Noodletools is our citation generator. Used correctly, it will format your citations for you and ensure you get full credit for providing your sources.
Some Tips
An Inquiry Question |
A Supporting Question |
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Notes Should |
Note taking can be done using digital tools (like Noodletools Notecards), or handwritten notes using styles students prefer, as long as they have these common elements! |
Does the Information? | |
If YES, use the information. |
Either your other evidence is strong enough to refute it, or the new information will lead to a change in their claim.
A Thesis is Flexible! |
What did I learn? |
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How can I apply my learning beyond this moment? |
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Noodletools is more than a citation generator. It can be a whole research platform. Find some tutorials of other components of Noodletools below.
Truncation lets you search for a term and variant spellings of that term.
Just add an asterisk (*) to a word with multiple endings:
EXAMPLE: interact* will search interacting, interacted, interaction, and interactivity
For more precise searching, connect your keywords in a meaningful way using the words AND, OR, and NOT.
Using AND narrows your search.
EXAMPLE:
The more keywords you connect with AND, the fewer results you will retrieve. The database will need to find each of your keywords in the text in order to show it to you.
EXAMPLE: "homeless youth" AND "education" AND "new york city"
Using OR broadens their search. You should get MORE results using this strategy.
EXAMPLE: water OR lake OR river OR stream
Using NOT narrows your search.
This type of search is good to use when you already know what you DO NOT want.
EXAMPLE: (cars OR automobiles) NOT Europe.
Sometimes you may want to search for a phrase. Using QUOTATION MARKS around a group of words will search the phrase as a whole instead of by individual terms.
EXAMPLES:
"common cold"
"primary school"
"community college"
We recommend you avoid the battle engendered in the statement "Don't google it!". Instead student use of Google (or any other search engine) is an opportunity to start a discussion about evaluating sources. One tried and true method of source evaluation is the CRAP (sometimes CRAAP) method.