />

to support your statement and state specifically the purpose of the study, or what you intend to<br />

discover, describe, examine, investigate, etc.<br />

<strong>Capstone</strong> Goals (title, left align, bold)<br />

State your goals in measurable terms. It is suggested that you articulate between one and three<br />

goals. The results and discussion will be presented as responses to these goals.<br />

Context of the <strong>Capstone</strong> (title, left align, bold)<br />

Describe the context and include information in which you will implement the capstone.


Literature Review<br />

The review of literature section is approximately 3-4 pages and includes the following:<br />

(new page, title, center, bold)<br />

The literature review provides an interpretive summary of the research on the selected topic and<br />

presents a historic background for the capstone, a theoretical framework, and current research<br />

developments about the topic. A good review analyzes the research and shows how the results<br />

relate to the problem of your capstone. The section provides the link between existing knowledge<br />

and the problem being studied. Use subheadings as appropriate. Students must use 5 sources for<br />

this section.<br />

Method<br />

The method section is approximately 2-3 pages and includes the following:<br />

(new page, title, center, bold)<br />

Describe the method (design) and procedures that were used to operationalize the goals that were<br />

presented in the introduction.<br />

• Restate the key findings from the review of the literature; provide support, and a rationale for<br />

your inquiry.<br />

• Restate the goals.<br />

• Describe the action strategy or intervention implemented and studied. Connect this to the<br />

research as well.<br />

• Describe the rationale for the intervention/strategy and why you selected this particular<br />

intervention.<br />

Site or Setting (title, left align, bold)<br />

Describe the location of the capstone. Provide enough information for the reader to understand<br />

the context of the capstone.<br />

Participants (title, left align, bold)<br />

Describe the overall group (population) you worked with. Provide general information about the<br />

population, including age, gender, ability level, classification, language, ethnicity, etc.<br />

Describe the specific population included for this initiative. Who are they? Why are you studying<br />

this group? Remember to protect the privacy of your participants by assigning to them<br />

pseudonyms, letters, or numbers.<br />

Materials and Procedure (title, left align, bold)<br />

Describe the materials and procedure used to gather information about the capstone.<br />

48


Results and Discussion<br />

The results and discussion section is approximately 1-2 pages and includes the following:<br />

(new page, title, center, bold)<br />

Results (title, left align, bold)<br />

This is a presentation of the results and collection of the data gathered. The data is presented in<br />

relation to each goal. Data presentation should be factual with tables, charts, illustrations, and<br />

graphs utilized to illustrate information when appropriate. Use subheadings to organize the<br />

results. Organize results in relationship to each goal.<br />

Discussion (title, left align, bold)<br />

This section includes a discussion and overview of the major results. A good discussion refers<br />

the results back to the review of the literature.<br />

Conclusion<br />

The conclusion section is approximately ½-1 page and includes the following:<br />

(title, center, bold)<br />

Provide a discussion with conclusions, implications for learning, leading, etc., and implications<br />

for policy and future research.<br />

References/Works Cited<br />

(not bold)<br />

Any references cited in the narrative must appear in the reference list and be formatted according<br />

to APA or MLA format.<br />

Appendices<br />

(title, center, not bold)<br />

If you created a survey or reference a chart, etc., place it in this section.<br />

49


Sample: <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong><br />

PVHS graduate, Nicholas Fine, grants permission to the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> to publish his APA<br />

research paper entitled The Viability of Solar Panels as a Power Source for Transportation.<br />

50


Portfolio<br />

59


Portfolio Requirements<br />

The portfolio is a collection of documents in support of the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong>, as well as<br />

personal educational growth from previous academic years. This evidence is the culminating part<br />

of the capstone that the judges will review during the presentation(s).<br />

Your portfolio may well be the judges first contact with you. Therefore, it is important that it is<br />

reflective of a polished, finished product. Make sure that documents are clean, edited, and typed.<br />

A table of contents is a way to make the portfolio “user friendly” to the panel.<br />

Include the following items in the portfolio IN THIS EXACT ORDER. Include TABS for every<br />

section. There are (3) sections, in addition to the cover page and table of contents. Portfolios<br />

must be spiral bound.<br />

Cover Page<br />

Table of Contents<br />

I. Information (tab)<br />

A. Letter to the Judges<br />

B. Resume<br />

C. Parent or Guardian Liability Release Form<br />

D. Faculty Mentor Form<br />

II. <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> (tab)<br />

A. Research Paper<br />

B. Research Paper Rubric with Comments<br />

C. Fieldwork Time Sheet<br />

D. Fieldwork Evidence<br />

III. Cumulative <strong>Writing</strong> (tab)<br />

A. Grade 9 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample and Reflection<br />

B. Grade 10 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample and Reflection<br />

C. Grade 11 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample and Reflection<br />

D. Grade 12 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample and Reflection<br />

60


Portfolio Cover Page<br />

The portfolio cover page will demonstrate your technology skills, as well as advertise your<br />

capstone. The paper must be typed and printed on 8½ x 11 inch paper. The cover page must<br />

contain the research topic, thesis statement, and a brief description of your capstone using<br />

active verbs and vivid adjectives. Additionally, the cover page must include your first and last<br />

name, teacher’s name, subject and period, and date all accompanied by an appropriate<br />

graphic. Print the graphics on the cover page .NOTE: Do not glue or staple.<br />

PVHS graduate, Nicholas Fine, grants permission to the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> to publish his APA<br />

research cover page entitled The Viability of Solar Panels as a Power Source for Transportation.<br />

61


Letter to the Judges<br />

The purpose of this letter is to introduce you as a whole person, beyond the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong><br />

accomplishments to the panel of judges. When the judges listen to your presentation(s) at the <strong>Sea</strong><br />

<strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Exhibition, they will most likely bring these insights into their understanding of<br />

you. Therefore, it is important to make a good first impression. As a result, it is extremely<br />

important to have this letter represent your best writing along with a sincere expression of how<br />

you perceive certain aspects of yourself.<br />

Consider the following topics: family background, hobbies, goals, driving principles or beliefs,<br />

individual talents, handicaps, experiences with the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong>, reflections from your<br />

high school years, expressions of regret or gratitude, or views on any subject. This information<br />

will give the judges useful information about you as a graduate. Write the letter in correct<br />

business format and carefully proof the contents.<br />

62


Sample: Letter to the Judges<br />

PVHS graduate, Nicholas Fine, grants permission to the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> to publish his Letter<br />

to the Judges.<br />

63


Resume Guide<br />

What is a Resume?<br />

A resume is a mini-bio of you, a snapshot of you on paper. It is a brief description of your skills,<br />

interests, experience, and abilities in a quick legible format. The purpose of a resume is to get an<br />

interview. It is a marketing tool to sell a product and that product is you. The best and most<br />

important advice is keep the resume short simple and focus on the skills and abilities that the<br />

employer is seeking. It is important to read the job description carefully and to direct the resume<br />

specifically to the job. Most recruiters and employers spend only 5 to 10 seconds reviewing a<br />

resume.<br />

The Basics:<br />

Do<br />

Use 8½ x 11 white paper<br />

Use 11 or 12 point font<br />

Have even margins<br />

Use standard fonts<br />

Use specific key words<br />

Be action oriented and value driven<br />

Include professional email address<br />

Let experience dictate length<br />

Proofread, proofread, proofread<br />

Create your own resume<br />

Use clear bulleted format<br />

Don’t<br />

Use colored paper<br />

Use small hard to read fonts<br />

Use margins less than ¾” all around<br />

Use italics, underlining or graphics<br />

Be generic or general<br />

Staple, fold or paper clip resumes<br />

Use cutesy or annoying email addresses<br />

Make employer work, focus on their needs<br />

Rely on spellchecker<br />

Use templates<br />

Use narrative or long paragraphs<br />

Important Points to Use When <strong>Writing</strong> a Resume<br />

• Keep your name on top, in bold and larger than the rest of the resume.<br />

• Use only one phone number with accurate professional email.<br />

• The objective should be short, concise and to the pint, modified with each new position.<br />

• Avoid spelling errors, typos, and poor grammar.<br />

• Use proper formatting and structure.<br />

• After high school, use only college education and write out the entire degree in bold.<br />

• Only put the month and year you are graduating.<br />

• Use appropriate tense-past for past experiences and present for current.<br />

• Skills are important: languages, computer, and other skills should be added.<br />

• Under experience heading include all paid or unpaid, volunteer or any other demonstrating<br />

your abilities.<br />

• <strong>High</strong>light your title/position, not the company, by using bold.<br />

• Use chorological layout-most recent first.<br />

• Use months and years for dates, avoid abbreviations.<br />

• Align dates and locations vertically.<br />

• Provide 4-6 bullet points in an active voice. Use numbers whenever possible. Avoid<br />

paragraphs or narrative style.<br />

“Resumes and Cover Letters.” Loyola Marymount University. Career Development Services, n.d. Web. 29 Aug.<br />

2011. <br />

64


Sample: Resume<br />

Jane Doe<br />

1234 <strong>Capstone</strong> Drive • <strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> Estates, CA 90274 • 310-378-1234 • jdoe@aol.com<br />

EDUCATION<br />

<strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> <strong>High</strong> <strong>School</strong>, <strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> Estates, CA June 2012<br />

EXPERIENCE<br />

Starbucks Coffee Company, Rancho <strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong>, CA<br />

Barista, Shift Manager<br />

• Create various specialty coffees based upon customer requests<br />

• Conduct sales in a fast-paced environment<br />

• Promote to Shift Manager within 6 months<br />

• Develop more efficient inventory management system<br />

November 2010-Present<br />

Salon Riviera, Redondo Beach, CA<br />

Receptionist June 2010- June 2011<br />

• Scheduled clients’ appointments<br />

• Communicated by telephone client contacts<br />

• Purchased supplies for stylists<br />

<strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> Art Center, Rolling Hills Estates, CA<br />

Teacher Aide April 2010-May 2011<br />

• Assisted students with completing art projects<br />

• Encouraged students to share their ideas about future art projects<br />

• Helped the teacher present daily lesson plans<br />

• Taught a lesson on color theory<br />

ACTIVITIES/AWARDS<br />

Link Crew<br />

National English Honor Society, <strong>Palos</strong> <strong>Verdes</strong> <strong>High</strong> <strong>School</strong> Chapter<br />

College Scholarship Federation<br />

Varsity Soccer<br />

2010-Present<br />

2009-Present<br />

2009-Present<br />

2008-Present<br />

COMPUTER SKILLS<br />

Operating Systems<br />

Windows 7, XP; Mac OS<br />

Application Software<br />

MS Excel, PowerPoint, Word; Adobe Photoshop<br />

65


Portfolio Reflections<br />

Choose four pieces of writing to reflect upon (one from each high school grade level). Be sure to<br />

choose something other than your <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> for your senior year entry. If you did not<br />

attend PVHS for any portion of high school and do not have a particular writing sample, then<br />

you must double up on another grade level. Please include a note explaining the situation in your<br />

reflection as well as in your Letter to the Judges. Each writing sample must include the graded<br />

rubric and final copy of the written assignment.<br />

You should explore the impact and relevance of each particular selection. You may list your<br />

responses to the following prompts according to the A-F subheading. Typing responses is a<br />

requirement with double-spacing and a minimum of 3-5 sentences for each “bullet point.” Each<br />

reflection should be on a separate page and follow the writing sample.<br />

Reflection Requirements:<br />

A. Identify 2 strengths for each selection.<br />

B. Specifically address why you feel they are strengths.<br />

C. Identify 2 weaknesses for each selection.<br />

D. Specifically address why you feel they are weaknesses.<br />

E. Why did you choose this piece? How does it reflect you as a writer and student?<br />

F. After reviewing the work, how have you grown as a writer and a student? Offer ideas for<br />

how to improve on the weaknesses and set goals for next year.<br />

66


Presentation<br />

67


Presentation Format: Tier 1<br />

Tier 1: Bronze Exhibition<br />

All seniors will showcase their capstones in an exhibition type format using the following<br />

criteria:<br />

1. Create on a tri-fold board an overview of their <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong><br />

2. Present and communicate their <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> to a standing audience with a short<br />

1 minute speech, “stump speech,” to emphasize the significance of the capstone<br />

Four judges will score each capstone during the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Bronze Exhibition. The total<br />

possible score will be 100 points on the exhibition. The judges will determine 80% of the<br />

capstone presentation and the student faculty mentor will determine the remaining 20% by<br />

assessing the overall quality of the capstone.<br />

The criteria for the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Bronze Exhibition will vary since some students will<br />

have a conclusion after completing their fieldwork verses other students who are still working on<br />

their fieldwork. The focus of the exhibition is to assess one of the 4 Cs of Common Core State<br />

Standards, which is communication. Tier 1 will give students an opportunity to present their<br />

capstone with an oral presentation.<br />

Presentation Format: Tier 2 and Tier 3<br />

Tier 2: Silver Exhibition<br />

The top 50 students will prepare a verbal presentation with visuals, which demonstrates the<br />

synthesis of the research, the capstone phases, and the growth that they experienced during the<br />

process. At the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Silver Exhibition, students will present a 7-10 minute<br />

PowerPoint or Prezi presentation about their capstone to a panel of judges. A 5-minute question<br />

debriefing will follow the presentation in which the students will answer questions about their<br />

capstone, research, and self-growth.<br />

Tier 3: Gold Exhibition<br />

The top 5 students will present at the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Gold Exhibition a 7-10 minute<br />

PowerPoint or Prezi presentation about their capstone to a panel of judges. A 5-minute question<br />

debriefing will follow the presentation in which the students will answer questions about their<br />

capstone, research, and self-growth.<br />

68


Slide 1<br />

First and Last Name<br />

Teacher<br />

Class<br />

Date of Presentation<br />

Include picture of self on slide<br />

Ex: senior yearbook picture<br />

Slide 2: Research Topic<br />

• Thesis Statement<br />

• State the purpose<br />

Presentation Outline: Tier 2 and Tier 3<br />

Slide 3: Literature Review<br />

• Reflect on the literature, theory, and/or research that guided you towards proving<br />

your thesis statement.<br />

o Include the following:<br />

Quotes<br />

Main ideas/concepts<br />

• Take from the Literature Review section of your paper<br />

• Remember to cite<br />

Slide 4: Fieldwork<br />

• State what you did for the 15 hours and how it relates to your research topic<br />

• Include pictures of you “on scene” during the 15 hours<br />

Slide 5: Method<br />

• List activities and give rationale<br />

o Timeline of events<br />

Who<br />

What<br />

When<br />

Where<br />

Why<br />

How<br />

Slide 6: Results and Discussion<br />

• Include the following:<br />

o Survey findings (if administered)<br />

o Observations<br />

Slide 7: Conclusion<br />

• Restate thesis statement<br />

o Did you prove or disprove based on Literature Review and Fieldwork?<br />

• Future research<br />

69


Slide 8: Reflection<br />

• What did you learn about<br />

o Topic<br />

o Self<br />

Slide 9: Resume <strong>High</strong>lights<br />

• Emphasize connections between resume and your research topic<br />

• State college/university that you will attend in the Fall and area of study<br />

• List activities and/or jobs that reflect you<br />

Slide 10: References or Works Cited<br />

• Copy the APA References or MLA Works Cited page from your paper.<br />

• Careful! When you cut and paste from your paper to the PowerPoint, each line<br />

will be a bullet.<br />

o Remove bullets<br />

Slide 11: Thank You<br />

• Be creative<br />

o Picture<br />

o Inspirational quote (include author)<br />

Slide 12: Questions and Answers<br />

• Panel will generate questions pertaining to your research.<br />

• Questions will make you think beyond your current self, to create meaning, to<br />

identify connections, and to envision possibilities.<br />

70


Technology Tips and Guidelines<br />

• All presentation files need to work on Microsoft’s PowerPoint 2003 software.<br />

• Please bring your PowerPoint file on a USB flash drive or CD. Having two copies of your<br />

presentation is better than one.<br />

Note: We do not do file recovery. This is another reason why it is recommended to always<br />

keep two copies.<br />

• We will have a computer and projector already set up for you. If you plan to bring your own<br />

laptop to present your material, you may only hook up to the projector via the VGA output<br />

(usually a blue plug). We do not support any other video output (example: DVI, HDMI, or<br />

Apple proprietary video output).<br />

• If you created your presentation using an Apple computer, please be sure that your<br />

presentation file will work on Microsoft’s PowerPoint software. If you want to bring your<br />

Macbook laptop, be sure to include the adapter that allows you to connect your Macbook to<br />

our projectors using VGA.<br />

• If your presentation includes sound, you may want to consider bringing computer speakers if<br />

you want it to be loud. Otherwise, you will be able to use the speakers built onto the laptop.<br />

• If you created your PowerPoint in Windows Vista, it would be best if you saved your file in a<br />

2003 format to ensure that it will work properly. To do that, click the Office Circle at the top,<br />

go down to the picture of the disk that says “Save” and choose to Save In 2003 format.<br />

• If you plan to show a video from YouTube or somewhere else on the internet, note that most<br />

of those websites are blocked and the district more than likely will refuse to unblock them<br />

during <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong>. To plan, you need to download the video from home (using a<br />

browser extension or program like Tomato YouTube downloader) and bring it on a separate<br />

file along with an FLV player. Both programs can be found by searching for them at<br />

www.download.com<br />

Preparation is key to a successful presentation, especially when dealing with technology. If you<br />

need assistance with anything, or have questions about what will or will not work please stop by<br />

the computer lab early (sometime before the day of your presentation) and ask for assistance.<br />

71


Dress Requirements<br />

Look business professional for your <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Exhibition presentation(s) because<br />

appearance counts. Dress for success and reflect <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> pride. Please follow these guidelines:<br />

Gentlemen:<br />

• Bathe, comb your hair, and shave. If you have a beard or mustache, trim it so it looks<br />

neat. Avoid heavy after-shave. Make sure that your fingernails are also clean.<br />

• Wear a shirt with a collar. Tuck it in and wear a tie!<br />

• Wear nice slacks and a belt. They may be dress slacks or khaki trousers that fit you. No<br />

jeans and no baggy pants! You may also wear a sports jacket, if you wish.<br />

• Polish your shoes. Nothing looks worse than to see a nicely dressed man only to have his<br />

appearance ruined by the presence of dirty shoes! By the way, no tennis shoes, please.<br />

Ladies:<br />

• Bathe, comb your hair, and wear minimal makeup. Easy on the perfume! This is a<br />

professional presentation, not an evening date.<br />

• Make sure fingernails are clean and avoid bright nail polish.<br />

• Wear dresses/slack suits that cover all essentials. Skimpy or provocative clothing is not<br />

appropriate for the presentations.<br />

• Wear appropriate heals or flats; avoid flip-flops and sneakers.<br />

• Wear minimal jewelry. Nothing should detract from your speech.<br />

Additional Tips for Gentlemen and Ladies:<br />

• Do not chew gum during your presentation.<br />

72


Forms<br />

73


<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> Strand Proposal<br />

Student Name: ______________ English Teacher: ______<br />

Please circle the strand that best fits your capstone research idea.<br />

• Arts, Media & Entertainment<br />

o Fashion<br />

o Interior Design<br />

o Information Technology<br />

• Education, Psychology & Public Service<br />

o General Psychology<br />

o Music Therapy<br />

o Pet Therapy<br />

o Art Therapy<br />

o Sports Psychology<br />

o Religion<br />

o Gender Issues<br />

o Body Image<br />

o Animal Rights<br />

o Child Development<br />

• Engineering & Environmental Science<br />

o Marine Bio<br />

o Architecture<br />

• Health Sciences & Medical Technology<br />

o Health Sciences<br />

o Brain Issues<br />

o Sports Medicine<br />

o Physical Therapy<br />

o Pharmaceutical<br />

o Vaccines<br />

o Nutrition<br />

o Veterinary Sciences<br />

• Business, Marketing & Sales<br />

o International Relations<br />

o Sports Management<br />

o Public Policy<br />

Write a thesis or brief research idea:<br />

______<br />

74


Parent or Guardian Liability Release Form<br />

I acknowledge that I have read the explanatory letter about the <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> and have<br />

received the booklet describing and outlining due dates for the different phases of the capstone. I<br />

understand the consequences of missing deadlines and assignments. I also understand that my<br />

senior will select the topic and capstone he/she wishes to complete, and I have reviewed this<br />

topic with my student as summarized on the reverse of this form. In the event that my senior<br />

selects a capstone that includes expenditure, I realize that this is the student’s choice, not a<br />

requirement. I further understand that if my senior undertakes a capstone by his or her choice in<br />

which risk is involved, I will not hold the school or district responsible for injury.<br />

_____________________________________<br />

Parent/Guardian Signature<br />

_____________________<br />

Date<br />

Integrity Commitment<br />

Honesty and integrity are important character traits we hope to reinforce throughout the<br />

culminating capstone. While we fervently hope we will not have to perform administrative<br />

consequences, we want to be very clear about the consequences of cheating on the culminating<br />

capstone.<br />

We define cheating as:<br />

• Plagiarizing (claiming work is yours that is not) any part of the culminating<br />

capstone, particularly the research paper.<br />

• Lying about or exaggerating the quality and/or quantity of the time spent working<br />

on the product phase; inventing or exaggerating a mentor relationship.<br />

If any of these should occur, you would be removing yourself from eligibility to give your senior<br />

board presentation, because unethical behavior has severe consequences to an organization and<br />

to self. By doing this, you would also be removing yourself from commencement exercises-you<br />

would not walk at graduation.<br />

You may have the opportunity to present your new, original work at a post-commencement<br />

board. Provided you pass that board, and satisfy the other graduation requirements, you would<br />

still earn your diploma.<br />

I have also reviewed the above Integrity Commitment with my student and both parties fully<br />

understand the consequences of cheating. We commit to honesty and integrity regarding the<br />

whole <strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> experience.<br />

____________________________ ____________________________ _________<br />

Parent/Guardian Name Parent/Guardian Signature Date<br />

____________________________ ____________________________ _________<br />

Student Name Student Signature Date<br />

75


Faculty Mentor Form<br />

Student Name: ______________ English Teacher: ______<br />

Please have the faculty mentor verify your attendance during the Wednesday meetings.<br />

____________________________________<br />

Faculty Mentor Name<br />

____________________________________<br />

Faculty Mentor Signature<br />

Work Phone: (_____) ________________________ Email: _____________________________<br />

Wednesday Meetings<br />

Date<br />

Mentor Signature<br />

76


Fieldwork Time Sheet<br />

Student Name: ______________ English Teacher: ______<br />

Date<br />

Start<br />

Time<br />

End<br />

Time<br />

Brief Description<br />

Hours<br />

Total Hours _________<br />

____________________________ ____________________________ _________<br />

Faculty Mentor Name Faculty Mentor Signature Date<br />

77


Rubrics<br />

78


Resume Rubric<br />

Student Name: ______________ English Teacher: ______<br />

Contact Information<br />

1 Point Each<br />

Skill Application Yes No<br />

First and Last Name (highlight in bold and larger than rest of resume)<br />

Street Address, City, State, ZIP Code<br />

Telephone Number (including area code)<br />

Email Address (without hyperlink)<br />

Education<br />

Skill Application Yes No<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s Name<br />

City, State<br />

Graduation Month and Year<br />

*When college education is in progress or completed, high school education is eliminated<br />

Experience (Jobs, Internships, Volunteer Work)<br />

Skill Application Yes No<br />

Title/Position (highlight in bold)<br />

Company/Organization Name<br />

City, State<br />

Month(s) and Year(s) Employed<br />

4-6 Bullet Points for each experience (emphasize specific skills and achievements)<br />

Verbs start each bullet point describing experience<br />

(past for past experiences and present for current)<br />

Activities/Awards (Clubs, Sports)<br />

Skill Application Yes No<br />

Activity Name<br />

Month(s) and Year(s)<br />

Computer Skills<br />

Operating System(s)<br />

Application Software<br />

Skill Application Yes No<br />

Mechanics/Usage/Spelling/Format<br />

Skill Application Yes No<br />

Standard font and size with even margins, correct form and structure<br />

Chronological layout (most recent first)<br />

No spelling errors, typos, abbreviations, or poor grammar<br />

Comments:<br />

Total Score: _________ /20<br />

79


Annotated Bibliography Rubric<br />

Student Name: __________________________ English Teacher: __________________________<br />

Sources<br />

Annotations<br />

Citation Formatting<br />

Overall Presentation<br />

Above Standard (4) At Standard (3) Approaching Standard (2) Below Standard (1)<br />

Uses a variety of sources: books, Good sources but not enough Good sources but not enough Relies too heavily on reference<br />

critical articles, reference variety, relies too heavily on one variety, relies too heavily on one sources and biographies.<br />

sources, and biographies. type of source.<br />

type of source. All sources come Has two or more un-credible or<br />

All sources are credible and At least 4 sources.<br />

from one database or catalog. irrelevant sources.<br />

relevant.<br />

Has un-credible or irrelevant At least 2 sources.<br />

At least 5 sources.<br />

sources.<br />

All entries show full competence<br />

in all of the following:<br />

• Summary: brief summary of<br />

the source.<br />

• Relevance: indication of its<br />

potential use for paper.<br />

• Credibility: indication source<br />

has been evaluated and<br />

deemed appropriate for<br />

academic paper.<br />

No errors. All citations have all<br />

of the elements of the following<br />

fields:<br />

• Author<br />

• Title<br />

• Publication<br />

• Retrieval/format<br />

All of the following features:<br />

• Annotated Bibliography<br />

centered at the top<br />

• Font: Times New Roman<br />

• Font Size: 12<br />

• Margins: 1 inch<br />

• Alpha ordering<br />

• Hanging indent<br />

• Double spaced<br />

• Annotations begin at the end<br />

of each citation<br />

Most entries show full<br />

competence in all of the<br />

following:<br />

• Summary: brief summary of<br />

the source.<br />

• Relevance: clear indication of<br />

its potential use for paper.<br />

• Credibility: indication source<br />

has been evaluated and<br />

deemed appropriate for<br />

academic paper.<br />

Perfect except for a few minor<br />

typo errors. All citations have all<br />

of the elements of the following<br />

fields:<br />

• Author<br />

• Title<br />

• Publication<br />

• Retrieval/format<br />

All but one of the following<br />

features:<br />

• Annotated Bibliography<br />

centered at the top<br />

• Font: Times New Roman<br />

• Font Size 12<br />

• Margins: 1 inch<br />

• Alpha ordering<br />

• Hanging indent<br />

• Double spaced<br />

• Annotations begin at the end<br />

of each citation<br />

At least 3 sources.<br />

Most entries show full<br />

competence of any two of the<br />

three criteria. All four criteria are<br />

included in the annotation, but<br />

full competence in each criterion<br />

is not exhibited.<br />

Citations follow basic outline of<br />

APA or MLA style but have<br />

some errors. For most citations,<br />

three or all of the following<br />

fields has all the criteria.<br />

All but two of the following<br />

features:<br />

• Annotated Bibliography<br />

centered at the top<br />

• Font: Times New Roman<br />

• Font Size 12<br />

• Margins: 1 inch<br />

• Alpha ordering<br />

• Hanging indent<br />

• Double spaced<br />

• Annotations begin at the end<br />

of each citation<br />

Most entries only show full<br />

competence of any one of the<br />

criteria.<br />

Some citations do not have<br />

annotations.<br />

Citations follow basic outline of<br />

APA or MLA style but have<br />

some errors. Most citations have<br />

two or three of the following<br />

fields.<br />

Displays at least three of the<br />

criteria.<br />

80


Research Paper Rubric<br />

Student Name: __________________________ English Teacher: __________________________<br />

Title Page<br />

Introduction<br />

Literature Review<br />

Method<br />

Above Standard (4) At Standard (3) Approaching Standard (2) Below Standard (1)<br />

Appropriate in tone, structure, Suggests nature of the study; Identifies only one variable of<br />

and length; generally explanatory may identify only one variable of the study; contains superfluous<br />

of the study; suggests design. the study; suggests design. information; lacks design<br />

Appropriate in tone, structure,<br />

and length; fully explanatory of<br />

the study; allows reader to<br />

anticipate design.<br />

Clear statement of problem under<br />

investigation; clearly states<br />

goal(s) of the study; problem<br />

identified in introductory<br />

paragraph.<br />

Articles reviewed are relevant to<br />

the problem being investigated;<br />

coverage of previous empirical<br />

and theoretical studies is<br />

thorough; issues are clearly<br />

explained; issues related to the<br />

problem are discussed in a<br />

logical progression; the number<br />

of articles cited is sufficient for<br />

the task.<br />

Contains concisely organized<br />

information that allows the study<br />

to be replicated; includes all<br />

subsections including site or<br />

setting, participants, materials<br />

and procedures; identifies<br />

sequential information in an<br />

appropriate chronology; does not<br />

contain unnecessary, wordy<br />

descriptions of procedures.<br />

Problem under investigation<br />

stated in general terms; goals of<br />

the study stated less clearly;<br />

problem identified in<br />

introductory paragraph.<br />

Articles reviewed are relevant to<br />

the problem; coverage of<br />

previous empirical and<br />

theoretical studies may not be<br />

complete; some confusion over<br />

concepts or issues may be<br />

present; issues related to the<br />

problem may not be presented in<br />

a logical order; the number of<br />

articles is adequate for the task.<br />

As in 4, but contains unnecessary<br />

or superfluous information or<br />

wordy descriptions within the<br />

section.<br />

Introductory paragraph may not<br />

identify problem under<br />

investigation; nature of problem<br />

being studied is not clear to the<br />

reader; the reader has to find the<br />

goals of the study.<br />

Some articles reviewed are<br />

irrelevant to the problem, or<br />

relevant articles from the<br />

literature are not reviewed;<br />

important information about<br />

articles being reviewed may be<br />

left out, and/or irrelevant<br />

information may be included;<br />

confusion about some concepts<br />

or issues being discussed; issues<br />

related to the problem are not<br />

organized in a way which<br />

effectively supports the<br />

argument, are arranged<br />

chronologically, or are arranged<br />

article by article; the number of<br />

articles is fewer than necessary<br />

for the task.<br />

Presents a study that is definitely<br />

replicable; all information in<br />

document may be related to this<br />

section but fails to identify some<br />

sources of data or presents<br />

sequential information in a<br />

disorganized, difficult way; may<br />

contain unnecessary or<br />

superfluous information.<br />

information or is misleading.<br />

Problem not identified in<br />

introductory paragraph; reader<br />

may be unable to determine the<br />

problem being investigated; the<br />

purpose and/or goals of the study<br />

are not apparent to the reader.<br />

Articles reviewed are not directly<br />

related to the problem, though<br />

they may be in the same general<br />

conceptual area; important<br />

information from articles is<br />

ignored, and irrelevant<br />

information is included; lack of<br />

understanding of concepts or<br />

issues being discussed;<br />

presentation of previous research<br />

and theory not organized in a<br />

logical manner; inadequate<br />

number of articles reviewed.<br />

Presents a study that is<br />

marginally replicable; parts of<br />

the basic design must be inferred<br />

by the reader; procedures not<br />

described; some information in<br />

results and discussion cannot be<br />

anticipated by reading the<br />

method section.<br />

81


Results and Discussion<br />

Conclusion<br />

References/Works Cited<br />

Appendices<br />

Mechanics & <strong>Writing</strong> Style<br />

APA/MLA Format<br />

Includes the major results and<br />

collection of the data. Data is<br />

presented in relation to each goal<br />

and is factual (may include<br />

tables, charts, illustrations or<br />

graphs). Consistently refers back<br />

to the literature review.<br />

Provides a discussion with<br />

conclusions, implications for<br />

learning beyond the project, and<br />

implications for policy and future<br />

research.<br />

List of reference citations is<br />

complete; all references/works<br />

cited in the body of the paper are<br />

listed, but only those works;<br />

references/works cited is listed in<br />

alphabetical order; proper<br />

APA/MLA citation format is<br />

followed.<br />

Includes original surveys or<br />

referenced charts, etc.<br />

Student has written elegantly and<br />

cogently, using proper grammar,<br />

syntax, punctuation, and<br />

spelling; the paper has a neat<br />

appearance and is free of<br />

typographical errors; wording is<br />

appropriate to the context;<br />

paragraphs are well constructed;<br />

paper exhibits a logical “flow”<br />

from section to section; student<br />

used proper voice for the paper.<br />

Student has followed all<br />

conventions for proper format of<br />

a research report as described in<br />

the APA/MLA Publication<br />

<strong>Manual</strong> (current edition).<br />

As in 4, but may contain<br />

unnecessary information or<br />

superficial discussion of results.<br />

Inconsistently refers back to the<br />

literature review.<br />

As in 4, but may provide a<br />

superficial discussion of<br />

implication for learning beyond<br />

the project.<br />

As in 4, but references/works<br />

cited are listed that were not<br />

cited in the paper; minor errors in<br />

APA/MLA reference format may<br />

be present.<br />

Mostly includes original surveys<br />

or referenced charts, etc.<br />

As in 4, but with occasional<br />

uncorrected typographical errors,<br />

or a very few minor errors in<br />

spelling, grammar, syntax, or<br />

punctuation; however, errors do<br />

not detract from the overall<br />

ability to convey meaning; the<br />

paper is not as elegant.<br />

Student has made minor<br />

deviations in APA/MLA format:<br />

e.g., incorrect form of page<br />

headers, improper section<br />

headings, or incorrect citation<br />

format of references.<br />

As in 3, but does not relate data<br />

to each goal.<br />

Concludes the research project,<br />

but does not discuss implications<br />

beyond it.<br />

As in 3; student has not followed<br />

proper APA/MLA format for<br />

citations.<br />

Somewhat includes original<br />

surveys or referenced charts, etc.<br />

The paper exhibits numerous<br />

typographical errors and repeated<br />

errors in basic elements of<br />

writing; the student has not<br />

expressed ideas with clarity and<br />

precision; transitions between<br />

paragraphs are awkward;<br />

wording of sentences tends to<br />

simplistic in style and content.<br />

As in 3, but more serious and<br />

consistent errors in APA/MLA<br />

format: e.g., subsections are<br />

omitted, absence of page headers<br />

or numbers, non-APA/MLA<br />

style citation format, improper<br />

tense or voice for the paper,<br />

figures/tables inserted in<br />

incorrect location of paper.<br />

As in 2, but includes unnecessary<br />

information or superficial<br />

discussion of results. Does not<br />

refer back to literature review.<br />

Does not effectively conclude the<br />

project or discuss further<br />

implications.<br />

Does not include all references<br />

cited in body of the paper;<br />

information in the<br />

references/works cited is<br />

incorrect or incomplete;<br />

references do not follow<br />

APA/MLA citation format.<br />

Does not appropriately include<br />

original surveys or referenced<br />

charts, etc.<br />

The student has displayed serious<br />

and consistent problems in basic<br />

writing skill; the ability to<br />

express ideas is compromised by<br />

the poor writing quality.<br />

Major errors in APA/MLA<br />

format: e.g., major sections of<br />

paper omitted, information<br />

presented in incorrect sections,<br />

critical information omitted,<br />

figures or tables left out.<br />

82


Portfolio Rubric<br />

Student Name: ______________ English Teacher: ______<br />

1 Point Each<br />

Skill Application Yes No<br />

Spiral Bound<br />

Cover Page correctly formatted<br />

Table of Contents with correct page numbers<br />

Information (tab)<br />

Letter to the Judges<br />

Resume<br />

Parent or Guardian Liability Release Form<br />

Faculty Mentor Form<br />

<strong>Sea</strong> <strong>King</strong> <strong>Capstone</strong> (tab)<br />

Research Paper; revised<br />

Research Paper Rubric; grade marks<br />

Fieldwork Time Sheet<br />

Fieldwork Evidence<br />

Cumulative <strong>Writing</strong> (tab)<br />

Grade 9 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample<br />

Grade 9 Reflection<br />

Grade 10 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample<br />

Grade 10 Reflection<br />

Grade 11 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample<br />

Grade 11 Reflection<br />

Grade 12 <strong>Writing</strong> Sample<br />

Grade 12 Reflection<br />

* Tabs are worth 1 point<br />

Total Score: _______/20<br />

83


Presentation Rubric: Tier 1<br />

Student Name: __________________________ English Teacher: __________________________<br />

5—Clearly a knowledgeable, practiced skill<br />

4—Evidence of a developing skill<br />

3—Superficial, random, limited consistencies<br />

2—Did not demonstrate appropriate skill<br />

1—Unacceptable skill application<br />

0—Missing<br />

Content/Organization<br />

Skill Application 5 4 3 2 1 0<br />

Introduction<br />

Delivers effective attention grabber<br />

States the purpose/thesis statement<br />

Literature Review Connects main ideas with research<br />

Fieldwork Connects thesis with 15 or more hours of fieldwork<br />

Method<br />

Describes activities and leadership practices that address the capstone<br />

Provides evidence of thoughtful planning<br />

Results and Discussion Presents findings that connect to the goals of the capstone<br />

Conclusion Effectively summarizes capstone<br />

Reflection Discusses the importance of the findings and makes substantiated recommendations for the future<br />

Resume <strong>High</strong>lights Shares relevant resume highlights and articulates clear links to the capstone<br />

________/50<br />

Delivery Presentation Time: ________ minute(s)<br />

Skill Application 5 4 3 2 1 0<br />

Time Meets 1 minute time requirement<br />

Visual Aid Tri-fold enhances the presentation and keeps the audience informed and engaged<br />

Effective and engaging verbal presentation (voice projection with clear tone and pronunciation)<br />

Effective and engaging non-verbal presentation (eye contact and poised posture)<br />

Style<br />

Demonstrates confidence<br />

Dress and appearance<br />

________/30<br />

Portfolio _______/20<br />

Total Score: ________/100<br />

84


Presentation Rubric: Tier 2 and Tier 3<br />

Student Name: __________________________ English Teacher: __________________________<br />

5—Clearly a knowledgeable, practiced skill<br />

4—Evidence of a developing skill<br />

3—Superficial, random, limited consistencies<br />

2—Did not demonstrate appropriate skill<br />

1—Unacceptable skill application<br />

0—Missing<br />

Content/Organization<br />

Skill Application 5 4 3 2 1 0<br />

Introduction<br />

Delivers effective attention grabber<br />

States the purpose/thesis statement<br />

Literature Review Connects main ideas with research<br />

Fieldwork Connects thesis with 15 or more hours of fieldwork<br />

Method<br />

Describes activities and leadership practices that address the capstone<br />

Provides evidence of thoughtful planning<br />

Results and Discussion Presents findings that connect to the goals of the capstone<br />

Conclusion Effectively summarizes capstone<br />

Reflection Discusses the importance of the findings and makes substantiated recommendations for the future<br />

Resume <strong>High</strong>lights Shares relevant resume highlights and articulates clear links to the capstone<br />

________/50<br />

Delivery Presentation Time: ________ minutes<br />

Skill Application 5 4 3 2 1 0<br />

Time Meets 7-10 minute time requirement<br />

Visual Aid PowerPoint or Prezi enhances the presentation and keeps the audience informed and engaged<br />

Effective and engaging verbal presentation (voice projection with clear tone and pronunciation)<br />

Effective and engaging non-verbal presentation (eye contact and poised posture)<br />

Style<br />

Demonstrates confidence<br />

Dress and appearance<br />

Question/Answer<br />

Responses<br />

________/30<br />

Skill Application 5 4 3 2 1 0<br />

Responses to questions are focused and relevant<br />

Demonstrates interest and enthusiasm<br />

Responses link to fieldwork, leadership, and reflection to capstone<br />

Clarifies, restates ideas, and elaborates on capstone findings<br />

________/20<br />

Total Score: ________/100<br />

85

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!