Learning 4 Life @your library®
Notemaking
Information in Your Own Words
Respect other people's intellectual property. Use information ethically. Record notes in your own words. Cite your sources and use quotations when you use other people's words.
Process:
- Read a section of text.
- Think about it. Determine which information is new to you and relevant to your question or topic.
- Record information in your own words using one or more of these notemaking formats (single word, short phrase, bulleted list, abbreviations, symbols, or a reference to a page number).
Practice with this selection of text from http://storytrail.com/pages/TOT.html
In O'odham language, "Tohono O'odham" means "Desert People." The Tohono O'odham American Indians live on approximately 3 million acres southwest of Tucson, Arizona. There are three primary parts to the reservation. The total size is larger than the state of Delaware. Tohono O'odham also live in northern Sonora, Mexico. The Tohono O'odham belong to their own nation, separate from the United States. They have their own flag, government, and police. There are about 20,000 members of the Tohono O'odham Nation.
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