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Academic Honesty February 20 th 2013. Opportunities to discuss course content Today 10-2 Thursday 11-2 Friday 10-1.

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Presentation on theme: "Academic Honesty February 20 th 2013. Opportunities to discuss course content Today 10-2 Thursday 11-2 Friday 10-1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Academic Honesty February 20 th 2013

2 Opportunities to discuss course content Today 10-2 Thursday 11-2 Friday 10-1

3 Definition pla-gia-rize Etymology: plagiary Date: 1716 transitive senses : to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own : use (another's production) without crediting the source intransitive senses : to commit literary theft : present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source From: Webster's New World Dictionary, Second College Edition

4 The difference between good research and plagiarism is a reference!

5 The Academic Handbook St. Edward's University expects academic honesty from all students; consequently, all work submitted for grading in a course must be created as the result of your own thought and effort. Representing work as your own when it is not a result of your own thought and effort is a violation of the St. Edward's Academic Honesty policy. The normal penalty for a student who is dishonest in any work is to receive a mark of F for that course. Plagiarism is a form of academic dishonesty and may result in the same penalty. In cases of mitigating circumstances, the instructor has the option to assign a lesser penalty. A student who has been assigned the grade of F because of academic dishonesty does not have the option of withdrawing from the course.

6 FORMS OF PLAGIARISM

7 Theft Taking someone else's work and submitting it as your own. This ranges from a few sentences, to an entire paper. it is plagiarism and is subject to the penalties under the academic honesty policy

8 Collusion receiving unauthorized assistance on any type of work such as writing sections of your paper. Roommates, friends, mom and dad

9 What of Long Strings of Quotations? Cutting and Pasting information from the internet is stealing. This includes big chunks of properly cited information. Papers must be original

10 Unintentional Plagiarism Is still plagiarism failure to cite creating an impression that someone else's work is your own

11 Examples you bought or otherwise acquired a research paper and handed it in part or all of it as you own you paraphrased someone's unique or particularly apt phrase without acknowledgement. You repeated someone's wording without acknowledgement while browsing the web, you copied text and pasted it into your paper without quotation marks or without citing source

12 PARAPHRASING

13 When Paraphrasing is Plagiarism Only the wording of a few phrases was changed and the sentences were only re- arranged. This is called transcribing or The writer does not acknowledge the source of the information and ideas.

14 When it is not The writer uses his or her own words. Proper acknowledgment for the ideas presented in the passage is given.

15 WHEN CITATIONS ARE NOT NEEDED

16 Citations are not needed Information is your own writing It is a familiar saying or proverb

17 Common Knowledge These are facts known by a large amount of people. These do not need citations. George Washington was the first President of the United States

18 What is Not Common Knowledge Anything that is not common knowledge needs a citation. This is especially true when the statement involves an interpretation Washington was probably a deist, though he would have strenuously denied accusations of not being a Christian, if any had been foolish enough to make them (Johnson, p.205)

19 Wikipedia This is not a trusted source because it is user edited rather than peer reviewed. It tries to present a neutral point of view, but is often lacking The Death of SinbadDeath of Sinbad Do not use this as a source in your paper.

20 SUBMISSION 2 What it Entails

21 THREE SECTIONS 1.Introduction to social problem 2.Background/history/ current policy 3.In-depth presentation of the sides

22 INTRODUCTION (approximately 3-4 pages) Introduction Social problem – Significance – Statistics – Targets Definitions (as needed) Brief overview of the controversy Conclude with normative question

23 Your introduction should scare the reader by convincing him/her that the fate of the world depends on solving this problem

24 BACKGROUND/HISTORY (Approximately 5 pages) Goal: historical context to understand current controversy Starting place: it should be far back enough to describe the modern dilemma Ending point: Most recent events

25 Section 3:What it Contains (4-5 Pages for Each Side) Stakeholders Arguments Issues Plans

26 Who are the Stakeholders? Identify the General Stakeholders Identify the Specific Stakeholders – Tell me why the group matters – Tell me what they value Conclude by identifying their major arguments on the solution

27 MECHANICS Approximately 14-16 pages long (Minimum of 12) Works Cited Correct MLA form throughout Style – In accordance with Capstone guidelines – Polished, proofed DUE: In Class 3/8/2013 and on Blackboard by Midnight on 3/8/2013

28 MISSION RESOURCE CENTER

29 What they Do The MCRC focuses on content specific to Capstone Help students – understand Capstone vocabulary – find and evaluate appropriate sources for their projects – analyze the arguments and moral reasoning – develop portions of their oral presentations.

30 Who and Where Holy Cross Hall 106 Hours: One-on-one tutoring sessions by appointment. Staff: Professors Mary Reilly, Brian McNerney, Brett Westbrook, and Peter Austin

31 On Line At- St. Edwards http://sites.stedwards.edu/mcrc/ On Twitter- https://twitter.com/MissionCourseRC https://twitter.com/MissionCourseRC

32 Turnitin.Com This paper must also be submitted to turnitin.com

33 About Turnitin.com It Checks your paper for plagiarism – Against the web – Against the other papers in the turnitin archive Failure to use this results in a 10 point deduction from your paper

34 Accessing Turnitin Log into Blackboard Go to the CAPS 4360 Page DO NOT GO TO TURNITIN.COM

35 Click on Assignments

36 Click on View/Complete

37 Step 1 in Submitting the Paper Fill out all the parts You must have a title for your paper Browse for your file Choose Upload

38 Step 2 In Submitting the Paper Preview the Paper Make sure everything is ok Choose Submit

39 Step 3 in Submitting the Paper If you do it right, you will get the following message


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