plagiarism citing sources evaluating sources mrs. castro gjhs library

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Page 1: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

PlagiarismCiting SourcesEvaluating Sources

Mrs. CastroGJHS Library

Page 2: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Definition

According to the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, to "plagiarize" means

1) to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own

2) to use (another's production) without crediting the source

3) to commit literary theft 4) to present as new and original an idea

or product derived from an existing source

Page 3: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

What?

In other words, plagiarism is an act of fraud.

It involves both stealing someone else's work and lying about it afterward.

Page 4: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Not citing sources…

“Ghost Writer” “The Photocopy” “The Potluck Paper” “The Poor Disguise” “The Labor of Laziness” “The Self Stealer”

Page 5: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Sources cited, still plagiarized…

“The Forgotten Footnote” “The Misinformer” “The Too-Perfect Paraphrase” “The Resourceful Citer” “The Perfect Crime”

Page 6: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Did you know?

The penalties for plagiarism can be surprisingly severe, ranging from failure of classes and expulsion from academic institutions to heavy fines and jail time!

Page 7: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

GJHS Student Handbook

Students are expected to do their own work.

Students who choose to cheat, plagiarize, or forge may: 1. have to repeat work for partial or no

credit 2. receive a grade of zero 3. receive a failing grade for the

semester

Page 8: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Believe it or not…

Changing the words of an original source is not sufficient to prevent plagiarism. If you have retained the essential idea of an original source, and have not cited it, then no matter how drastically you may have altered its context or presentation, you have still plagiarized.

Page 9: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

What do we do?

Cite Sources Acknowledge borrowed material/ideas

Provide audience with information to find sources

Page 10: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

What is Citation?

A "citation" is the way you tell your readers that certain material in your work came from another source. It also gives your readers the information necessary to find that source again, including: Author Title Publishing Company Date of Publication Page numbers of the material Where to locate the source

Page 11: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

When do I need to Cite?

Whenever you borrow words or ideas. The following situations almost always require citation: Quotes Paraphrase Use an idea someone else has already

expressed Make specific reference to the work of

another Someone else's work has been critical in

developing your own ideas

Page 12: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

How do I Cite?

GJHS Library Website http://gjhs.mesa.k12.co.us/library Citation Machine Library Handouts

Page 13: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Keeping track of sources

Save to favorites Organize this so you can find things

again Before moving on, save pages so you

can easily go back Look for “persistent” links Keep a “working” works cited list

Page 14: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Evaluate Your Sources

Databases - great places to start EBSCO – Infotrac – Worldbook – Science FOF Print resources

Websites - Who, What, Where, When, Why Use an evaluation form Be very careful!

Page 15: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Try it!

The importance of evaluating sites… and looking at the dot what?

www.whitehouse.net www.whitehouse.gov www.whitehouse.org

Dihydrogen Monoxide Research Divisionhttp://www.dhmo.org/

Page 16: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Creating better searches…

Worldbook (online or print) Great place to “pre-search”

General overview of topic Find key words to use in searching

Database Basic Search Tips – handout available in the library (Yellow)

Boolean Operators Parentheses Quotation Marks Wildcard and truncation symbols – ?,!,* Proximity

Page 17: Plagiarism Citing Sources Evaluating Sources Mrs. Castro GJHS Library

Sources:

www.plagiarism.org www.m-w.com GJHS Student Handbook, 05-06 http://gjhs.mesa.k12.co.us/library http://citationmachine.net/ Database Basic Search Tips – GJHS Research Notes & Web Evaluation - GJHS