Noodle is a slang term for your head or your brain.
Noodletools is a place on the internet where you can keep all of your research. Research is looking up facts to answer a question. You may have questions of your own you want to answer, or your teacher may assign you a question to research.
To answer the question, you will use different sources of information. Your sources may be books, databases, magazines, photos, references such as dictionaries and encyclopedias, or web sites. Sometimes sources are called works.
Your teacher will want you to keep a list of all your sources of information. A list of sources may be called a BIBLIOGRAPHY or WORKS CITED. When you cite a source, you put the information about that source in a special form called a citation. Noodletools can help you make a correct citation.
To answer the question, you will use different sources of information. Your sources may be books, databases, magazines, photos, references such as dictionaries and encyclopedias, or web sites. Sometimes sources are called works.
Your teacher will want you to keep a list of all your sources of information. A list of sources may be called a BIBLIOGRAPHY or WORKS CITED. When you cite a source, you put the information about that source in a special form called a citation. Noodletools can help you make a correct citation.
Noodletools is divided into five sections:
1. Projects - a list of all your research activities
2. Dashboard - a record of all the work you have done so far on each project
3. Bibliography (also called Works Cited) - a list of the sources you used to find your information
4. Notecards - the notes you have taken from each source
5. Paper - the place you type your report
1. Projects - a list of all your research activities
2. Dashboard - a record of all the work you have done so far on each project
3. Bibliography (also called Works Cited) - a list of the sources you used to find your information
4. Notecards - the notes you have taken from each source
5. Paper - the place you type your report