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Religion

In fourth grade we learn several guides to help us live according to God's way. We study the Commandments, Beatitudes, and the Works of Mercy. We also celebrate the feasts of the Liturgical Year.

Visit this website for a preview of our work.

www.webelieveweb.com

RELIGION SAINTS PROJECT

DUE November 23

SAINTS REPORT

Choose 1 Saint from the list below.

Research the life of the Saint using books on the Lives of the Saints or the

Internet. www.saints.catholic.org/index.shtml

www.saints.catholic.org/stsindex.html

www.catholic-forum.com/saints/indexsnt.htm

Your written report about the Saint should include the following information:

When and where the Saint was born. (5 points)

What this person did to become a Saint. (50 points)

The date of the Saint’s feast day, and why this Saint is honored. (10 points)

What we can do to be like this Saint. (10 points)

Your report may be typed or handwritten.

Include a neat and attractive cover. (5 points)

Include a bibliography. (5 points)

Spelling, grammar and neatness. (15 points)

Illustrations or pictures may be added to enhance your report.

SAINTS LIST

St. Andrew - Daniel                               St. Anne

St. Anthony - Chris                                St. Bernadette Soubirous - Julianna

St. Augustine                                        St. Catherine Laboure - Jaime

St. Bartholomew                                   St. Catherine Siena - Rachel

St. Charles Borromeo - Matthew          St. Clare

St. Charles Lwanga & Companions       St. Cecilia - Geeta

St. Dominic Savio                                  St. Edith Stein

St. Francis of Assisi                               St. Elizabeth Ann Seton - Hope

St. Ignatius Loyola - A.J.                        St. Elizabeth of Hungary

St. John the Apostle - Raj                     St. Frances Cabrini

St. John Bosco                                      St. Joan of Arc

St. John Neumann - Andrew                  St. Juliana of Nicomedia

St. Joseph                                             Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha - Molly

St. Juan Diego                                      St. Katharine Drexel - Gina

St. Jude Thaddeus                                St. Lucy - Elise

St. Martin de Porres                             St. Mary Magdalene - Maggie

St. Matthew                                          St. Monica

St. Patrick                                             St. Rita - Lauren

St. Paul Miki & Companions                 St. Rose of Lima - Maura

St. Peter                                                Blessed Theresa of Calcutta

St. Thomas Apostle                              St. Theresa of Avila

St. Thomas More - Ben                         St. Therese of the Child Jesus - Bridget

GUIDE TO PREPARING A BIBLIOGRAPHY

When doing research and writing a report, it is always necessary to name the source(s) of your information. This list of sources is called a bibliography. A bibliography should be listed alphabetically. The second line of an entry should be indented. Skip a line after each entry.

FOR A BOOK:

Author’s last name, first name. Title of book. Place of publication: Publisher, copyright year.

example: Fogle, Bruce. Training Your Dog. New York: DK Publishing, 2001.

If you only used part of a book:

Fogle, Bruce. Training Your Dog. New York: DK Publishing, 2001, pp. 50-55.

FOR AN ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLE THAT IS SIGNED:

Article author’s last name, first name. "Title of article." Name of encyclopedia. Copyright year. Volume number, page(s).

example: Clark, William W. "Gothic Art." World Book Encyclopedia. 2002.
Volume 8, pp. 277-278.

FOR AN ENCYCLOPEDIA ARTICLE THAT ISN’T SIGNED:

"Title of article." Name of encyclopedia. Copyright year. Volume number, page(s).

example: "Golden Retriever." World Book Encyclopedia. 1999. Volume 8, p.255.

FOR A MAGAZINE OR NEWSPAPER ARTICLE:

Article author’s last name, first name. "Title or headline of article." Name of magazine or newspaper. Date of magazine or newspaper, page(s).

example: McGill, Kristy. "A Baltic Scramble." Faces. May, 2003, p. 27.

FOR AN INTERNET ADDRESS:

Author’s last name, first name. "Title of item." [Online] Available

http://address/filename, date of document or download.

example: DiStefano, Vince. "Guidelines for Better Writing." [Online] Available
http://www.usa.net/~vinced/home/better-writing.html,
October 5, 2002.

This example of how to cite an INTERNET source was downloaded from this online source.

FOR AUDIOVISUAL MATERIALS:

Title of material. Type of material. Place of publication: Publisher, copyright date.

example:

Bizet’s Dream. Videotape. New York: Sony Wonder, 1998.

FOR A CD-ROM:

"Article title." CD-ROM title. CD-ROM. Copyright date.

example:

"Titanic Disaster." Encarta 99 Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. 1999.

FOR AN INTERVIEW:

Name of person interviewed (last name first). Kind of interview. Date.

example:

Watson, Cosmo. Personal interview. July 29, 2003.

Your finished bibliography should be alphabetized by the first word of the entry, and will look something like this:

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Bizet’s Dream. Videotape. New York: Sony Wonder, 1998.

Clark, William W. "Gothic Art." World Book Encyclopedia. 2002.
Volume 8, pp. 284-286.

DiStefano, Vince. "Guidelines for Better Writing." [Online] Available
http://www.usa.net/~vinced/home/better-writing.html, October 5, 2002.

Fogle, Bruce. Training Your Dog. New York: DK Publishing, 2001, pp. 50-55.

"Golden Retriever." World Book Encyclopedia. 1999. Volume 8, p.255.

McGill, Kristy. "A Baltic Scramble." Faces. May, 2003, p. 27.

"Titanic Disaster." Encarta 99 Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. 1999.

Watson, Cosmo. Personal interview. July 29, 2003.



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