English, asked by baguisamhyles24, 4 months ago

1. Make a Topic Outline and Alphanumeric Outline using the topic:
Memes: To Make or Not to Make
2. Make a Sentence Outline and Decimal Outline using the topic:
Rampant Online Hate

Answers

Answered by swaragoswami9
2

Answer:

the answer is

Explanation:

1. Outline: Developing subtopics is a KEY research process step that is often overlooked when students jump straight from a topic into research. But it's important to divide a topic into smaller parts, called subtopics. This can be written as an outline. It becomes your research plan so you know what information to gather and, equally important, what to skip! Just like a chef cannot cook without a recipe and an architect cannot build without a blueprint, you CANNOT do research without subtopics as your research plan.

2. Rule of three: Triangulation means the fewest number of subtopics you need is three for good topic exploration. Judge how many more to add by the amount of time needed for project completion. The more time you have, the more subtopics you can explore.

3. Notes: A subtopic must be large enough to take at least ten notes about it. For example, "population" cannot be a subtopic if the answer is just one number. But "people" can be a subtopic if it includes things like food, clothing, language, cultural group, etc.

4. Keywords or question: Subtopics can be written into essential questions, or subtopics can be identified from essential questions. Subtopics form the keywords used as search terms. Expand your search with keyword synonyms.

5. Location skills: Learn skills unique to print and digital sources to locate subtopics that support the topic. It is NOT plagiarism to copy subtopics. Be prepared to add, drop, or change subtopics depending on information in at least three different kinds of sources.

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