Reflection paper

Reflection Paper 3: 
Please identify and discuss the five goals of sentencing. Please rank each of them in the order
you found to be most important based on its relative effectiveness using the literature to support
your position.

Reflection Paper Requirements:
Each reflection paper requires you to respond to a question relevant to the material and lecture
that is discussed in class. 
Reflection papers must be provided in hard copy by or before the due date.  Late submissions
will not be accepted and will be factored into your final grade as a zero. Each reflection paper
must adhere to the following:
1.  One (1) to Two (2) pages (not including the cover page and reference page)
2.  Times New Roman 
3.  12 point font
4.  Double-spaced
5.  1-inch margins
6.  Include at least 2 scholarly citations that are listed in the Works Cited section

Chicago Style Quick Guide
Book

Structure:
Last, First M. Book. City: Publisher, Year Published.

Example:
Carley, Michael J. 1939: The Alliance That Never Was and the Coming of World War II. Chicago:
Dee, 1999.

Chapter/Anthology

Structure:
Last, First M. Section Title. In Book/Anthology, edited by First M. Last, Page(s). Edition ed. City:
Publisher, Year Published.

Example:
Melville, Herman. Hawthorne and His Mosses. In The Norton Anthology of American Literature,
edited by Nina Baym, 5-25. 3rd ed. New York: Norton, 1989.

Magazine

Structure:
Last, First M. Article Title. Magazine Title, Month Date, Year Published.

Example:
Pressman, Aaron. Bottom Fishing in Rough Waters. BusinessWeek, September 29, 2008.

Newspaper

Structure:
Last, First M. Article Title. Newspaper Title (City), Month Date, Year Published.

Example:
Campoy, Ana. Gasoline Surges in Southeast After Ike. The Wall Street Journal, September 23,
2008.
*Note: Only include (City) if it is not in the title. Do not include if the newspaper is well known or
nationally published.

Journal

Structure:
Last, First M., and First M. Last. Article Title. Journal Title, Series, Volume, no. Issue (Month
Date, Year Published): Page(s).

Example:
Bharadwaj, Parag, and Katherine T. Ward. Ethical Considerations of Patients with
Pacemakers. American Family Physician 78 (2008): 398-99.

Website

Structure:
Last, First M. Article Title. Website Title. Month Date, Year Published. [or] Last modified date [or]
Accessed Month Date, Year. URL.

Examples:
Satalkar, Bhakti. Water Aerobics. Buzzle.com. July 15, 2010. www.buzzle.com.
Smith, John. Illinois Governor Wants to Fumigate States Government. CNN.com. Last modified
January 30, 2009. http://edition.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/01/30/illinois.governor.quinn/.

Online Database

Structure:
Last, First M. Article Title. Journal Title, Series, Volume, no. Issue (Month Date, Year Published):
Page(s). Accessed Month Date, Year. URL.

Example:
Ahn, Hyunchul, and Kyoung-jae Kim. Using Genetic Algorithms to Optimize Nearest Neighbors for
Data Mining. Annals of Operations Research 263, no. 1 (2008): 5-18. Academic Search Premier.
*Note: Only include URL if it is stable. If no stable URL, use database name instead.