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Serious attention:Hello, my order will use Turnitin anti-plagiarism software to check, so no copy no plagiarism

Serious attention:Hello, my order will use Turnitin anti-plagiarism software to check, so no copy no plagiarism. If I test the order in Turnitin system show it plagiarism, I will apply refund money due to the reason bad quality.
please MUST finish it on time,no any reason for extend?Thanks
Please ensure the quality for the essay,it is important for me?Thanks

SOCL 101
Library and Referencing Exercise
Read the questions carefully and then complete the exercise
You should complete this exercise on your own and not collaborate with other students. There are many different styles of referencing but you should use the one presented in SOCL 101 lectures and in the SOCL 101 Handbook. If you are unsure about how to use the library system, look at the online help on the University library page, or ask an information assistant in the library. Using OneSearch, the library’s online ‘discovery tool’, complete the following:

1. Under which library classmark would you find a large number of books on the sociology of media?

2. Under which classmark would you find a large number of books on the sociology of the family?

3. Using OneSearch, find books written by Zygmunt Bauman. Select one of them and write out the full reference for this book as if it was part of a bibliography of an essay.

4. Imagine you are researching an essay on the sociology of health. Using OneSearch, find 5 books that you think might be useful to read in relation to this topic. If they are print copies, find the books on the library shelves to check that they are useful for the essay. If they are electronic copies, open the link to the books to check that they are useful for the essay. Then write a bibliography of your 5 books in the form that normally appears at the end of an essay.

5. Using OneSearch, search for an electronic journal called Sociology. From the year 2013, choose one issue of the journal (it doesn’t matter which one). Within your chosen issue, select one journal article and open it. Then:
a. Write out the full reference for this issue of the journal as if it was part of a bibliography of an essay
b. Choose one sentence and quote it (write it out as a direct quotation using quotation marks and reference it correctly)

6. In OneSearch, select one print copy of a sociology book on a topic that interests you. Go and find that book on the library shelves. Then:

a. Write out the full reference for this book as if it was part of a bibliography of an essay
b. Select one paragraph in the book and paraphrase it, referencing it correctly.
c. Select one sentence from the book and quote it (write it out as a direct quotation using quotation marks and reference it correctly)

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Serious attention:Hello, my order will use Turnitin anti-plagiarism software to check, so no copy no plagiarism.

Serious attention:Hello, my order will use Turnitin anti-plagiarism software to check, so no copy no plagiarism. If I test the order in Turnitin system show it plagiarism, I will apply refund money due to the reason bad quality.
please finish it on time,no any reason for extend?Thanks
Please ensure the quality for the essay,it is important for me?Thanks

benvgEPA Planning practices in Europe 2015-16
Task 1: comparative essay – brief and advice
Attention:write London and Paris
The first task in this module is to write a short essay comparing the planning
of two cities or regions.(London and Paris)

The word limit is 1,500 words but you can make generous use of maps and
diagrams. Your course handbook explains what the word-count covers.

Choose your two cities (or regions) so that their similarities and differences
(so far as you can discover from initial reading and your background knowledge) are of strong interest to you. Your essay could, for instance, compare how the selected places deal with similar urban problems in different ways; or how similar planning systems or practices might lead to different spatial, social or economic outcomes.

Both places must be large: cities with their metropolitan areas or other
extensive areas large enough to contain most of the homes and workplaces of
the population. You could choose two tourist regions or mountain regions if
you want to. At least one of the 2 must be in Europe. They must be in different
nations.

It is an essay, but that does not mean it has to be an un-broken flow of
elegant prose developing one single argument. Indeed it is highly unlikely that
your comparative study could become one single argument; far more likely
that you will identify and feel able to account for some similarities and
differences in the planning of the places, and some matters which you can’t
resolve or have not had the time or the evidence to deal with – in which case
say so within your essay.

You may certainly insert headings and so on to guide the reader but don’t
waste words on a title or contents page.

Do use maps, plans, charts, tables of statistics – generally whatever helps to
convey your meaning. It will be very odd if you do NOT have any maps or
plans.

There is a separate document on this Moodle page with advice on sources of
information for this assignment.

Other key points:
Don’t use bullet points: write sentences and paragraphs.

Take great care to cite all the sources of ideas, quotations, data and images
you use (Smith 1999; 17) in the text and then to have an alphabetical list of
your sources at the end of the essay. For example

Saunders, W S (Ed) (2006) Urban Planning Today, Minneapolis,
University of Minnesota Press.
Wachs, M (1989) ‘When planners lie with numbers’ Journal of the
American Planning Association 55 (4): 476-479.

If you quote anyone’s actual words, they must be “in quotation marks”. It does
not matter whether they are ‘single’ or “double” (or the << >> kind if you have
a continental keyboard).

When you quote web sources, follow the advice in Claire Colomb’s wonderful
BSP guide – copies from the office or download from this Moodle page.

We shall give you feedback, and a grade, using the following headings /
criteria
Content:
Approach to research: does it answer the brief?
Formulation of the essay and of problems and issues to compare;
Analytical / theoretical framework;
Relevance of material examined, omissions;
Drawing of useful conclusions

Form:
Structure of the essay;
English language;
Use of tables, maps, images;
Citation of sources;
Bibliography;
Length

Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

Comments are closed.

Serious attention:Hello, my order will use Turnitin anti-plagiarism software to check, so no copy no plagiarism.

Serious attention:Hello, my order will use Turnitin anti-plagiarism software to check, so no copy no plagiarism. If I test the order in Turnitin system show it plagiarism, I will apply refund money due to the reason bad quality.
please finish it on time,no any reason for extend?Thanks
Please ensure the quality for the essay,it is important for me?Thanks

benvgEPA Planning practices in Europe 2015-16
Task 1: comparative essay – brief and advice
Attention:write London and Paris
The first task in this module is to write a short essay comparing the planning
of two cities or regions.(London and Paris)

The word limit is 1,500 words but you can make generous use of maps and
diagrams. Your course handbook explains what the word-count covers.

Choose your two cities (or regions) so that their similarities and differences
(so far as you can discover from initial reading and your background knowledge) are of strong interest to you. Your essay could, for instance, compare how the selected places deal with similar urban problems in different ways; or how similar planning systems or practices might lead to different spatial, social or economic outcomes.

Both places must be large: cities with their metropolitan areas or other
extensive areas large enough to contain most of the homes and workplaces of
the population. You could choose two tourist regions or mountain regions if
you want to. At least one of the 2 must be in Europe. They must be in different
nations.

It is an essay, but that does not mean it has to be an un-broken flow of
elegant prose developing one single argument. Indeed it is highly unlikely that
your comparative study could become one single argument; far more likely
that you will identify and feel able to account for some similarities and
differences in the planning of the places, and some matters which you can’t
resolve or have not had the time or the evidence to deal with – in which case
say so within your essay.

You may certainly insert headings and so on to guide the reader but don’t
waste words on a title or contents page.

Do use maps, plans, charts, tables of statistics – generally whatever helps to
convey your meaning. It will be very odd if you do NOT have any maps or
plans.

There is a separate document on this Moodle page with advice on sources of
information for this assignment.

Other key points:
Don’t use bullet points: write sentences and paragraphs.

Take great care to cite all the sources of ideas, quotations, data and images
you use (Smith 1999; 17) in the text and then to have an alphabetical list of
your sources at the end of the essay. For example

Saunders, W S (Ed) (2006) Urban Planning Today, Minneapolis,
University of Minnesota Press.
Wachs, M (1989) ‘When planners lie with numbers’ Journal of the
American Planning Association 55 (4): 476-479.

If you quote anyone’s actual words, they must be “in quotation marks”. It does
not matter whether they are ‘single’ or “double” (or the << >> kind if you have
a continental keyboard).

When you quote web sources, follow the advice in Claire Colomb’s wonderful
BSP guide – copies from the office or download from this Moodle page.

We shall give you feedback, and a grade, using the following headings /
criteria
Content:
Approach to research: does it answer the brief?
Formulation of the essay and of problems and issues to compare;
Analytical / theoretical framework;
Relevance of material examined, omissions;
Drawing of useful conclusions

Form:
Structure of the essay;
English language;
Use of tables, maps, images;
Citation of sources;
Bibliography;
Length

Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

Comments are closed.

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