• There are three kinds of card catalog – the title card, the author card and the subject card.
• The title card presents the title of each book on the first line of the card.
• The author card lists each book by the author’s last name.
• The subject card lists each book of non – fiction by the name of its subject.
• The call helps us find any book in the library. It is preset in all three card catalogs.
English 111 Spring 2020 Dr. De Naples Adapted from Dr. .docxgidmanmary
English 111 Spring 2020 Dr. De Naples
Adapted from Dr. Groth’s ENG 111 assignment
Essay 2: Immigration, Citizenship, National Interest
Any debate about immigration is informed by ideas about the character of a nation.
Immigrants impact not just the current workforce, institutions, culture, and political
orientation of a society; more important, they shape the nation’s future. What is this
country all about? How do we want to evolve? What kind of society do we want to be and
become?
While the United States has always been a country of immigrants, historically
immigration was restricted in many ways. There have been waves of immigrants from
different parts of the world, and at different times certain groups were deemed more
desirable than others. The debate about who should be allowed to come here and
ultimately become American citizens continues. The political struggle about President
Trump’s proposed wall at the US-Mexican border is one manifestation of a long history
of arguments for and against immigration.
Assignment: Write a 3- to 4-page essay using at least 3 of the following sources as
well as several interviews with people who represent the various political positions on
the issue. If you like, you may use other sources, preferably articles from reputable
magazines and newspapers, like The Guardian, The New York Times, and The Wall
Street Journal. You don’t have to take a position, though you are welcome to if you
wish—just be sure to marshal some evidence to support your view. Either way—staying
neutral or offering your opinion—your essay needs to shed light on the complex
motivations and concerns of proponents and opponents of immigration. Why do people
feel the way they do? Why do they get so passionate about immigration? Discuss 3 or 4
related issues, one per paragraph at minimum. (If you have more to say about a
particular issue, feel free to extend your discussion to multiple paragraphs.) Make sure
each paragraph uses information from a source.
Below are titles of articles and web sites where you will find good sources for this
assignment as well as jumping-off points for deeper exploration. I was able to find these
by entering the title and author/agency into Google and clicking through to the site or
the article. You should have similar results, but feel free to contact me if you’re having
trouble.
AFL-CIO. “Immigration.” 2019.
Camarota, Steven A. “The Case Against Immigration: Why the United States Should Look Out for
Itself.” Center for Immigrations Studies. 2018.
DeParle, Jason. “How Stephen Miller Seized the Moment to Battle Immigration.” The New York
Times. 2019.
Hauslohner, Abigail, and Nick Miroff, Maria Sacchetti, and Tracy Jan. “Trump officials move to deny
green cards, path to citizenship for poor immigrants.” The Washington Post. 2019.
Kazin, Michael. “How Labor Learned to Love Immigration.” New Republic. 2013.
Seller, Maxine. “Historical Perspectives on Am ...
Alternative Medicine Essay.pdfAlternative Medicine Essay. Alternative and Tra...Carolyn Wagner
Alternative vs Conventional Medicine Essay Example | StudyHippo.com. Lesson 20 | Alternative Medicine | Essays. Alternative medicine research paper pdf. Philippine Traditional and Alternative Medicine - Philippine .... Essay about alternative medicine. Essay on alternative medicine - awesomethesis.x.fc2.com. Opinion essay alternative medicine. Free Alternative Medicine Essay Examples And Topic Ideas | Studymoose.com. Complementary, Alternative and Integrative Medicine Essay Example .... Yoga as an alternative medicine Essay Example | Topics and Well Written .... Conventional And Alternative Medicine: Free Compare and Contrast Essay .... ≫ Benefits and Harmful of Traditional Medicine Free Essay Sample on .... Alternative Medicine Research Paper Example - EssayEmpire. Essay On Alternative Medicine | PDF. essay alternative medicine. How Alternative Medicine Has An Impact On Mainstream Medicine Essay. Alternative medicine research paper. How to Write Alternative Medicine Paper - Mega Effective Guideline!. PTE Academic Essay Writing Task 2 - Alternative forms of medicine .... Research paper alternative medicine - deaththesis.x.fc2.com. Alternative medicine essay. Essays on Alternative Medicine. Essay .... Traditional and Alternative Medicine Free Essay Example. Complimentary and alternative medicine in nursing Essay.
• There are three kinds of card catalog – the title card, the author card and the subject card.
• The title card presents the title of each book on the first line of the card.
• The author card lists each book by the author’s last name.
• The subject card lists each book of non – fiction by the name of its subject.
• The call helps us find any book in the library. It is preset in all three card catalogs.
English 111 Spring 2020 Dr. De Naples Adapted from Dr. .docxgidmanmary
English 111 Spring 2020 Dr. De Naples
Adapted from Dr. Groth’s ENG 111 assignment
Essay 2: Immigration, Citizenship, National Interest
Any debate about immigration is informed by ideas about the character of a nation.
Immigrants impact not just the current workforce, institutions, culture, and political
orientation of a society; more important, they shape the nation’s future. What is this
country all about? How do we want to evolve? What kind of society do we want to be and
become?
While the United States has always been a country of immigrants, historically
immigration was restricted in many ways. There have been waves of immigrants from
different parts of the world, and at different times certain groups were deemed more
desirable than others. The debate about who should be allowed to come here and
ultimately become American citizens continues. The political struggle about President
Trump’s proposed wall at the US-Mexican border is one manifestation of a long history
of arguments for and against immigration.
Assignment: Write a 3- to 4-page essay using at least 3 of the following sources as
well as several interviews with people who represent the various political positions on
the issue. If you like, you may use other sources, preferably articles from reputable
magazines and newspapers, like The Guardian, The New York Times, and The Wall
Street Journal. You don’t have to take a position, though you are welcome to if you
wish—just be sure to marshal some evidence to support your view. Either way—staying
neutral or offering your opinion—your essay needs to shed light on the complex
motivations and concerns of proponents and opponents of immigration. Why do people
feel the way they do? Why do they get so passionate about immigration? Discuss 3 or 4
related issues, one per paragraph at minimum. (If you have more to say about a
particular issue, feel free to extend your discussion to multiple paragraphs.) Make sure
each paragraph uses information from a source.
Below are titles of articles and web sites where you will find good sources for this
assignment as well as jumping-off points for deeper exploration. I was able to find these
by entering the title and author/agency into Google and clicking through to the site or
the article. You should have similar results, but feel free to contact me if you’re having
trouble.
AFL-CIO. “Immigration.” 2019.
Camarota, Steven A. “The Case Against Immigration: Why the United States Should Look Out for
Itself.” Center for Immigrations Studies. 2018.
DeParle, Jason. “How Stephen Miller Seized the Moment to Battle Immigration.” The New York
Times. 2019.
Hauslohner, Abigail, and Nick Miroff, Maria Sacchetti, and Tracy Jan. “Trump officials move to deny
green cards, path to citizenship for poor immigrants.” The Washington Post. 2019.
Kazin, Michael. “How Labor Learned to Love Immigration.” New Republic. 2013.
Seller, Maxine. “Historical Perspectives on Am ...
Alternative Medicine Essay.pdfAlternative Medicine Essay. Alternative and Tra...Carolyn Wagner
Alternative vs Conventional Medicine Essay Example | StudyHippo.com. Lesson 20 | Alternative Medicine | Essays. Alternative medicine research paper pdf. Philippine Traditional and Alternative Medicine - Philippine .... Essay about alternative medicine. Essay on alternative medicine - awesomethesis.x.fc2.com. Opinion essay alternative medicine. Free Alternative Medicine Essay Examples And Topic Ideas | Studymoose.com. Complementary, Alternative and Integrative Medicine Essay Example .... Yoga as an alternative medicine Essay Example | Topics and Well Written .... Conventional And Alternative Medicine: Free Compare and Contrast Essay .... ≫ Benefits and Harmful of Traditional Medicine Free Essay Sample on .... Alternative Medicine Research Paper Example - EssayEmpire. Essay On Alternative Medicine | PDF. essay alternative medicine. How Alternative Medicine Has An Impact On Mainstream Medicine Essay. Alternative medicine research paper. How to Write Alternative Medicine Paper - Mega Effective Guideline!. PTE Academic Essay Writing Task 2 - Alternative forms of medicine .... Research paper alternative medicine - deaththesis.x.fc2.com. Alternative medicine essay. Essays on Alternative Medicine. Essay .... Traditional and Alternative Medicine Free Essay Example. Complimentary and alternative medicine in nursing Essay.
Running head MYTHS OF LATINO IMMIGRATION .docxjeanettehully
Running head: MYTHS OF LATINO IMMIGRATION 1
MYTHS OF LATINO IMMIGRATION 3
Myths of Latino Immigration (revised)
Myth Outlining Worksheet
1. What is your myth?
A common myth about Latino is that Latino is homogenous naturally existing and an easily identifiable group of people.
2. What is your argument about your myth? (Should be two to three concise sentences.)
This myth is wrong because Latino is not a homogenous group or an easily identifiable group because Latino is the group that is initially from areas with different ancestries. Latino population is consisting of many types, say, Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban or Dominican, and they are not easily identified.
Evidence
I. Latino comprises of several sub-groups with unique identities
· One of the typical stereotype and mentality regarding the Latinos in America is that they have a shared ethnic background, race, and culture.
· However, the reality is that Latino comprises of several sub-groups with unique identities (Holloway, 2008, p.5).
· In the United States, Latino is defined in terms of their nationalities or the countries that they originated.
· For example, in the case of Midwest and Southwest, Latinos are seen as Mexicans.
· In the eastern part of America, particularly New York and Boston regions, Latino is people who are considered to have limitations of communications with the Dominicans and Puerto Ricans.
· In this case, Latinos are defined by their inability to communicate with o people other in the region. In the case of Miami, Cubans, and Central America, Latinos are groups for interpreting Latin America.
· Latin America is considered a group of Latin people who originate from different nationalities. In chapter three, Social Polarization and Colonized Labor: Puerto Ricans in the United States, between 1945–2000 Kelvin Antiago-Valles & Jiménez-Muñoz assert that the idea of homogeneity is quite extensive to the extent of some politicians treating Latino Americans as culturally unified people.
· Latino is racially diverse, thus making the ethnic category rather than a race (Gutiérrez, 2008, p.129). Technically, anyone from central, South America and the Caribbean can be described as Latino because the regions were previously empires of Spanish, Portuguese and French.
· Also, Latino as an ethnicity, has people from different nationalities. Several races are comprised of the group. The only similarity they have is that they are not the original inhabitants in America. Latinos have their roots in the immigrant groups that moved to America.
2. Latino originated from different countries with varying cultures.
· Latino is not easy to identify in terms of cultural practices.
· In chapter six, The Other “Other Hispanics”: South American–Origin Latinos In the United States, Espitia states t ...
Reflective Essay- Nursing professionDirectionsImagine or be s.docxcarlt3
Reflective Essay- Nursing profession
Directions:Imagine or be sure to ask your nurse to be specific and provide examples and stories. 300 words per questions below:
Reminder: Respond to the following questions below.
1. Why did you choose nursing as a profession?
1. What was nursing school like for him or her? Ask them:
1. How they managed and balanced work, family and life and the difficulties.
1. The level of commitment to school required to be successful (hrs. required for studying, social life, workload)
1. What their clinical and lab experiences were like.
1. How they prepared for examinations and the NCLEX.
1. Describe their top three patient memories and why they are memorable.
1. What does the phrase “Nurse-Life” mean to this nurse?
1. What is the hardest thing about being a nurse?
1. Reflect and discuss what your thoughts are about the interview. Did the interview change your perspective on nursing, on nursing school or life?
Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, Vol. 11, No. 1, 2011, pp. 300--313
This paper is part of an ASAP special collection on Social Psychology and Contemporary
Immigration Policy
Economic Dynamics and Changes in Attitudes
Toward Undocumented Mexican Immigrants
in Arizona
Priscila Diaz,∗ Delia S. Saenz, and Virginia S.Y. Kwan
Arizona State University
Mexican immigration to the United States comprises an important social issue
in contemporary public policy debate, particularly given the recent passage of
Arizona’s Senate Bill 1070 (SB 1070). The current study investigated how indi-
viduals’ sentiments toward undocumented Mexican immigrants shifted between
2006 and 2009 in Arizona, and also examined economic concomitants to these
shifts. Participants included 3,195 culturally diverse students attending a state
university in Arizona. They reported their attitudes toward undocumented Mex-
ican immigrants regarding housing, employment, values, social welfare, citizen-
ship, health care, and education issues. Results show less-positive attitudes as
each year progressed among European and Latino Americans, as well as other
ethnic minorities. Further, anti-undocumented immigrant sentiment increased as
unemployment increased and gross domestic product real growth rate decreased.
Ethnic differences emerged in the relative negativity toward undocumented immi-
grants such that European Americans were less positive towards undocumented
Mexican immigrants than Latinos over 4 years. These findings suggest that eco-
nomic dynamics may beget anti-immigrant sentiment, leading to contentious leg-
islation, such as Arizona’s recent immigration law.
“America has constantly drawn strength and spirit from wave after wave of immigrants. . .They
have proved to be the most restless, the most adventurous, the most innovative, the most
industrious of people.” – Bill Clinton, 42nd U.S. President
Nearly all U.S. citizens have roots in other countries from which they, their
parents, or one of their ancestors from 300 ye.
Assignment 1 ecree Please note that ecree works best in Firefox.docxfelicitytaft14745
Assignment 1 ecree
Please note that ecree works best in Firefox and Chrome.
Please do not use Internet Explorer or mobile devices when using ecree.
Assignment 1: Dealing with Diversity in America from Reconstruction through the 1920s Due Week 3 and worth 120 points After the Civil War, the United States had to recover from war, handle western expansion, and grapple with very new economic forms. However, its greatest issues would revolve around the legacies of slavery and increasing diversity in the decades after the Civil War. In the South, former slaves now had freedom and new opportunities but, despite the Reconstruction period, faced old prejudices and rapidly forming new barriers. Immigrants from Europe and Asia came in large numbers but then faced political and social restrictions. Women continued to seek rights. Yet, on the whole, America became increasingly diverse by the 1920s. Consider developments, policies, and laws in that period from 1865 to the 1920s. Examine the statement below and drawing from provided sources, present a paper with specific examples and arguments to demonstrate the validity of your position. Statement—in which you can take a pro or con position: Political policies and movements in the period from 1865 to the 1920s generally promoted diversity and “the melting pot” despite the strong prejudices of a few. (or you can take the position that they did not). Use specific examples of policies or movements from different decades to support your position. After giving general consideration to your readings so far and any general research, select one of the positions above as your position—your thesis. (Sometimes after doing more thorough research, you might choose the reverse position. This happens with critical thinking and inquiry. Your final paper might end up taking a different position than you originally envisioned.)
Organize your paper as follows, handling these issues:
The position you choose —or something close to it—will be the thesis statement in your opening paragraph.To support your position, use three (3) specific examples from different decades between 1865 and 1930. You may narrowly focus on race or gender or immigrant status, or you may use examples relevant to all categories.Explain why the opposing view is weak in comparison to yours.Consider your life today: In what way does the history you have shown shape or impact issues in your workplace or desired profession?
Length: The paper should be 500-to-750 words in length.
Research and References: You must use a MINIMUM of three sources; the Schultz textbook must be one of them. Your other two sources should be drawn from the list provided below.
This is guided research, not open-ended Googling. Source list for Assignment 1: Some sources are “primary” sources from the time period being studied. Some sources below can be accessed via direct link or through the primary sources links on Blackboard. Each week has a differen.
Lecture Overview One Nation or Many Nations Supreme Cour.docxsmile790243
Lecture Overview: One Nation or Many Nations? Supreme Court and CongressFreedom of States to Deny FreedomSuppressing Indian SovereigntyWhat is the West? Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Frederick Jackson Turner on the West White Manifest Destiny and Indian Removal An “Empire of Liberty” from the Plains Sioux PerspectiveThe 1840sTreaty of Fort Laramie (1851)1868 TreatyDestruction of the BisonU.S. Colonialism on the ReservationDawes General Allotment Act (1887)Dawes Sioux Act (1889)Massacre at Wounded Knee (1890)
Supreme Court DecisionsEnforcement Acts (1870,1871)US v. Cruishank (1876)Slaughterhouse Cases (1873)US v. Reese (1876)Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)Dignity versus DeferenceInstitutionalizing inequality
Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock (1903)Congress granted “plenary powers”
1871, Congress declares Native Americans “wards of the government”
What is the West?
John Gast, American Progress (1873)
Mexican-American Mine Workers,
Southwest, 1890s
Hydraulic Mining
One Nation or Many Nations?Thomas JeffersonThe West as empty and populated
One Nation or Many Nations?Thomas JeffersonThe West as empty and populatedAn “Empire of Liberty”
One Nation of Many Nations?
Theodore RooseveltThe Winning of the West (1900)Social DarwinistConquering the West and Indians was central to American identity
One Nation or Many Nations?
Frederick Jackson Turner“the meeting point between savagery and civilization”Neither savage nor European, but
uniquely American
1804-1876 1876-1877 1889
The Plains Sioux Loss of Land in the 19th Century
Buffalo Hunting in the Old Days by Howling Wolf
One Nation or Many Nations?White Manifest DestinyGod’s chosen peopleSubduing and replenishing the EarthEmpire buildingIndian RemovalExtinction or Assimilation on the Reservation
Treaty of Fort Laramie (1851)Territorial lines drawnSafe passage for migrantsAnnuities of $50,000
Fort Laramie Treaty (1851)War over the Bozeman Trail (1865-1868)
1868 TreatyBozeman Trail abandonedRights over buffalo in neighboring areasNon-interference with railroadsRights of passage75% of male vote required to annex landAnnual annuities, rations, and clothesAgencies established on reservationsChildren required to attend schools
Seizing a Soldier’s Gun at the Battle of the Little Big Horn
Drawing by Wooden Leg.
1804-1876 1876-1877
The Plains Sioux Loss of Land
between 1851 and 1876
In 1890, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Thomas Jefferson Morgan wrote:
“It has become the settled policy of the Government to break up reservations, destroy tribal relations, settle Indians upon their own homesteads, incorporate them into the national life, and deal with them not as nations or tribes or bands, but as individual citizens. The American Indian is to become the Indian American.”
Rations line. Lakota women regularly stood in line waiting to receive rations of flour, coffee, and sugar.
“Seven Litt ...
How did the 1920s fall into fascism, and how did we start walking down a similar road? How does Rowling's story of angry Grindelwald and his quest for Wizard Supremacy mirror it? Parallels between then and now.
Topic essay outline. Essay Outline: Definition, 5. 2022-10-28. Essay Sample University PDF. How To Write An Analytical Essay: with Topics amp; Examples. How to Write an Analytical Essay with Samples EssayPro. Sample Essay Outlines - 34 Examples, Format, Pdf Examples. Analytical Essay Outline Worksheet - worksheet. Persuasive Essay: English essay outline template. Analysis essay outline. Literary Analysis Outline Young Goodman .... 3 Analytical Essay Outline Templates Free amp; Premium Templates Topic .... 003 Essay Example Outline And Thatsnotus. 3 Analytical Essay Outline Templates Free amp; Premium Templates. Rhetorical Analysis Outline Worksheet. Analytical essay introduction. Complete Analytical Essay Writing .... 3 Analytical Essay Outline Templates Free amp; Premium Templates .... Fall Of The Roman Empire Essay. 012 Essay Example Outline Guide Process Thesis Statement Expository .... 37 Outstanding Essay Outline Templates Argumentative, Narrative .... Rhetorical analysis outline example. How to Write a Rhetorical .... What is an analytical essay. Example of Analysis in Essays. 2022-10-30. An analytical paper. How to Write an Analysis Paper. 2022-11-06. How to Write an Essay Outline 21 Examples FREE Templates. How to Write an Analytical Essay: A Complete Guide amp; Examples .... A Guide on an Analytical Essay Outline with Examples. Narrative Essay: Analytical outline. 10 Download Free Essay Outline Sampletemplatess. How to Write Analytical Essay - Complete Essay Format Analytical .... Sample Analytical Essay Outline - Templates amp; Examples. Business Proposal Examples - Research Proposal Template - 3 Printable .... How To Write An Analytical Paragraph : How to write an analytical essay .... Free Printable Essay Outline Template - Printable Templates. College essay: Analytical thesis statement template Analytical Essay Example Outline Analytical Essay Example Outline
NameHIST1302The Atlanta Compromise Speech.docxroushhsiu
Name
HIST1302
The Atlanta Compromise Speech
The Atlanta Compromise speech was given by Booker T. Washington in 1895. In this speech, which Washington gave at the Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta, Georgia, Washington asks for blacks to be given equal opportunities in terms of gaining economic rights. Washington, however, does not ask for any civil rights for blacks, and does not push the audience to accept blacks as their equals. Instead, Washington says blacks and whites “can be as separate as the fingers, yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress.” Washington acknowledges that blacks had initially gotten rights after slavery but says that blacks did not know how to handle these rights. This speech is important because it shows Washington’s attitudes towards civil rights in the turn-of-the-century. It proves that Washington believed that economic progress was the best way for blacks to prove themselves to whites, and it also is important because it shows that Washington was concerned that the new immigrants, which we discussed in class, would be taking jobs away from blacks. This speech shows how bad conditions were for blacks during the Jim Crow era and how the black leadership was trying to make things better.
Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others
“Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others” was published as part of W.E.B. Du Bois’s 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk. In this essay, Du Bois comes out as extremely critical of Booker T. Washington, especially Washington’s Atlanta Compromise Speech. Instead of pushing only for economic rights, like Washington suggests, Du Bois argues that American blacks needed to have full citizenship. Du Bois suggests that Washington is no different than black leaders during the time of slavery and was willing to settle for less than what blacks deserved. Du Bois was against Washington’s program of industrial education and said “it startled the nation to hear a Negro advocating such a programme after many decades of bitter complaint; it startled and won the applause of the South, it interested and won the admiration of the North; and after a confused murmur of protest, it silenced if it did not convert the Negroes themselves.” This highlights a key difference between Washington and Du Bois because Du Bois did not believe blacks needed to be limited to industrial education. Throughout this document, Du Bois states why he thinks that Washington’s ideas were so dangerous for blacks. This document is important because it shows that not all blacks believed in Washington’s ideas, and that there were different methods put forth for helping blacks achieve their rights during the era of Jim Crow. Du Bois’s background and education led him to believe that blacks could- and should- do more than what Washington expected.
Word Count: 465
Assignment Content PSYCH/665
Top of Form
Write a 500- to 750-word summary of the ethical issues that affect your ...
1. Term Paper Note cards
PURPOSE: to gather, record, and
organize information that will be used in
your paper
2. REQUIREMENTS:
• each note card must have
– A title – the subject of the notecard (ex.
background checks, abortion statistics, etc.)
– A TAG – Background, Important Info.,
Opposing View, Solution
– A direct quotation from your source
– A paraphrase (put that quotation into your own
words)
– Page numbers (if your source is a book or
journal article)
– You may also add to the “my ideas” section if
you’d like
6. How do I know what info.
is important?
ALWAYS go back to your thesis
statement. Does the fact or
statistic help you to prove what
you’ve set out to prove?
7. Example
• “One reason it's (veiling) been less of an issue in
the U.S. is that Muslims are generally more
assimilated in the U.S. than in Europe; the U.S.,
which has always been more of a "melting pot,"
has historically had an easier time accommodating
new cultures than European nations, which tend to
be much more homogeneous.”
• Because the United States has a strong history if
immigrants assimilating into society, Muslim
citizens blend in more than in European countries.
European countries tend to be less diverse than
American, so controversies have erupted recently
over Muslim women’s right to veil.
8. Example
• “Elsewhere in Europe, the Danish
government has barred judges from
wearing religious garments and symbols. In
Belgium, several cities have enacted
outright bans on burqas, another kind of
veil.”
• In Denmark, judges are not allowed to
wear religious garments or symbols, and in
Belgium, some cities have banned burqas.
9. Example
• “Iran has been at odds with the U.S. since the 1979
Islamic revolution, but relations have become more
tense in recent years. Iran's hard-line President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has threatened to ‘wipe Israel
off the map,’ and Iran supports Hamas and Hezbollah,
radical Muslim groups that the U.S. considers
terrorist organizations.”
• Even though the relationship between the United
States and Iran has suffered since the Islamic
revolution in 1979, tensions have heightened in recent
years. President Ahmadinejad’s threats targeting
Israel, and his support of terrorist groups is in
conflict with America’s foreign policy in the Middle
East.
10. Example
• “… the Obama administration is working with U.S.
allies and the United Nations to assemble a package
of tougher economic sanctions against Iran, including
a cut-off of foreign investment in its critical oil and
gas industry.”
• In working with U.S. allies and the United Nations,
the Obama administration hopes to discourage the
Iranian nuclear program by imposing stricter
sanctions which would cripple their economy.
11. Organizing your
information
• Once you have created the required
number of note cards, you will outline your
paper.
• You will insert each note card into your
outline.
• Your note cards will be supporting details
for each argument in your paper.
Let’s visit NoodleTools…