MAN 6830 PROJECT 1 GUIDELINES

 
 
 

LAST UPDATED: Thursday December 01, 2005 11:57:10 AM -0500

 

 

 

  Project shall be presented in class in CD format and will include

 

  1. Page 1

    1. Title of paper

    2. Student Name

    3. Student course number and course name

    4. Semester and year

    5. Name of University

    6. Name of Professor - correctly spelled

    7. Visible digital photo of yourself

  2. Page 2 Table of contents

  3. Page 3 Introduction

  4. Pages 3-15 Main body guideline - which means your paper can be from 3 pages to 15 pages or even longer.

  5. Include diagrams, photos, sketches , other visual

  6. Page last but one - References - all references from both books, library and of course the web.

  7. Last page - A one page executive Summary which should summarize your paper in one page.

 

 

Paper should be
  1. Double spaced,

  2. Fonts: Times Roman or Ariel

  3. Font size: 12

  4. Font color : black

  5. Margins should be 1" either side

  6. Spell checked

  7. MS Word 2000 or XP

  8. Any other applications should be from the MS family

  9. CBA does not support Visio or WordPerfect

  10. emailed by class time - and if necessary win zipped.

  11. Hard copy should be brought to class. 

  12. Project 1 needs to be presented in CD format  by due date

  13. Project 1 must be presented in ONE file and saved as "yourname.doc"

  14. Project 1 must have a color digital and visible photo of yourself

 

 

 MLA Check list

 

The bibliography or list of sources  is referred to as Works Cited under MLA rules.

  1. Direct quotations

    Quote directly from your source if the original words are unique and distinctive or if they add authority to your point.

  2. Ideas that are summarized or paraphrased

    Paraphrasing or summarizing a source is often preferable to quoting, for it allows you as the author to use your own style and voice in your research paper. Always remember to use parenthetical citations for such sources. just as you would if you were quoting them.

  3. Ideas and opinions associated with a particular person 

    If you refer to specific concepts adhered to by one person, you must include a reference to this person.

  4. Data that, in context of your paper, may be open to dispute

    If you cite statistics you need to include a reference to your source.

  5. Results of surveys you have conducted as part of your research

    If interviews are personal, you may mark them "personal communication" in your bibliography.

  6. Avoiding plagiarism

    Plagiarism is a serious violation of academic ethics and is grounds for severe penalty. To avoid plagiarism you must cite work that is not your own. For example, a student taking class notes, might omit to add quotation marks to a direct quote. Weeks later when they are working on their paper they may forget which words and phrases are their own and which come directly from the original source. Check with your professors which as to whether or not to cite them as sources for ideas. The individual professor might consider his ideas as part of the public domain of the class, in which case you could cite them without attribution.

     

  7. I would like to point out the following form the Student Handbook 1.02 Plagiarism. "The deliberate use and appropriation of another's work without any indication of the source and the representation of such work as the student's own. Any student who fails to give credit to ideas, expressions or materials taken from another source, including internet sources, is guilty of plagiarism. Any student helping another to plagiarize may be found guilty of academic misconduct."

  8. Works cited: Books The order is Author, Title, Publication Information:

  9. Arrange the entries alphabetically by the author's last name or, when there is no author name, by the first significant word in the title.

    One author

    McDonald, David Francis. Cyber crime on the net. New York: Harper 2002

    Two authors

    Cranley, Janet F., Shamika M. Brown. Freedom on the Internet. Miami, Uinversity of Miami Press, 2001

     

  10. Works cited: Article in a magazine or newspaper

    Mrad, Grace. "Cyber crime - Miami second in the nation" El Nuevo Herald 28 January 2002  

  11. When citing internet sources, be sure to give credit;  

The University of Florida's IT department has developed a Website that provides information about Cyber crime ( "Cyber crime is constantly increasing")

 Good luck

Last updated: Thursday December 01, 2005 11:57 AM