2013年2月24日星期日

Presentation


Presentation
*Read the question paper first (understand the question and make sure u topic)

*Before you do the work please find enough information then continue to do it

1 all the photos can not put on the page

2 all the words have to bigger than 24 size (make sure you audience can see it )

3 each photos have to write source (animation effects)

4remenber you name and team number (still has introduce and what are you topic of  list  finally conclusion)( the date )

5 bibliography on the back  ( thank  you &any question time part )

6  images and words have to connect each (part word and part images)

7 using hyperlink and hypermedia

8 can using red and any colour  (arrow and circle) to shows important information.

 Introduction
Introduce yourself and tell every what are taking about

Conclusion
You have to give the recommendation and what do you think about the future .

Main body
)  to compare what are you taking about with others .

)using the connect words such as  however ,also ,next one  


Adams, Paul. "Furious Arafat Is Freed." Globe and Mail [Toronto] 2 May
          2002: A1+.
"Beginner Tip: Presenting Your Page with Style." Webmaster Tips Newsletter.

  July 2000. NetMechanic. 13 Sept. 2004 <http://www.netmechanic.com/
          news/vol3/beginner_no7.htm>.

Collins, Ronald K.L., and David M. Skover. The Trials of Lenny Bruce: The
          Fall and Rise of an American Icon. Naperville, IL: Sourcebooks, 2002.
Continelli, Louise. "A Place for Owls to Heal." Buffalo News 12 Jan. 2003: C2.

"E-Money Slips Quietly into Oblivion." Nikkei Weekly [Tokyo] 22 Jan. 2001: 4.

Gordin, Michael D. "The Science of Vodka." Letter. New Yorker 13 Jan. 2003: 7.

"Ho Chi Minh."  Encyclopaedia Britannica. 2004. Britannica.com.
 
          15 Sept. 2004 <http://www.britannica.com>.
How to do a Bibliography
Items in a bibliography are alphabetically ordered by author; and, if no author, then by title. Looking at the examples below, the source authored by the Central Intelligence Agency would be listed before the source titled "How to Measure Justice". The source titled "Vietnam" would be last in order and the source by George Adams would come first.

WEBSITE:
Author of page, last name first, followed by a period. Title of page in quotes, followed by a period. Title of the entire website, underlined, followed by a period. The full URL address of the page, beginning with http://, followed by the date you visited the site in parentheses, followed by a period.
Grimes, Barbara F., ed. "South Africa." Ethnologue. 
http://www.sil.org/ethnologue/countries/Sout.html (4 Feb 1999).
BOOK:
Author's name, last name first, followed by a period. Title underlined, followed by a period. Place of publication, followed by a colon. Publishers name, followed by a comma. Copyright date, followed by a period.
Morgan, Terri. Photography Take your Best Shot. Minneapolis: Lerner, 1991.
ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLE:
Author's name, last name first, followed by a period. Title of the article in quotation marks, followed by a period. Title of encyclopedia, underlined, followed by a period. Copyright date of edition, followed by a period.
Dickinson, Robert E. "The Norman Conquest." World Book Encyclopedia. 1990 ed.
(If there is no author, leave it out.)
"Vietnam." Compton's Encyclopedia. 1992 ed.
MAGAZINE ARTICLE (MONTHLY):
Author's name, last name first, followed by a period. Title of article, in quotation marks, followed by a period. Title of magazine, underlined, followed by a period. Date of issue (month, then year), followed by a comma. Pages, followed by a period.
Sterling, Jeffrey. "Apartheid in South Africa." The World & I. April 1986, pp. 27-35.
(If there is no author, leave it out.)
MAGAZINE ARTICLE (WEEKLY):
Same as a monthly magazine article, except the date is done differently. See below.
Smith, Belinda. "Chaos in Television." Time. 7 Feb. 1990, pp. 34-35.
NEWSPAPER:
Author's name, last name first, followed by a period. Title of article, in quotation marks, followed by a period. Title of newspaper, underlined, include city if necessary in parentheses, followed by a comma. Date (day, month, year) followed by a comma. Page, followed by a period.
Adams, George. "Ford's Plan to Spur Republican Revival." Christian Science Monitor , 29 Nov. 1974, p. 20.
(If there is no author, leave it out.)
"How to Measure Justice." The Tennessean (Nashville), 19 Aug. 1979, p. 8.
INTERVIEW:
See example.
Personal interview with Robert Turrentine, President, Acme Boot Company, Clarksville, Tenn. , 11 Feb. 1987.
NEWSBANK:
Author's name, last name first, followed by a comma. 
Title of article, in quotation marks, followed by a period. Title of newspaper or magazine underlined, followed by the date, followed by a period. Name of the database followed by a period. Date retrieved from database in parentheses.
Wood, Daniel B., "Largest Welfare to Work Program Called a Success." The Christian Science Monitor 20 April 1993. UMI Proquest Direct. (29 January 1999).


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