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Published byTyrone Weaver Modified over 8 years ago
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Give credit whenever you use: 1. Another person's idea, opinion, or theory. 2. Any facts, statistics, graphs, drawings -any pieces of information that are not common knowledge. 3. Quotations of another person's actual spoken or written words. 4.Paraphrases of another person's spoken or written word Author: Tool for Teachers http://mytpl.org/wp-content/uploads/TFT-LP-8-When-and-Why-to-Cite- Sources1.pdf
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Author vs Corporate Author If an article has an author the name will be give somewhere on the page…yes- sometimes you have to search for it. If no author was given it is most likely a corporate author…which mean a group such as Health Canada, WWF, Nike etc is responsible for the content.
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What to include in text Author last name and date of publication Ex: (Ross, 2012)
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The Works Cited This you include at the end of your paper n a separate page. We are going to be working our way towards this… for now we wont include it….but technically that is plagerism.
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Paraphrase vs. Direct use of source (sometimes you will hear me say direct quotation) Paraphrase is when you put someone else's info in your own words- you still have to give the credit Use of Direct source is when you take word from word for the text and incorporate it into your work- you put a set of quotations marks around the work to show that it is word for word from another source.
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