Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or...

23
Research

Transcript of Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or...

Page 1: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Research

Page 2: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Plagiarism and FabricationPlagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words,

ideas or data as one’s own work.

If you submit ideas that are not your own, you must submit the source of that information. This is not just for quotes, but for paraphrasing and summarizing as well. If words are used verbatim, you put quotes around the statement.

Examples:

Whenever one quotes another person’s actual words without citing

Whenever one paraphrases another person’s idea, opinion, or theory

Whenever one borrows facts, statistics, or other illustrative materials – unless the information is common knowledge.

o Ex: Pearl Harbor was attacked on December 7, 1941. o Ex: Joe Shmo died in the Pearl Harbor attack.

Page 3: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Examples:

Citing information not taken from the source indicated Listing sources in a bibliography that were not used Inventing data or source information for research or other

academic work Submitting work that you did not do yourself

Fabrication is the used of invented information or the falsification of research or other findings with the intent to deceive.

Plagiarism examples:https://www.indiana.edu/~istd/examples.html

http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/589/01/

Plagiarism and Fabrication

Page 4: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

ResearchReading and Evaluating

Sources

Page 5: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Reading Sources Critically:

Look for similarities and differences in the sources you read

Examine implications of what you read for the project – how will the source help you?

Be aware of unusual information

Note relevant sources used in the source you are reading

Avoid reading with psychological standards (egocentrism, sociocentrism, etc.)

Be aware of logical fallacies

Ask questions as you read – don’t just accept what the reading tells you

Page 6: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Primary vs. Secondary Sources:

A primary source is an original work or evidence provided directly by an observer of an event

A primary source has not been tainted by the opinion of another person

Examples: Works of art or literature (poem, short story, novel, painting, musical recordings, etc.) Personal writings (diaries, journals, memoirs, autobiographies) Reports, photographs, films, audio recordings of an event Physical artifacts associated with an event (the book gives an example of a weapon used in a crime scene)

A secondary source is a source that comments on or interprets an event, using a primary source as evidence

A secondary source is okay to use, but remember that you are seeing a primary source/issue through the eyes of other people

To avoid problems with this tainted lens, consider what factors may have affected the author’s argument or analysis

Page 7: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Evaluating sources:

Look at evidence to see if it is reasonable:

Is enough evidence offered?

Is the right kind of evidence offered? For example, does the author rely on different types of evidence or just one?

Is the evidence convincing to you? If not, your readers will probably not buy it either.

Is the source of evidence provided?

Avoid personal websites or blogs – tend to be very subjective sources

Page 8: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Evaluate the author:

• How knowledgeable is the author about the topic? What makes the author an “expert” on the topic?

• Who is the author affiliated with? What organization (if any) does the author belong to?

• How do the author’s biases affect the arguments, ideas, and information in the source?

Also consider the publication’s bias

• The date of publication – this is especially applicable if you are writing a report in the field of science • Comprehensiveness – does the source provided a complete and balanced view of the topic?

Also consider:

Page 9: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

ResearchMLA Citations

Page 10: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

How to Format Works Cited Page:

*See handout for general rules

Important things worth mentioning twice…

Title your page Works Cited – Times New Roman size 12

Alphabetize by the first word listed in each citation

(with the exception of a, an, and the).

Every entry should end with a period (.)

Page 11: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

How to Format Citations Based on SourceType:

Book: One author

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

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

Page 12: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

How to Format Citations Based on SourceType:

Book: More than one author

Last, First M., and First Last. Book. City Published: Publisher, Year Published. Print.

Carley, Michael K., and Jody Jones. 1939: The Alliance That Never Was and the Coming

of World War II. Chicago: Dee, 1999. Print.

Page 13: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

How to Format Citations Based on SourceType:

Book: Chapter from an Edited Book

Last, First M. Section/Chapter Title. Book/Anthology. Ed. First M. Last. Edition. City Published: Publisher, Year Published. Page

Range. Print.

Melville, Herman. Hawthorne and His Mosses. The Norton Anthology of American Literature.

Ed. Nina Baym. 3rd ed. New York: Norton, 1989. 5-25. Print.

Page 14: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Website

Last, First M. “Website Article.” Website. Publisher, Day Month Year. Web. Day Month Year.

Friedland, Lois. “Top 10 Natural and Wildlife Adventure Travel Trips.” About.com. New York Times Company, 22 Sept. 2008. Web.

25 Sept. 2008.

How to Format Citations Based on SourceType:

Page 15: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

How to Format Citations Based on SourceType:

Personal Interview

Interviewee. Personal Interview. Day Month Year.

Hesch, Kara . Personal Interview. 9 Dec. 2012.

Page 16: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

How to Format In-Text Citations:

Your in-text citation should always include the first element of the citation of the Works Cited page.

For example, if the first element listed for a source is the author, you will put the author and page number in the in-text citation: (Carley 30).

There should be NO punctuation used here, and the period goes OUTSIDE of the parenthesis.

Page 17: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

How to Format In-Text Citations:

If no author is listed (common for websites), you go to the next element of the Works Cited page citation for that source.

For a website, this would be the article title: (“Top 10 Natural and Wildlife Adventure Travel Trips”).

NEVER put the URL in the in-text citation!

Page 18: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Research:Using Sources

Properly

Page 19: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Using Direct Quotes:

Write down the EXACT quote and the page it appears on You may want to quote when the statement strongly supports (or disagrees) with your idea

Use a quote when it enhances your paper and you don’t think your paraphrase could do it justice

Be sure to indicate it is a quote by using quotation marks

o Also, be sure to introduce your quoteo For example:

As Smith states in her book Untitled, “……” (33).

Page 20: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Paraphrasing:Paraphrasing is restating a passage or statement in your own words

Your research paper will include a great deal of paraphrasing – use it when a direct quote is not entirely necessary

Points to remember when paraphrasing:

Still need to cite when paraphrasing

Paraphrasing too closely is plagiarism (for example, adding or changing words, including using a thesaurus to change a word)

To avoid plagiarism, focus on key ideas in the passage

Page 21: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Paraphrasing: PracticeParaphrase the following paragraph:

"The Antarctic is the vast source of cold on our planet, just as the sun is the source of our heat, and it exerts tremendous control on our climate," [Jacques] Cousteau told the camera. "The cold ocean water around Antarctica flows north to mix with warmer water from the tropics, and its upwellings help to cool both the surface water and our atmosphere. Yet the fragility of this regulating system is now threatened by human activity.“ From "Captain Cousteau," Audubon (May 1990):17.

Page 22: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

The twenties were the years when drinking was against the law, and the law was a bad joke because everyone knew of a local bar where liquor could be had. They were the years when organized crime ruled the cities, and the police seemed powerless to do anything against it. Classical music was forgotten while jazz spread throughout the land, and men like Bix Beiderbecke, Louis Armstrong, and Count Basie became the heroes of the young. The flapper was born in the twenties, and with her bobbed hair and short skirts, she symbolized, perhaps more than anyone or anything else, America's break with the past.

From Kathleen Yancey, English 102 Supplemental Guide (1989): 25.

Page 23: Research. Plagiarism and Fabrication Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else’s words, ideas or data as one’s own work. If you submit ideas that are.

Summarizing:A summary is a brief statement of what a source says. You are taking a great deal of information and narrowing it down to a few sentences.

This will be part of your annotation for your annotated bibliography.

Practice:

Write a brief summary of your favorite novel or movie. Be prepared to share with the class.