Lecture Notes 4 Week 7 and 8 2

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BBI2424 ACADEMIC WRITING/LECTURE NOTES 4/WEEK 7-8 1 LECTURE NOTES 4 AVOIDING PLAGIARISM Definition of Plagiarism: The main difficulty that students face is that they are expected: There are several reasons why students must avoid plagiarism: Copying the work of others will not help you develop your own understanding To show that you understand the rules of the academic community Plagiarism is easily detected by teachers and computer software It may lead to failing a course or even having to leave college To show that they have read the principal experts on a subject by giving citations To explain these ideas in their own words and come to their own original conclusions.

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Transcript of Lecture Notes 4 Week 7 and 8 2

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    LECTURE NOTES 4

    AVOIDING PLAGIARISM

    Definition of Plagiarism:

    The main difficulty that students face is that they are expected:

    There are several reasons why students must avoid plagiarism:

    Copying the work of others will not help you develop your own

    understanding

    To show that you understand the rules of the academic community

    Plagiarism is easily detected by teachers and computer software

    It may lead to failing a course or even having to leave college

    To show that they have read the principal experts on a subject by giving

    citations

    To explain these ideas in their own words and come to their own original

    conclusions.

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    Acknowledging sources:

    Author Date Title Place of publication

    Publisher

    Smith, M. (2009) Power and the State

    Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan

    The citation makes it clear to the reader that you have read Smith and borrowed this

    idea from him. This reference gives the reader the necessary information to find the

    source if the reader needs more details.

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    Degrees of plagiarism:

    Although plagiarism essentially means copying somebody elses work, it is not

    always easy to define. Working with a partner, consider the following academic

    situations and decide if they are plagiarism.

    This exercise shows that plagiarism can be accidental. For example in situation (10)

    above, when the authors name is misspelt, is technically plagiarism but really

    carelessness. In situation (9) your teacher may have encouraged you to discuss in

    groups, and then write an essay on your own, in which case it will not be plagiarism.

    Self-plagiarism is also theoretically possible, as in situation (7). It can be difficult to

    decide what is general or common knowledge (6) but you can always try asking

    colleagues.

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    Avoiding plagiarism by summarising and paraphrasing:

    Quotations should not be over-used, hence you must learn to paraphrase and

    summarise in order to include other writers ideas in your work. This will demonstrate

    your understanding of a text to your teachers.

    Paraphrasing invloves re-writing a text so that the language is substantially

    different while the content stays the same.

    Summarising means reducing the length of a text but retaining the main

    points.

    Normally, both skills are used at the same time. You will learn these skills in detail

    when you begin learning about summarising and paraphrasing.

    Practice:

    Read the following text and compare the five paragraphs below, which use ideas and

    information from it. Decide which are plagiarised and which are acceptable, and give

    your reasons in the table.

    Railway Manias

    In 1830 there was a few dozens miles railways in all the world, chiefly consisting of

    the line from Liverpool to Manchester. By 1840 there were over 4,500 miles, by 1850

    over 23,500. Most of them were projected in a few bursts of speculative frenzy

    known as the railway manias of 1835-1837 and especially in 1844-1847. Most of

    them were built in large part with British capital, British iron, machines and know-

    how. These investment booms appear irrational because in fact few railways were

    much more profitable to the investor than other forms of enterprise, most yielded

    quite modest profits and many none at all: in 1855 the average interest on capital

    sunk in the British railways was a mere 3.7 per cent.

    (Adapted from the Age of Revolution by Eric Hobsbawm, p.45)

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    Plagiarised or acceptable?

    a.

    b.

    c.

    d.

    e.

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    LECTURE NOTES 4

    CITING SOURCES & QUOTING EVIDENCE

    In-Text Citations

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    Special Citation Situations:

    1. Quotations

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    2. Idea Taken from More Than One Source

    3. Unknown Author

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    4. Groups as Authors

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    5. Source with More Than One Author

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    6. Indirect Source

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    Writing the Reference Page

    Documenting your sources includes both citing sources within your paper and on a

    reference page. The list of your references is the second of the two-part

    documentation process. The format of information in the reference list corresponds

    to the citations within your paper.

    General Formating Guidelines For APA Reference Lists

    APA Reference List Formats for Specific Types of Sources

    Each type of source has specific rules for how it should appear on a reference page.

    Go to the Purdue University Online Writing Lab at https://owl.english.purdue.edu/

    owl/resource/560/01/ for more information about formats for sources.

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    LECTURE NOTES 4

    CITATION: REPORTING VERBS

    What are reporting verbs and when should I use them?

    Academic writing requires you to use citations to refer to the original source when

    you have used someone elses ideas or concepts in your writing. One of the most

    common ways to incorporate these citations into your writing is to use reporting

    verbs to present the information.

    In addition to helping you to avoid plagiarising others work, reporting verbs help you

    to strengthen your argument and to help the reader understand the relevance of

    the sources you are using in your writing.

    Below is a table of other useful reporting verbs that you might use with citations.

    Please note, however, that these verbs are not all interchangeable. Before selecting

    a verb, it is vital that you carefully read the source and clearly understand the

    authors claim(s). When you have chosen a verb, ask yourself whether that is really

    what the author intended. You must make sure that you report others work

    accurately.

    The APA style emphasises the use of the simple present tense or present perfect

    tense when you are discussing an authors ideas or writing.

    For example:

    Harrison evaluates

    White demonstrates

    Lee has suggested

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    There are certain conventions to follow when citing someones work. Words like

    says, tells, asks are normally used in oral conversation but are not appropriate

    in formal academic writing. The following table illustrates some appropriate words to

    use for reporting the work of others.

    When you mention a published work for the first time, you can use the following

    basic patterns:

    For the second or subsequent mentions of your sources in your paraphrase of a

    linked point, you can use these patterns:

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    References:

    Swales, J. (1990). Genre analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

    Swales, J., & Feak, C. (1994). Academic writing for graduate students. Ann Arbor, MI: University of

    Michigan Press.

    .

    PRACTICE:

    Choose one of the reported verbs suggested to complete the citations below.

    state suggest/identify claim

    1. Atrill et al. (2009) _____________ that the ultimate objective of accounting is

    to provide information in reports which can be used by internal and external

    decision-makers".

    lists suggests/identifies highlights

    2. Bronson (2011) _____________ three questions to which external decision

    makers need answers.

    argues defines describes/outlines

    3. Alan (2007) _____________ the users of special purpose reports as "users

    who have specialised needs and who possess the authority to obtain

    information to meet those needs".

    claims states suggests

    4. Armstrong (2004) _____________ that historical cost accounting has "passed

    its use-by date".

    propose say argue

    5. In their study on acculturation, Birman, Sharpe, and Angeles (2004)

    ___________ a variety of solutions to the current problem facing Australian

    cities such as Melbourne and Sydney, that of ghettoisation (p. 77).