High school (9–12)
English / ELA
ELA: Research & MLA Citations: Challenge
Free research and MLA citation practice for high school. Learn to evaluate sources, paraphrase effectively, avoid plagiarism, and format in-text and Works Cited entries. Stretch thinking with multi-step problems, application questions, and deeper reasoning.
Hard Level Guide
Stretch thinking with multi-step problems, application questions, and deeper reasoning.
Developing a Research Question
Start with a broad topic, then narrow to a focused question. A strong thesis answers that question with a claim you can support. Research gathers evidence from credible sources, not just the first search result.
Evaluating Sources
Check author credentials, publication date, and purpose. Peer-reviewed journals and established news outlets differ from opinion blogs. CRAAP test: Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, Purpose.
Paraphrasing and Quoting
Paraphrase by restating ideas in your own words and sentence structure. Quotes preserve exact wording for powerful language. Both require citation. Changing only a few words is still plagiarism.
MLA Format Basics
In-text citations use author and page: (Smith 42). Works Cited lists full sources alphabetically. Core elements include author, title, container, publisher, and date. Hanging indent and double spacing are standard.
FAQ
- Which MLA edition is this based on?
- Guidance follows MLA 9th edition conventions used in most high schools since 2021.
- Does this cover APA format?
- This pack focuses on MLA, the standard for high school English research papers.