Overview  Outline Project Specification  Plagiarism  Bibliography  IPR.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Referencing – why do it? When you start researching a project you will be expected to find and use information that will help you. This might be from such.
Advertisements

Module 2 Acknowledging Sources
CSE594 Fall 2009 Jennifer Wong Oct. 14, 2009
What is Plagiarism? buying, stealing, or borrowing a paper (including, of course, copying an entire paper or article from the Web) hiring someone to write.
Citations, footnotes, references (citing sources) Writing tips for a paper/report/formal writing project How to avoid plagiarizing by not copying/pasting.
London School of Science & Technology Harvard Referencing Guide.
Bibliography Cards Use index cards of a different size or color from your note cards Use a separate card for each bibliography entry Write in ink Be sure.
Avoiding Plagiarism Tips on Citations, Direct Quotes, and Paraphrasing © 2011, Regis University.
Referencing, NOT Plagiarising!. Outline Referencing Citations Creating a reference list Plagiarism Recognising what it is How to avoid it.
Scientific Research Dr. Noura Al-dayan.
PLAGIARISM, COLLUSION AND REFERENCING. IN ACADEMIC WRITING YOU NEED  to show that you have researched your subject  to acknowledge the sources you have.
Research & Referencing SED1007: Week 6. Do you trust your sources?  You can find plenty of web pages saying…  “Windows 7 is better than OS X”  “OS.
How to prepare better reports
Proper Citation and Attribution Avoiding Plagiarism Lois S. Sadler and Janene Batten Yale University School of Nursing 2010.
Referencing: a short quiz Nancy Graham Learning Advisor (Medicine) July 2006.
Writing Papers and Citing Sources:
Developing Business Practice – 302LON Reading for academic success Week 1.
Harvard Referencing
RESEARCHING Notes on plagiarism and APA style references Please copy the information in this presentation into your class notes. You do not need to copy.
What is it? How to Avoid it!
What is it? Let’s decide as a class..  They don’t know that Park University doesn’t allow plagiarism  They don’t understand what plagiarism is  International.
How to Create a Research PowerPoint
Referencing and Plagiarism A Guide for students Nick Hubbard.
REFERENCING GUIDE REFERENCING GUIDE ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW FOR YOUR ASSIGNMENTS… Fiona Maistry
Avoiding Plagiarism. “Plagiarism is a form of cheating in assessment… it is the presentation of the work, idea or creation of another person, without.
References & Bibliographies. What you will learn: What are references & bibliographies. Why provide references & bibliographies. Different styles of references.
Loving Your Library Ms. Boreland’s guide to research and writing excellence.
CITE YOUR STUFF! Your Guide to Avoiding Plagiarism & Creating Bibliographies Developed by Gayle Bushell for the Resource Centre, October 2006.
Referencing Harvard APA (6 th ed.). Referencing Academic writing requires you to understand the ideas and writing of other people. You should always acknowledge.
Acknowledging Sources
Research Paper Topic Pick a topic that is appropriate for the assignment. Pick a topic that is easily researchable. You should have many sources. Pick.
Welcome Back! Counselling Level Three Week 14 Assignment Workshop (including Harvard Referencing)
Plagiarism Guidelines What is plagiarism?. Academic Honesty “Honesty by individuals and social groups is a basic value essential to a fair and just society.
Plagiarism. Doing research puts you in a position to present views relevant to your topic other than your own. You will discover many interesting ideas.
Counselling Level Three Week 11 PCC in Action and Assignment Workshop (including Harvard Referencing)

1 Document Writing and Presentations. 2 Writing reports and project documentation u Approaches to writing u Writing style u References u Other tips u.
The University of South Wales Guide to Referencing Daniela Pesconi-Arthur October/2013.
Library training, Part II Justin Hodds Subject Librarian for Education Psychology.
Notetaking Using Note Cards for Your Research Paper.
PLAGIARISM Dr Cordelia Beattie School Academic Misconduct Officer.
University of Derby PReSS – Plagiarism - A Guide for Students What is plagiarism? “…passing off someone else’s work, either intentionally or unintentionally,
“Citing your sources” What does it really mean?. Citing means that you tell your reader that certain ideas or parts in your paper came from another source.
How to avoid plagiarism. Format of this session A. What is plagiarism?: Can you recognise it? (Activity 1, 2 and 3) B. What is paraphrasing?: How do you.
Research Vocabulary. Research The investigation of a particular topic using a variety of reliable resources.
Plagiarism Miss H. 2008/2009. The entire content of this presentation comes from TurnItIn.com Turnitin allows free distribution and non-profit use of.
Taking Notes when Reading Should you require this or any other handout in a different format, please let us know.
How to Research Learning outcomes To understand the research process To understand the benefits of planning before embarking on internet searching To use.
Effective Research & Resources Mrs. Bastone, Head of Learning Resources Autumn 2015.
Effective Research & Resources Mrs. Bastone, Head of Learning Resources Autumn 2015.
A guide to avoiding plagiarism and creating bibliographies Cite your Stuff Originally developed by Gayle Bushell for the WCDSB Resource Centre, October.
Jackie A. Rapp January 21,  Definition of Plagiarism? The copying of another's paper with the intention of representing it as one's own" (Lathrop.
Banda Ramadan - Citing and Referencing 1 Communication Skills (603281) Citing and Referencing.
Antar Abdellah.  Writing is a process NOT a product  You need to go through the experience of writing to produce real valuable pieces  Copying or quoting.
Effective Research – Mrs. Bastone, Head of Learning Resources LVS Resources – Mrs. Keeler, LRC Manager Autumn 2015.
Introduction to Academic Writing
FRANCHISE INSTITUTION
CSE594 Fall 2009 Jennifer Wong Oct. 14, 2009
How to avoid plagiarism
COMP390/3/4/5 Final Year Project Demonstration & Dissertation
Plagiarism and Referencing
COMP390/3/4/5 Final Year Project Demonstration & Dissertation
COMP390/3/4/5 Final Year Project Demonstration & Dissertation
An Introduction to the Research Process
Plagiarism & Annotation
COMP390/3/4/5 && COMP593 Final Year Projects Demonstration & Dissertation Irina Biktasheva
HARVARD REFERENCING SYSTEM
CSE594 Fall 2009 Jennifer Wong Oct. 14, 2009
Presentation transcript:

Overview  Outline Project Specification  Plagiarism  Bibliography  IPR

Outline Project Specification  See the website for details  Title Page  Two pages of content  Template available (not required)  Due by 6pm Monday 22 nd October (i.e. next week)  Blackboard submission  All modules - use the CS39440 module

Plagiarism

Good Practice and Unfair Practice  What is plagiarism?  Why is now a good time to think about it?  What happens if I am suspected?  How to avoid it… i.e. adopting good practice

What is plagiarism?  It is the intentional use of other people's ideas and words and claiming them as your own  e.g. taking someone else's code and handing it in as if you wrote it  e.g. taking someone else's words and putting them into a document that you are writing without attribution (see later)

Plagiarism includes…  Reusing writing without attribution  Reusing diagram without attribution  Reusing code without attribution  Reusing ideas without attribution

Why is this topical?  You will be writing reports on this module  You will be writing code  Some people try to pass of other people’s work as their own  We need to see what is YOUR work

What happens if plagiarism is suspected?  Case is reported to Department Exam Board Chairperson (Prof. Dave Barnes at present)  Student receives a formal letter from the Chair  Enquiry committee is established  Less than 20 credits: dealt with in the department (but can be handled at the University level)  More than 20 credits: must be handled at the University level  There is a hearing  If the student is found guilty, a penalty will be applied

Possible penalties  Lower or zero mark awarded  Decision about whether a retake is allowed  Exclusion from University

“Unfair” vs “Bad” practice  Unfair practice – you have attempted to gain an unfair advantage  Bad practice – you have not followed good practice for some areas  Plagiarism has some grey areas  Always use good practice so that you won’t leave yourself open to accusations

How to avoid bad practice  1. For course work or project work, NEVER write down words taken directly from another source without putting quotation marks around it and a reference to where you found it  2. Unless it is an impressive quote you are better of explaining things in your own words (with a reference)  Never just cut and paste someone else’s code into your program. If you are supposed to do the coding yourself, then look at the code, learn from the code, put it to one side and write your own implementation.  If you are using 3 rd party code, record exactly where you obtained the code from, when you accessed the code and how the code has been used in your project.

Bibliography

Building a bibliography  For your reports, you need to tell us the sources that you have been reading to support your work  Information such as:  Authors/Editors and Year of Publication  Title (book/journal)  Edition / Volume / Series  Publisher and Place of Publication  Page References  URLs for web resources and dates when you accessed the resource  Digital Object Identifiers  Start keeping detailed records: tools may help (BibTeX, EndNote)

 Author-Date (Harvard Style)  IEEE Style (Numeric)  Useful Resource  Pears, R., Shields, G. (2010). Cite them right: the essential referencing guide. 8 th Edition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

Annotated Bibliography  A bibliography, with a paragraph for each entry to describe the main points/ideas that are of interest to your project.  Might be more difficult with the tool support…

Example Bibliographies (1) Bibliography: Major/Minor Project17

Example Bibliographies (2) Bibliography [1] [2] [3] [4] Newborn, M., (1975) Computer Chess. Academic Press. [5] Connolly, Thomas M & Begg, Carolyn E. (2000) Database Solutions, A step-by-step guide to building databases. Addison- Wesley. Major/Minor Project18

Example Bibliographies (3) [1] Loosemore, M., Uher T. Essentials of Construction Project Management, UNSW Press, This book covers the process of managing large construction projects. In particular, it discusses the production of a design management plan, and how it can be used in managing the construction phase. This is useful for the modelling phase of my project. [2] Eriksson, H., Penker, M., Lyons, B., Fado, D. UML2 Toolkit, Wiley, UML2 updates the UML standard, but many of the extra features are related to the needs of Model-Driven Development, and so are not relevant to this project, where modelling with the simpler UML1 will be sufficient. [3] Stevens, P., Pooley R.Using UML: software engineering with objects and components, Addison-Wesley, A useful summary of UML when I was doing the modelling, but too short on examples to be useful when learning how to use the various components of UML in the first place. Major/Minor Project19

IPR

 Who owns the outputs of the project?  General statement on the website  Read this  Talk to me about any questions  May involve CCS as appropriate

Questions?