Title: Transition to Graduate School
1Transition to Graduate School
Trinity (Washington) University
2Welcome to Trinity!
- Session 2
- Transition to Graduate School
3Topics for Today
- Academic honesty plagiarism
- APA Documentation Style
4What is plagiarism?
Turn to a neighbor and discuss. Try to come up
with a definition.
5Plagiarism is the act of taking someone elses
ideas, words, research, or other intellectual or
artistic work and presenting it as if they were
your own (Trinity, 2005). Trinity University
(2005). Academic honesty, plagiarism, and the
honor system A handbook for students. p. 2.
6Conventions of Academic Writing
- For ANY and EVERY idea that you didnt make up
yourself you have to give credit to the
originator of the idea - There must be an attribution (that is, a
citation) showing where it came from - unless it is general knowledge
7Example from a journal article
- The example of academic writing on the next slide
was found in - Dix, S. (2006). Ill do it my way Three writers
and their revision practices. The Reading Teacher
59, 566-573.
8- The ability to revise is significant because it
helps the writer reflect and clarify his or her
thinking with the goal of improving the writing
(Calkins, 1991 Corden, 2001 Dix, 2003a
Fitzgerald, 1987, 1988 Graves, 1979, 1983
Murray, 1978).
These are citations of articles and books that
originated the idea
9Examples of Plagiarism
- Turn to a neighbor and discuss.
- Try to come up with three examples of plagiarism.
10What about these?
11- A student includes part of a book review found at
Amazon.com in a paper with no attribution
12In a paper about the moral development of
children,
- A student used the exact words found in a book by
Robert Coles. There were quotation marks around
the quote, and the book was listed in the
reference list.
13Plagiarism can be
- INADVERTENT
- As well as deliberate
14In a paper about current education initiatives
- A student says that education in the United
States has historically been a matter of local
government
15The fact thatcontrol of education in the U.S. is
local is common knowledge
16How do I know if something is common
knowledge?Especially if I didnt already know it
17Common Knowledge
- You find the same information without
documentation in 5 sources - It is information that a reasonably educated
person will already know - A person could easily find the information in
general reference sources - (Trinity, 2005)
18And
- Standard information such as historical dates
- Folk literature
- Commonsense observations, Ex. siblings will argue
over little things - (Fowler, H.R, Aaron, J.E., Limburg, K., 1992)
19In a paper comparing two theories of human
development
- The student cuts and pastes into the paper from
sources found on the internet --no documentation
or original writing
20In a paper about management styles
- A student builds on ideas obtained from
interviews with principals, but does not
acknowledge the individuals in the paper.
21YIPES!
- Thats a lot of ways to
- plagiarize.
22- Ill be fine as long as I change the words of my
source, right?
23Paraphrasing
- You must
- provide documentation
- for the source
- of all paraphrases
24Paraphrasing
- Must be done correctly
- Just changing a few words
- DOES NOT
- turn a quotation into your own work
25- Examples of acceptable and unacceptable
paraphrases can be found in the Academic Honesty
. . . Handbook - http//www.trinitydc.edu/academics/acadaff/policy.
php
26If the ideas OR CHOICE OF WORDS did not originate
with you
- You must give credit to the source
27When in doubt . . .
28Academic Honesty is MORE than avoiding
plagiarism
29- Submitting the same paper or project for two
different classes-- unless you have permission in
advance from both instructors-- is contrary to
the culture and ethics of academia.
30When an instructor requests original work, you
cannot use a paper, lesson plan, case study, etc.
- Found on the internet
- Created by a friend or family member
- Provided by your school district
- Found in a book or article
31Original work means just that, it is original,
created by you alone.
32APA Documentation Style
33What is APA?
34- I wonder what that means.
?
?
35Documentation Styles
- Every profession has a particular way of showing
where (documenting) ideas come from.
- English, Languages MLA
- (Modern Language Association)
- History, Philosophy Chicago
- (Chicago Manual of Style)
- Education, Psychology
- APA
- (American Psychological Association)
36Why?
37A documentation style has rules for
- Showing the sources of ideas in a paper
- Compiling a reference list
- Capitalization, punctuation, and selected aspects
of usage
38APA Style is
- Exceptionally comprehensive
- and complex
39. . . but required
40Coming up next
- In-text citations
- Reference list
- Cover Page
- Running Head
- Style issues - just a few
41In-Text Citations
42In-text citations
- In-text citations are what you put into the
actual text of a paper to document the source of
your ideas - You must indicate the source of ideas as well as
direct quotes and paraphrases - APA uses an author/date format
- APA does NOT use footnotes for citations
43Study the first complete paragraph on the third
page of the article on year round school, 2nd
sentence
Author
Author of a 2nd article reaching the same
conclusion as Ballinger
date
For example, Ballinger (2000) and Barber (1996)
found that students attendance and academic
achievement at year-round schools improved some
studies suggest that this schedule may especially
benefit at-risk students (Kneese, 1996 Shields
Oberg, 1999).
Semi-colon used to separate citations when more
than one article listed in a parenthesis
Period outside parens
44What information needs to be included?
- The author or authors of your source
- The publication date
- Sometimes the page number
45When do you need a page number?
- ALWAYS when you have a direct quote (that is
you use the EXACT words of your source) - Highly recommended when you paraphrase (p. 171)
46You do NOT need a page number
- When you are summarizing the general idea or
conclusions of a source
47Citation information within the text (your
sentences) should NOT be repeated in the
parenthesis
48Authors name is part of the sentence
Date, but not name, is put in parenthesis
For example, Ballinger (2000) and Barber (1996)
found that students attendance and academic
achievement at year-round schools improved some
studies suggest that this schedule may especially
benefit at-risk students (Kneese, 1996 Shields
Oberg, 1999).
A semi-colon is used to separate more than one
work cited within the same parenthesis.
The names of these authors were NOT included
within the text of the sentence so authors names
and pub dates are put in the parenthetical
citation.
49Example Direct quotation
- In explaining their choice of profession,
aspiring teachers often mention the long summer
vacation as a contributing factor, yet at a
school in Fairfax County, Virginia, teachers
viewed the year-round schedule as an improvement
in their working conditions (Haser Nasser,
2003. p. 67).
Quotation marks for direct quote
Note period comes at the very end.
No punctuation even though theres a period there
in the original sentence.
50Longer quotations
- Direct quotations 40 words or longer are placed
in block form without quotation marks around the
words - See pp. 170-171
51Online Material
- Provide author, date, and page no.
- If there are no page numbers, but paragraph
numbers, provide the paragraph number in the
parentheses in place of page number
52Example of in-text citation of online material,
no page number
Author, date
- In reviewing a new book on high-stakes
testing, Nichols (2009) states that the authors
primary argument is that the practice of
high-stakes testing presents an inherent paradox
(para. 2).
Period at end of everything
Location in source
53More on on-line material
- If there are no paragraph numbers, but section
headings, provide the section heading and the
number of the paragraph following the heading. - Shorten long heading titles and enclose short
title in quotation marks. - See pp. 171-172
54By now you must be wondering
- When do I use single vs. double quotation marks?
- Where do I put periods and commas?
- What do I do if there is a misspelled word in the
source I am quoting? - Where does the parenthetical citation go within a
sentence or paragraph? - What do I do if I use a quote but want to leave
out a few words that wont change the meaning?
55For the answer to those and other fascinating
questions
- READ THE BOOK!
- (pp. 171-173)
- All you need to know about in-text citations can
be found on pp. 169-173.
56- If your source contains a direct quote from
another source that you want to use, you must
indicate the original source of the quote in your
writing, and also state the source you found it
in. Do not omit in-text citations from material
you are quoting. - BUT only sources you have read yourself go into
your reference list. - See example 6.09 on p. 173.
57How many authors belong in a a citation?
58It all depends on
- How many people wrote the source being cited
- AND
- Whether it is the first or subsequent mention of
that source
59The first mention
- ALL authors last names
- UNLESS
- There are 6 or more authors
60If there are 6 or more authors,
- Use first authors name followed by et al. every
time - Like this
- (Smith, et al.)
comma
Note A period follows the al, but NOT the et
61For a work with just 1 author
- Use the authors last name every time
- Like this
- (Jones, 2006)
62For a work with 2 authors
- Use both last names every time
- Use the word and in the text
- Use an ampersand () in parentheses
63Two authors
The word and
- Hans and Blitz (2004) demonstrated that a
border collie can understand at least 200 words. - OR
- The German dog can understand at least 200
words (Hans Blitz, 2004).
ampersand
643-5 Authors
- First Mention Use all of the last names
- Subsequent mentions Use the first author only
followed by et al. - Exception If more than one citation shortens to
the same last name, include as many of the
authors as necessary to distinguish the sources.
65With 3 or more authors
- Place a comma before the and
- Example
- Greer, Riccio, and Brereton (2006)
- Dorr, Greer, Riccio, and Williams (2005)
66Review Talk to your neighbor and come up with 3
things to remember about
67Your List of References
68In APA style the list of references is titled
References NOT Bibliography or Works Cited.
69References
70The List of References
- MUST match up exactly with sources mentioned in
the text of a paper - In other words, EVERY source mentioned in the
paper must have an entry in the reference list - BUT nothing should be put in the reference list
that was NOT mentioned in the text of the paper
71In addition, sometimes a work is mentioned in one
of the sources you read,
BUT
- If you did not read the source yourself, DO NOT
include that source in your reference list!
72So, what do I do if I want to use the same quote
I find quoted in an article?
73- You can track down the original source and read
it yourself - Then you are entitled to list it in your
reference list - Otherwise, list the secondary source in the
reference list and include reference to the
original source in your in-text citation in the
body of the paper following example 6.17 on p. 178
74Study the example in the next slide
- Do you see anything that perplexes you?
- Do you see anything that looks different from
what you have done in other reference lists or
bibliographies? - Talk to a neighbor. Point out important features
to each other.
75Reference list example
- References
- Allington, R.L. (1994). The schools we have. The
schools we need. The Reading Teacher, 48, 1429. - Allington, R.L. (2004, October). What really
matters for struggling readers. Keynote paper for
the Lower Mainland Council of the International
Reading Association Conference, Vancouver, BC,
Canada. - Anderson, R.C., Wilson, P., Fielding, L.
(1988). Growth in reading and how children spend
their time outside of school. Reading Research
Quarterly, 23, 285303. doi10.1598/RRQ.23.3.2
76Capitalization
- Did you notice that most of the words in the book
and article titles were NOT capitalized? - The titles of the periodicals and the books are
capitalized, but not the article titles.
77- Can you find the word volume or the abbrev vol.
or the word page or the abbreviation pp. in
journal references?
78Reference list example
- References
- Allington, R.L. (1994). The schools we have. The
schools we need. The Reading Teacher, 48, 1429. - Anderson, R.C., Wilson, P., Fielding, L.
(1988). Growth in reading and how children spend
their time outside of school. Reading Research
Quarterly, 23, 285303. doi10.1598/RRQ.23.3.2 - Applebee, A.N., Langer, J.A., Mullis, I.V.S.
(1988). Who reads best? Factors related to
reading achievement in grades 3, 7, and 11.
Princeton, NJ Educational Testing Service.
79Features of APA references
- In APA reference lists, journal citations do NOT
use the abbrev. vol. at all - The periodical title and the volume number are
italicized, but the page numbers are not. - An issue number is ONLY used if pagination begins
with one for each issue. (see p. 186 p.198)
80More features
- For periodicals use month or season of
publication ONLY if there is no volume number.
81Reference list example
References
Volume Number
Page numbers
- Allington, R.L. (1994). The schools we have. The
schools we need. The Reading Teacher, 48, 1429. - Allington, R.L. (2004, October). What really
matters for struggling readers. Keynote paper for
the Lower Mainland Council of the International
Reading Association Conference, Vancouver, BC,
Canada. - Anderson, R.C., Wilson, P., Fielding, L.
(1988). Growth in reading and how children spend
their time outside of school. Reading Research
Quarterly, 23, 285303. doi10.1598/RRQ.23.3.2 - Applebee, A.N., Langer, J.A., Mullis, I.V.S.
(1988). Who reads best? Factors related to
reading achievement in grades 3, 7, and 11.
Princeton, NJ Educational Testing Service.
Journal title
digital object identifier
82On-line materialsGeneral Principles See pp.
191-192
- All of the forms are because . . .
- The reader of your paper needs to be able to
locate the material
83General PrinciplesDOI- Digital Object Identifier
- Always include this number when provided even if
you read a hard copy - Copy and paste if possible to avoid mistakes
- Learn ALL about DOIs on pp. 188-191
84More on on-line sources
- If there is no DOI provide a URL
- Dont add a period at the end of the URL
- Check URLs just prior to submission to ensure
they are still accurate - Do NOT include retrieval dates unless the
material is likely to change over time
85Even more on on-line materials
- Reference form for many types of electronic
materials begin with Retrieved from - Determine the type of source and follow examples
in the APA Manual- Ch. 7 - Section 7.11, pp. 214-215 for discussion groups,
blog posts and the like
86Journal article without a DOI
- If you read a hard copy, everything stays the
same except there is no DOI number at the end of
the reference entry. - If you retrieved from the internet, provide a
retrieval statement that includes the URL.
87Example- Journal reference, no DOI
- Bustle, L.S. (2004, February). The role of
visual representation in the assessment of
learning Media Literacy department. Journal
of Adolescent Adult Literacy, 47(5).
Available http//www.readingonline.org/newlite
racies/lit_index.asp?HREF/newliteracies/jaal/2-
04_column/index.html
The indentation ought to be uniform. Ppt issue.
No period
88Look at the pp. abbreviations on following slide
- Discuss with neighbors when/where it is used
89- Brozo, W.G. (2000). Hiding out in secondary
classrooms Coping strategies. In D.W. Moore,
D.E. Alvermann, K.A. Hinchman (Eds.),
Struggling adolescent readers A collection of
teaching strategies (pp. 5156). Newark, DE
International Reading Association. - Elkins, J., Luke, A. (1999). Redefining
adolescent literacies. Journal of Adolescent
Adult Literacy, 43, 212215.
90How do I know what form to use?
- Determine the type of work you are citing
- Find the example in the list on pp.193-198 (The
numerals following the type of work refer to the
number of the example, not a page) - Follow the format provided in the example and
- READ EVERY WORD OF THE EXPLANATION (Probably
several times)
91Most common types of works used in student papers
- Periodical article
- Book
- Book chapter or section
- Article in an edited book
- SO-O-O-O- Mark those pages and get familiar with
the formats
92Common error with electronic sources
- Many students mistake the database through which
they found an article for the source - Proquest, PsychInfo, ERIC, Questia, etc. are NOT
the sources. They are not periodicals or books.
They are merely a service providing you access to
an article, abstract, or whatever.
93Typing instructions
- Double-space (2.11, p. 37)
- Hanging indent
- Alphabetize by last name of first author
- Multiple sources by the same author appear in
chronological order - Extensive instructions on order, p. 181
- Located after the text of the paper appendices
follow references - Starts on a clean sheet of paper
- Heading of References (centered)
94Details to Notice
- Capitalization
- Parentheses
- Periods
- Italics
- Spacing
- Commas
APA is picky
95ReviewTalk to your neighbor and come up with 5
things to remember about
96Websites for assistance
- http//apastyle.apa.org/
- http//flash1r.apa.org/apastyle/basics/index.htm
- http//owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/01/
- http//www.umuc.edu/library/tutorials/citation/htm
l/
97APA documentation style is VERY COMPLEX
- Theres WAY too much to remember
98Use the book!!!
99Cover Page
- According to the Trinity Academic Success and
Writing Guide
100Cover Page
Example
- Title of paper (assignment)
- Your name
- Course name and number
- Instructors name
- Date submitted
- Running Head SHORT TITLE
- Article Review 1
- Pat McGuire
- EDCC 580
- Dr. Elmore Leonard
- October 16, 2006
101Running Head
102Whats all this about running heads?
103Dont worry, theyre not very fast.
104APA Running Heads, p. 229
- A running head is just a short title
- 50 characters or less including spaces and
punctuation - Use a running head if requested by your
instructor - For a short assignment it may not be needed
- If using a running head, use the header function
of your word processing program to make it appear
on every page.
105Running Head Location
- At the top of the title page
- Flush left
- ALL CAPS
106Style Issues
107A few pointers
- Avoid colloquial usage in academic writing
- Only one space after a period
- Know when to write out the word for a numeral and
when to use the numeral, i.e., one vs. 1 thirty
vs. 30. See pp. 111-112 - Always use a comma prior to the and in a series
108And more tips
- Hyphens
- In APA style hyphens are NOT used in many
instances where we are used to using them - Pages 97-100
- Guidelines on unbiased language,
- pp. 71-77
109Avoid common confusions
- An activity that took place in the past is
something you used to do NOT use to do - Could have NOT could of
- Pique her interest Mountain peak
- Affect vs. effect
- www.confusingwords.com
110- When speaking of ages
- A seven-year-old or the three-year-olds (note
hyphens) but He is seven years old. - Do NOT use they or their (plural) in place of
he/she or his/her (singular). - Each teacher finished his or her lesson plan.
- The teachers finished their lesson plans.
111Many good tips on writing
- Chapter 3, Writing Clearly and Concisely
- READ IT!!!
112Thank you for coming