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Most students struggle with learning how to find references, use
them effectively, and cite them appropriately in a required format.
One of the most common formats is that of APA. The authors all have
vast experience teaching writing courses to various levels of
studentsfrom undergraduates to graduates in other countries.
However, there was lacking a book that could explain the basics of
APA in simple, easy-to-understand language for non-native speakers
of English, who are often unfamiliar with using references and
formatting an essay in a particular method. In order to offer
English Learner student writers a source of information that is
appropriate for their level, and is cost-effective, this updated
APA 7th edition guidebook provides students with important
information in clear, concise, user-friendly language, as well as
to offer practical examples that will help them grasp the concept
of secondary research writing. Much of the published materials on
the market targets native speakers of English. The problem with
this is that they present the nitpicky details of APA in ways that
do not make sense to native speakers of English, let alone to those
for whom English is not their first language, because the
information is presented in very technical terms that are not
easyto understand. This handbook presents the same information in
simplified terms with images and step-by-step instructions in ways
that make sense to both native and non-native English speaking
student writers. Additionally, student writers often struggle with
understanding the concept of plagiarism, as well as how to find
sources, evaluate the appropriateness of sources, and use sources
in effective ways (e.g., how to integrate quotes, when to
paraphrase, among others). This book provides this important
information that is concise and easy to understand. NOTE: This is a
REVISED edition of our original The Concise APA Handbook, which has
been updated for APA 7th edition, which was issued in the fall,
2019.
|
The Concise APA Handbook (Hardcover)
Paul Chamness Miller, Racheal Ruegg, Naoko Araki, Mary Frances Agnello, Mark de Boer
|
R1,192
Discovery Miles 11 920
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
Most students struggle with learning how to find references, use
them effectively, and cite them appropriately in a required format.
One of the most common formats is that of APA. The authors all
teach at the same university, where their current off-the-shelf
reference book, while helpful, is filled with a lot of extra
information that they do not use and contains missing or incorrect
information. The cost of this book also continues to rise. In a
search for something else to meet their needs, they discovered that
there are no concise guides that deal with APA only that are cost
effective or user-friendly for students who are not familiar with
using references and formatting an essay in the APA format. In
order to offer student writers a source of information that is
concise and cost-effective, the authors have written this handbook
to provide students with important information in clear, concise,
user-friendly language, as well as to offer practical examples that
will help them grasp the concept of secondary research writing.
Much of the published materials present the nitpicky details of APA
in very technical terms that are not easy to understand. This
handbook presents the same information in simplified terms with
images and step-by-step instructions in ways that will make sense
to both undergraduate and graduate student writers. Additionally,
student writers often struggle with understanding the concept of
plagiarism, as well as how to find sources, evaluate the
appropriateness of sources, and use sources in effective ways
(e.g., how to integrate quotes, when to paraphrase, among others).
This book provides this information in a concise and
easy-to-understand format.
This volume builds a conceptual basis for assessment promoting
learning in Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL)
classrooms and proposes practical assessment approaches and
activities that CLIL teachers can apply in the classroom. CLIL as
an educational context is unique, as language and content learning
happen simultaneously. The efficacy of such instruction has been
studied extensively, but assessment in CLIL classrooms has drawn
much less attention. The present volume aims to fill this gap.
Arranged based on different ways that content and language are
integrated in CLIL, the chapters in this book together build a
solid theoretical basis for assessment promoting learning in CLIL
classrooms. The authors discuss how assessment eliciting this
integration yields insights into learners' abilities, but more
importantly, how these insights are used to promote learning. The
contributors to the volume together build the understanding of
classroom-based assessment as cyclic, of teaching, learning, and
assessment as inter-related, and of content and language in CLIL
classrooms as a dialectical unity. This volume will spark interest
in and discussion of classroom-based assessment in CLIL among CLIL
educators and researchers, enable reflection of classroom
assessment practices, and foster collaboration between CLIL
teachers and researchers. The assessment approaches and activities
discussed in the volume, in turn, will help educators understand
the scope of applications of assessment and inspire them to adapt
these to their own classrooms.
This volume builds a conceptual basis for assessment promoting
learning in Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL)
classrooms and proposes practical assessment approaches and
activities that CLIL teachers can apply in the classroom. CLIL as
an educational context is unique, as language and content learning
happen simultaneously. The efficacy of such instruction has been
studied extensively, but assessment in CLIL classrooms has drawn
much less attention. The present volume aims to fill this gap.
Arranged based on different ways that content and language are
integrated in CLIL, the chapters in this book together build a
solid theoretical basis for assessment promoting learning in CLIL
classrooms. The authors discuss how assessment eliciting this
integration yields insights into learners' abilities, but more
importantly, how these insights are used to promote learning. The
contributors to the volume together build the understanding of
classroom-based assessment as cyclic, of teaching, learning, and
assessment as inter-related, and of content and language in CLIL
classrooms as a dialectical unity. This volume will spark interest
in and discussion of classroom-based assessment in CLIL among CLIL
educators and researchers, enable reflection of classroom
assessment practices, and foster collaboration between CLIL
teachers and researchers. The assessment approaches and activities
discussed in the volume, in turn, will help educators understand
the scope of applications of assessment and inspire them to adapt
these to their own classrooms.
Most students struggle with learning how to find references, use
them effectively, and cite them appropriately in a required format.
One of the most common formats is that of APA. The authors all
teach at the same university, where their current off-the-shelf
reference book, while helpful, is filled with a lot of extra
information that they do not use and contains missing or incorrect
information. The cost of this book also continues to rise. In a
search for something else to meet their needs, they discovered that
there are no concise guides that deal with APA only that are cost
effective or user-friendly for students who are not familiar with
using references and formatting an essay in the APA format. In
order to offer student writers a source of information that is
concise and cost-effective, the authors have written this handbook
to provide students with important information in clear, concise,
user-friendly language, as well as to offer practical examples that
will help them grasp the concept of secondary research writing.
Much of the published materials present the nitpicky details of APA
in very technical terms that are not easy to understand. This
handbook presents the same information in simplified terms with
images and step-by-step instructions in ways that will make sense
to both undergraduate and graduate student writers. Additionally,
student writers often struggle with understanding the concept of
plagiarism, as well as how to find sources, evaluate the
appropriateness of sources, and use sources in effective ways
(e.g., how to integrate quotes, when to paraphrase, among others).
This book provides this information in a concise and
easy-to-understand format.
Most students struggle with learning how to find references, use
them effectively, and cite them appropriately in a required format.
One of the most common formats is that of APA. The authors all have
vast experience teaching writing courses to various levels of
studentsfrom undergraduates to graduates in other countries.
However, there was lacking a book that could explain the basics of
APA in simple, easy-to-understand language for non-native speakers
of English, who are often unfamiliar with using references and
formatting an essay in a particular method. In order to offer
English Learner student writers a source of information that is
appropriate for their level, and is cost-effective, this updated
APA 7th edition guidebook provides students with important
information in clear, concise, user-friendly language, as well as
to offer practical examples that will help them grasp the concept
of secondary research writing. Much of the published materials on
the market targets native speakers of English. The problem with
this is that they present the nitpicky details of APA in ways that
do not make sense to native speakers of English, let alone to those
for whom English is not their first language, because the
information is presented in very technical terms that are not
easyto understand. This handbook presents the same information in
simplified terms with images and step-by-step instructions in ways
that make sense to both native and non-native English speaking
student writers. Additionally, student writers often struggle with
understanding the concept of plagiarism, as well as how to find
sources, evaluate the appropriateness of sources, and use sources
in effective ways (e.g., how to integrate quotes, when to
paraphrase, among others). This book provides this important
information that is concise and easy to understand. NOTE: This is a
REVISED edition of our original The Concise APA Handbook, which has
been updated for APA 7th edition, which was issued in the fall,
2019.
|
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