GradeGrove
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.

Practice with the full quiz pack