Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Source Card
Source Card
Research Note‐Taking
Source Card
• You will need to create a source card for each
source you use.
• Each source card should include information
about the source (author, title, year, etc.).
• Different types of sources use different
formats. Make sure you use the right one.
• Each source card is assigned a letter that will be
used in creating your note cards.
SOURCE CARD A
(Book)
Author:
Title:
Publisher:
Date:
City:
SOURCE CARD A
(Book)
Author: Isabella Brega
Title: Argentina: Wild South America
Publisher: White Star Publishers
Date: 2007
City: Vercelli, Italy
SOURCE CARD B
Author:
Title:
Date article was written:
Date looked up:
Complete web address:
SOURCE CARD B
(Encyclopedia – Print)
Name of Encyclopedia:
Article you looked up:
Author of entry:
Edition (what year):
Page #:
SOURCE CARD C
(Encyclopedia – Print)
(Encyclopedia – Online)
Name of Encyclopedia:
Article you looked up:
Author of entry:
Edition (what year):
Web Address:
SOURCE CARD D
(Encyclopedia – Online)
(NOTE CARD)
• Ancestors from Europe, especially from Italy and Spain
• European immigrants came when Spain set up colonies
• Largest wave of immigration in the late 1800s because of government encouragement
• Small indigenous population compared to other Latin American countries
• Indigenous mostly in isolated parts of north and southwest
• One of the largest Jewish populations in the Americas
• Other groups include Asians and Middle Easterners
Work Cited
Rathje, A. (n.d.). Note & Source Cards
[PowerPoint slides]. Retrieved from
http://www.students.ed.uiuc.edu/arathje/
.../Note%20&%20Source%20Cards.ppt