Combating Plagiarism: A Hands-On Guide for Librarians, Teachers, and Students
Autor Terry Darren Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 sep 2019 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781440865466
ISBN-10: 1440865469
Pagini: 324
Ilustrații: 1 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Libraries Unlimited
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1440865469
Pagini: 324
Ilustrații: 1 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Libraries Unlimited
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Provides opportunities for librarians to collaborate with teachers and writing centers through plagiarism education
Notă biografică
Terry Darr is library director at Loyola Blakefield, an independent college preparatory school for boys in grades 6-12. She often presents on plagiarism education and micro-paraphrasing.
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionChapter 1. The State of Plagiarism TodayThe Online CommunityPlagiarism PerceptionsPlagiarism in SchoolsThe Role of Instruction for Plagiarism EducationPlagiarism Education InstructionWriting and PlagiarismLibrarians as Plagiarism Education TeachersThe New Plagiarism: Challenges with SourcesBooksDigital SourcesResearch DatabasesWeb PagesThe New Skill Set Required by Digital SourcesCitationsCitation ToolsDigital Source Information ManagementAlternatives to PrintingAdvice for StudentsToolsAdvice for Teachers and LibrariansFormattingInformation Retrieval and SynthesisParaphrasingProofreadingThe Authorship and Publication Cycle for Digital SourcesTurnitin.comConclusionReferencesChapter 2. Paraphrasing and Micro-ParaphrasingMicro-ParaphrasingPrerequisite Skills for ParaphrasingThe Micro-Paraphrasing ProcessThe Micro-Paraphrasing Teaching Process: Preparing for InstructionActive Instruction: Phase OneActive Instruction: Phase TwoStudent ExamplesConclusionChapter 3. Plagiarism ConversationsStructuring the DiscussionExplaining PlagiarismCategories of Plagiarism QuestionsPractical Plagiarism QuestionsGroup Work QuestionsPlagiarism Questions for College-Bound High School Seniors and First-Year College StudentsTeacher Questions about PlagiarismAcademic Integrity QuestionsMoral Plagiarism QuestionsConclusionReferencesChapter 4. CitationsCitation BasicsThe Citation Is the SourceTypes of Resources: Finding the Citation InformationPrint BooksMLAAPAChicago Notes and BibliographyChicago Author-DateAdvice for Teachers and Librarians about Print BooksDigital SourcesWeb PagesMLA: Web Page ArticlesAPA: Web Page ArticlesChicago Notes and Bibliography: Web Page ArticlesChicago Author-Date: Web Page ArticlesResearch Database ArticlesMLA: Scholarly Journal Research Database ArticleAPA: Scholarly Journal Research Database ArticleChicago Author-Date Scholarly Journal Research Database ArticleChicago Notes-Bibliography Scholarly Journal CitationMLA Research Database Reference Source Article Citation-No AuthorMLA Research Database Reference Source Citation-AuthorAPA Research Database Reference Source Article Citation-No AuthorAPA Research Database Reference Source Article Citation-AuthorChicago Author-Date Research Database Reference Source Article Citation-No AuthorChicago Author-Date Research Database Reference Source Article Citation-AuthorChicago Notes and Bibliography Research Database Reference Source Article Citation-No AuthorChicago Notes and Bibliography Research Database Reference Source Article Citation-AuthorBreaking down CitationsBuilding Visual Familiarity of Citations: Advice for Teachers and LibrariansCitation GuidesAdvice for Students about Citation GuidesAdvice for Teachers about Citation GuidesAdvice for Teachers: Teaching CitationsLibrarians Teaching CitationsOnline Citation ToolsOnline Citation Tools: Advice for LibrariansOnline Citation Tools: Advice for TeachersOnline Citation Tools: Advice for StudentsResourcesChapter 5. Reducing Plagiarism in the ClassroomTeacher and Librarian CollaborationsAdvice for Teachers about Collaborations for Plagiarism EducationAdvice for Librarians about Collaborations for Plagiarism EducationStrategies for Reducing Plagiarism in the ClassroomAdvice for TeachersThe Use of Secondary Sources to Reduce PlagiarismPlagiarism Problems and SolutionsCitations and PlagiarismAdvice for Teachers: When to Expect Citations from StudentsRecognizing Plagiarism through Citation ErrorsProofreading to Avoid PlagiarismAdvice for TeachersAdvice for LibrariansAdvice for StudentsProofreading GuidelinesA Note about Citation Tools and ProofreadingTitle FormatsReferences/Bibliography/Works Cited PageParenthetical Citations and FootnotesDirect Quotes and ParaphrasesDirect QuotesDirect Quote Parenthetical Citations and FootnotesParaphrasesParaphrase Parenthetical Citations and FootnotesBlock QuotesReview the Teacher's Grading Rubric and Assignment ExpectationsReviewing a RubricMore Proofreading Guidelines: Advice for StudentsIntegrating Plagiarism EducationAdvice for TeachersAdvice for Librarians: Leading the Way with Plagiarism EducationLibrarians: Helping Students Who Have PlagiarizedReferencesChapter 6. Student ResourcesA New Way to Look at PlagiarismThe InternetCatching PlagiarismHow Do You Know You Are Running the Risk of Plagiarism?Types of InformationCommon KnowledgeRelevant and Irrelevant InformationIdeas, Facts, and OpinionsExamples of Ideas and OpinionsWhat's a Fact?Recognizing Digital Source PartsTitles of Reference Books and Specialized EncyclopediasTitles of Magazines and NewspapersResearch Database Articles: Scholarly Journal TitlesWebsites: Article Titles and Web Page TitlesVolume and Issue NumberBook PublishersWhat Types of Information Need a Citation?Authors and EditorsRecognizing Authors in a CitationMLAChicago (Notes and Bibliography)Chicago (Author-Date)APAMLAChicago (Notes and Bibliography)Chicago (Author-Date)APAAuthor Name FormatsEditorsMLAAPAChicagoTitle FormatsItalics versus Quotation Marks for TitlesMLAChicago Author-Date and Notes-BibliographyAPADates and Page NumbersLocating Publication Dates for SourcesBooksWeb PagesResearch Database ArticlesPublication Date versus Copyright DateAccessed Dates for Digital SourcesMonth AbbreviationsDate VariationsDate Variations for Parenthetical CitationsPage Numbers in SourcesNonstandard SourcesQuotations and ParaphrasingBlock QuotesMLAAPAChicago Author-DateChicago Notes and BibliographyPlacing a Quote or Paraphrase in the Text of Your PaperMLA: Direct Quote from a Research Database ArticleMLA: ParaphraseAPA: Direct QuoteAPA: ParaphraseChicago Author-Date: Direct QuoteChicago Notes and Bibliography: Direct QuoteChicago Author-Date: ParaphraseChicago Notes and Bibliography: ParaphraseMicro-ParaphrasingThe Mechanics of PlagiarismCopy and PasteThese Errors Are Not Considered Plagiarism (But You'll Probably Lose Points)Plagiarism Problems and SolutionsOther Practical Ways to Avoid PlagiarismHonor Policies and Honor AgreementsYou Have Been Accused of Plagiarism: What Should You Do?ResourcesChapter 7. Common KnowledgeCommon Knowledge and PlagiarismRecognizing Common KnowledgeReading Sources with Attention to DetailAdvice for Teachers: What Do Your Students Know?Class ExamplesAdvice for StudentsNo Citation Required: Common Knowledge or Background KnowledgeNeeds a Citation: Not Common KnowledgeReferenceChapter 8. Digital ImagesAdvice for Teachers about Digital ImagesCategories of Digital ImagesGoogle ImagesDigital CollectionsCitations for Digital ImagesGoogle ImagesMLA ExamplesAPA ExamplesChicago Author-Date ExamplesChicago Notes and Bibliography ExamplesAdvice for Librarians about Digital ImagesAdvice for Students about Digital ImagesReferenceResourcesConclusionAppendix A: The Anatomy of a Web PageAppendix B: Identify the Parts of the CitationAppendix C: The Anatomy of a Research Database ArticleAppendix D: Can You Spot the Problems? Citation ProofreadingAppendix E: Citation GuidesAppendix F: Final Documentation ListsAppendix G: General Citation Style ReviewsAppendix H: Explaining PlagiarismAppendix I: Common KnowledgeGlossaryIndex
Recenzii
Recommended for high school librarians.
Readable, informative, and filled with excellent examples to illustrate its points, Darr's book is an extremely valuable resource. Any librarian or educator of any other sort will benefit from studying this book.
Readable, informative, and filled with excellent examples to illustrate its points, Darr's book is an extremely valuable resource. Any librarian or educator of any other sort will benefit from studying this book.