The Effect Of Use Of Social Media On Employee Job Performance
Your report must contain only articles found in our library's databases. Those articles must come from periodicals (these will be noted by the Periodical icon) and academic/professional journals (these will be noted by the Academic Journal icon). Instead of quoting full sentences, you should use only small portions of source material in your report. The most efficient way to do that is by combining paraphrases with brief integrated quotations. To practice this skill, complete the work described below:
Part 2 Directions: Create a Google document titled DG 9 Your Last Name. Complete the numbered items below, and format your work as shown under the EXAMPLE heading below.
1. Locate one periodical article from our library's databases you think would be useful/relevant to your report.
2. Locate the article's Permalink (see Step 6 in the Research Tutorial for instructions on locating the Permalink) and APA style bibliographic citation (see Step 8 in the Research Tutorial for instructions). Copy and paste the Permalink and bibliographic citation in your Google document on separate lines. Format the bibliographic citation using a hanging indentation. To do that, highlight your bibliographic citation and click on the following menu items: Format--Align & Indent--Indentation options--Special--Hanging.
3. Find a sentence worthy of including in your report from the article, and copy and paste it in your Google document. Highlight it, make it bold and/or put "quotation marks" around it to remind yourself it's borrowed material.
4. Write a single sentence of your own using both a paraphrase and a brief integrated quotation from the sentence you chose. See the APA Handout for the heading Article from an online scholarly/academic journal article (three examples), and model your combined paraphrase and integration after the ones marked Integrated quotation and paraphrase, or look at the EXAMPLE below.
5. Finally, create in-text documentation in your sentence by including the author's name, source's year of publication, and page number (if given) in a parenthetical citation at the end of the sentence.
6. Repeat steps above with an academic journal article. When you get to Step 5, instead of putting documentation details only at the end of the sentence in parentheses, place the author's name near the beginning of the sentence followed by the source's year of publication in parentheses. End the sentence with a parenthetical containing the correctly formatted page number you borrowed the source material from. Again, see the APA Handout for examples.
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