LSE SADL Workshop 3
description
Transcript of LSE SADL Workshop 3
Workshop 3: Managing and sharing information
Hello again!
#SADLw3
Student Ambassador role
• How did sharing exercise go?– Did you share anything?– If so, what?– How did you bring it up?– If not, what stopped you?
• Discuss with person next to them and then share with class
Student Ambassador role
• What is a student ambassador for digital literacy?
– Is the role clear to you?– What support do you need?– How can you support fellow students?– How much time should it take? – What might be the benefits and challenges?– Are the workshops enough? The right content?
Activity: which animal are you?
Information behaviour• Discuss in pairs how you approach information• Which animal are you?
Which animal are you?
A. MagpieB. CuckooC. OstrichD. SquirrelE. VultureF. Giant PandaG. Giant AnteaterH. Orb weaver spider M
agpie
Cuckoo
Ostrich
Squirrel
Vulture
Giant Panda
Giant Ante
ater
Orb w
eaver s
pider
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Which animal are you
• What does this mean for students?
• How useful an exercise is this for students?– What does it reveal to you?– Would this affect how you study?
Today: managing and sharing information
• Keeping up to date• Managing (organising information) • Using (quoting, citing) • And sharing (if you want!) …
Activity: discussion
How do you…• Get alerts for new information• Manage or organise your information• Store or archive your information• Cite your information
Feedback to group?
How we do it
Activity: my favourite tool
• Name a tool you use to keep track of things– What you use?– How you use it?– Why you use it?
• Add your tool on the sharing wall: http://padlet.com/wall/skiqgvguf4
• Or write it on a post-it to share with group
Our favourite tools
• Evernote• Mendeley• Delicious• Dropbox/ Google Drive• Flipboard/RSS
Evernote
• Incorporate images, audio, video and URLs into your notes
• Create checklists to help prioritise tasks• Automatically archive your notes and make
them searchable• Share notes via email, Twitter and messaging • Access across platforms
Social Bookmarking, e.g. Diigo, Delicious
• Access your weblinks from any computer • Organise bookmarks using tags and they are
searchable • Add notes to web pages you bookmark • Share some / all of your bookmarks • See popular web links people are
bookmarking and tagging
Dropbox and Google Drive
• Store and access your files whenever and wherever
• Easy to set up and use.• Change a file in own place, on one device and
all will update.• You can share, collaborate, or work alone.• Free up to a certain size
RSS feeds, e.g. Flipboard, Feedly
• Easy to set up and easy to add new feeds to the reader
• The information comes to you • Access across platforms• Flipboard very attractive to read • Good for reading on the go
Mendeley
• Easy to set up and start using• Access whenever and wherever and syncing
simple• Easy to add references + documents• Sharing readings between colleagues working
with you• Inserting citations as you write
Let’s find out how much you know about citing, referencing
and plagiarism!!
Is it plagiarism if you…
Copy a paragraph from a text and put it in your essay without putting it in quotation marks and referencing the source?
Is it plagiarism?
A. YesB. NoC. Unsure
YesNo
Unsure
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Is it plagiarism if you…
Copy a paragraph from a text and put it in your essay without putting it in quotation marks and referencing the source?
This is probably the most well known example of plagiarism. If you copy exact words, you must enclose them in quotation marks and acknowledge your source in your bibliography.
Is it plagiarism if you…
Include some paragraphs from a previous submitted essay that you have written into the one you are currently submitting?
Is it plagiarism?
A. YesB. NoC. Unsure
YesNo
Unsure
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Is it plagiarism if you…
Include some paragraphs from a previous submitted essay that you have written into the one you are currently submitting?
There is such a thing as self-plagiarism. Using your previous work in your current work is actually plagiarism and is not permitted.
Is it plagiarism if you…
Incorporate text from another source, changing one or two words and providing a citation?
Is it plagiarism?
A. Yes B. NoC. Unsure
Yes No
Unsure
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Is it plagiarism if you…
Incorporate text from another source, changing one or two words and providing a citation?
If you do not intend to quote directly from the source, you must write about it in your own words. Using too many words from the original source is plagiarism, even if you provide a reference.
Is it plagiarism if you…Copy a diagram or data table from a website, providing a reference for the source underneath?
Is it plagiarism?
A. Yes B. NoC. Unsure
Yes No
Unsure
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Is it plagiarism if you…Copy a diagram or data table from a website, providing a reference for the source underneath? This isn’t plagiarism. You
can include tables, diagrams or images from another source as long as you provide a reference.
Is it plagiarism if you…
Talk about the ideas of another author, written in your own words and without referring to the original author?
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Is it plagiarism?
A. Yes B. NoC. Unsure
Yes No
Unsure
33% 33%33%
Is it plagiarism if you…
Talk about the ideas of another author, written in your own words and without referring to the original author?
Even if you haven’t directly copied their words, you must provide a reference when talking about their ideas.
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What is plagiarism?
• Cutting and pasting from other documents.• Quoting without quotation marks or references.• Paraphrasing without referencing.• Summarising without referencing.• Using an image, source and/or diagram without
referencing.• Taking another student’s ideas and passing them off as
your own.• Re-cycling your own work which has been submitted for
assessment elsewhere.• Collaborating on what should be individual work.• Translating a document from another language.
Why do we need to cite?
To acknowledge the work of other writers To demonstrate the body of knowledge on which you have
based your work To enable other researchers to trace your sources and lead
them on to further information A standard system of citing ensures an easier system of tracing
knowledge more efficiently If you cite correctly, you don’t need to worry about plagiarism You are upholding and contributing to academic standards and
integrity
Academic writing is about …
• Posing a question, dilemma, debate that has not been posed in quite the same way before …
• Answering that question, with an answer that has not been constructed in quite the same way before …
• Bringing together your ideas with those of others, making connections between things that have not been connected in quite that way before …
• Using the work/ideas of others is a crucial element, but must be appropriately acknowledged.
LSE Teaching and Learning Centre
Wrap up and feedback
• Between now and the final session, please review Topic 5 of the Library Companion for Students in Moodle and send us any feedback
• See you at the final workshop in Summer Term
• Continue using the Sharing Wall:http://padlet.com/wall/skiqgvguf4