Title: Workshop Agenda
1(No Transcript)
2Workshop Agenda
- 1000 Discussion of Issues
- 1100 Toward an understanding of plagiarism
- 1145 Strategic Application
- 1200 Lunch
- 100 Goal- and support-based design model
- 145 Strategic application
- 215 Break
- 230 Assignment workshop
- 330 Discussion and resources
- 400 Adjourn
3Your Turn . . .
- Please read all the vignettes.
- Now focus on the vignette assigned to your
group. - Discuss the vignette with your group, exploring
its implications and trying to decide on a
particular course of action, if any. - Be ready to share the results of your discussion
with the larger group.
4So, Whats Plagiarism?
5Consider . . .
- Myth The rubber soles of shoes or rubber tires
on a car will protect you from being struck by
lightning. - Fact Rubber-soled shoes and rubber tires provide
NO protection from lightning. However, the steel
frame of a hard-topped vehicle provides increased
protection if you are not touching metal.
Although you may be injured if lightning strikes
your car, you are much safer inside the vehicle
than outside.
6This appears verbatim at
- Safeco.com
- City of Fort Collins, CO
- University of Victoria Elementary Education
Program - National Oceanographic and Atmospheric
Administration - Denton County TX
- FEMA.GOV kids site
- Times Record News (a Scripps newspaper), Wichita
Falls - Lightning Protection Service Installation,
Inc., Berlin, NJ - National Weather Service Forecast Office,
Jackson, MS
7And also at
- Emergency Management Service, Portage, WI
- WeatherBug.com (sponsored by Cool Savings, Inc.)
- Goddard Flight Center (NASA)
- Steuben County Gov., Bath, NY
- Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council
- Emergency Management Service, Tuscaloosa, AL
- Factmonster.com
- Kidzworld.com
- Florida Family Insurance Co., Inc.
8And also at
- weatherandkids.com
- bikeleague.org
- Emergency Management, Springfield, MO
- United Electric, Inc.
- cybercom.net
- vaudevilleproductions.com
- easyweb.easynet.co.uk
- Chiltern District County, Buckinghamshire,
England - And dozens of others . . . .
9Why?
- Producers of text in civic contexts--for the
public good--do not have profit motives or
proprietary interests - The more the texts circulate, the better
- Specific uses of texts make attribution
unnecessary or undesirable
10Consider . . .
- Experience six brightly colored island
villages with the ambiance of the tropics. Each
village has its own heated quiet pool plus a
white-sand beach on the shores of a shimmering
lake. (from official Disney site) - Dozens of booking agents provide this text
verbatim with no attribution.
11Why?
- Brokers dont want to risk creating their own
(mis)representations of properties - But they want to develop trust with clients
not their language but ours - No one cares that the text is not attributed
everyone wins
12Plagiarism?
- The concept of plagiarism varies in different
contexts and textual cultures. - The textual culture of public service operates
with less proprietary interest than either
business or academia. - The textual culture of business operates with
selective proprietary interest, based on its
goals.
13Textual Culture in Academia Research
- Highly individualistic and person-centered
- Based on credit cycles of individual production,
invention, and publication - Privileges the ownership and attribution of
ideas, concepts, and words to express them
14Textual Culture in Academia Teaching
- Focused on individual growth
- Preoccupied with evaluation of individual
achievement - Recognizes and rewards original thinking and
innovation by novices - Tends to perpetuate (and teach) assumptions about
authorship from its own context
15Values in Our Context Teaching
- We care that students are developing (through
their own effort). - We want to know we are evaluating their learning
authentically. - Secondarily, we want students to learn to do
things the way we do. - Secondarily, we want to emphasize ethical
behavior and prepare students for social and
occupational challenges.
16Values in Our Context
- We care that students are developing (through
their own effort). - We want to know we are evaluating their learning
authentically.
Fear of plagiarism? Or opportunity to make this
happen?
17Orientation of our Work
Turning in someone elses work
Pasting in un- attributed text as if own
Incorrect citation practices
Intentional and knowing?
Due process
Yes
Intervention
Possible sanctions/ remediation
No
18Orientation of our Work
Turning in someone elses work
Pasting in un- attributed text as if own
Incorrect citation practices
Intentional and knowing?
Due process
Yes
Intervention
Possible sanctions/ remediation
No
19Orientation of our Work
Turning in someone elses work
Pasting in un- attributed text as if own
Incorrect citation practices
Intentional and knowing?
Due process
Yes
Intervention
Possible sanctions/ remediation
No
20Why Ex Post Facto?
Learning Goals
Maintenance of Appropriate Teacher Role
Due Process/ Sanctions
Creative Assign- ment Design
Learning and Authentic Assessment
Yes
Attention to Learning/ Process
(Unlikely) Plagiarism
No
21Why Give Assignments?
- Gauge what students have learned.
- Assess their ability to express themselves in
writing. - Test their comprehension of course material.
- Look for the extent to which they can synthesize
disparate views on a topic. - See what they got from the experiment.
22Why Give Assignments?
- Provide an opportunity to practice skills of
close observation and analysis. - Help them learn how to describe different
positions on an issue in the discipline and
evaluate those positions. - Acquire the conventions of writing in my
discipline. - Get them to think critically.
23Problem We Tend to Use Writing as a Test
- Learning-oriented
- Particularized
- Multiple texts
- Goal-driven
- More integrated
- Assessment-oriented
- Generalized
- Single texts
- Format-driven
- Less integrated
24Dominant Orientation in Higher Ed
- Assessment-oriented
- Generalized
- Single texts
- Format-driven
- Less integrated
- Learning-oriented
- Particularized
- Multiple texts
- Goal-driven
- More integrated
25Potential for Submitting Others Work
Learning-oriented
- easy
- more reason to do so
- less learning if done
- difficult
- less reason to do so
- more learning if done
26Paper-as-Test Model
learning
testing
ACTIVITIES
Paper
Paper
27Example History
A term paper of five to eight pages in length
will be required and due at the end of week 14.
This may be attached and sent to the instructor
by e-mail. The paper must be in APA format (refer
back to link at top of syllabus for the APA
format guide). The term paper may be on any topic
covered by the time frame of the textbook that
is of interest to the student. Please advise your
instructor of your intended topic so that, you
do not pick something to difficult to research in
a freshman level history class. http//www.bmcc.ed
u/nish/courses/HS101/HS101syllabus.htmpoints
28Paper-as-Test (Plus Accountability)
learning
testing
ACTIVITIES
Paper plus evidence
Paper plus evidence
29Example Sociology
You will write 3 essays, each about 5-10 pages
long (not counting the Reference page). You must
choose your 3 topics from the list provided
below. Each essay must include at least 5
academic sources which cannot be dated before
1992. For each essay, you will turn in a rough
draft and a final essay. Only the final essay
will be graded and by the instructor only. Each
essay will count 30 of your final grade. PLEASE
TURN IN A COPY OF THE ARTICLES AND/OR BOOKS THAT
YOU USED TO WRITE YOUR PAPER WITH YOUR FINAL
DRAFT. I will return these back to you when I
return your paper. http//www.as.wvu.edu/soc_a/so
ciology/faculty/latimer/389syllabus.htm
30Semi-Integrated Model
learning
testing
ACTIVITIES
Paper
Paper
31Example Architecture
The rough drafts will not be graded, but you are
required to turn it in anyway. . . . Don't
short-change the rough draft. It's your chance to
show me what you are going to turn in on the
final copy so that I can tell you what could be
better about it. If you don't get the rough
draft to me by the due date, I don't guarantee
that I'll be able to get comments back to you
before the final copy due date (but I'll still
try). http//www.ksl.stanford.edu/people/kpflege
r/cs329_material/fall97/papers.html
32Example Chemistry
Peer Review (pick up drafts Friday Apr 16), peer
review IN CLASS Monday Apr 19) You will be given
rough drafts of your classmates papers on Friday.
By class the following Monday, you should have
thoroughly read the drafts and provided
constructive criticism both on the draft and in a
short paragraph summary for the author.
Constructive criticism should include positive
comments on aspects of the paper that are strong
and comments that you think the author should
work on. You should comment on the writing and
the content. You will then discuss the drafts in
small groups during Mondays class. Rough drafts
will be handed in with the final paper and peer
review scores will be determined based on effort
made in reviewing the drafts and participation
during the in-class exercise. http//www.sonoma.ed
u/users/w/whilesli/term_paper_assignment_446.pdf
33Fully Integrated Model
learning
testing
ACTIVITIES
WRITING
Paper
WRITING
ACTIVITIES
Paper
WRITING
34Your Turn . . . .
- Please read the Art History assignment.
- In a pair or small group, critique this
assign-ment generally. What works? What needs
improvement? - Now critique it in terms of its potential to
encourage or leave open the possibility of
plagiarism. How can you change the curricular
model to shut down this possibility?
35Lunch Break
36The Instructional Design Model
Design Assignments
Develop Goals for Students Learning
Informal
Formal
Evaluate Learning
Create Supporting Activities for Student Learning
37Operative Questions
What new knowledge, skills, and processes do you
want students to be able to know or use?
Learning Goals
Assignment Design
What aspects of your assignment help to
accomplish those goals?
Supporting Strategies
What activities support the development of the
assignment?
How do you judge whether the learning goals are
reflected in students products?
Assessment
38Plagiarism-Proofing Goals
- What learning goal(s) do you want students to
acquire? - Describe each goal is it informational (some
pieces of knowledge)? Experiential (something
experienced, or some skill practiced)? Affective
(some new awareness or metaconsciousness)? - How does each goal help you to achieve the goals
of your entire course?
39Plagiarism-Proofing Start With Goals
- Goal Learn about an artist in the context of a
work youve found in a museum. - Goal Practice taking someone elses biography of
an artist and putting it into your own words.
- Goal Learn how to tell others, orally, something
about an artist in a way that will interest and
motivate them. - Goal Be able to describe culture from an
anthropological perspective and reach conclusions
about behavior and cultural practice from careful
observation.
40Choose a Mode/Focus on Design
- Before you consider high-stakes,
assessment-oriented assignments, consider
low(er)-stakes assignments designed to encourage
learning - Such assignments are driven by specific
intellectual goals in your course - They tend to be linked well to your course
material - They are easier to evaluate
- They are very difficult to plagiarize
41Example 20th C. Science Tech.
- You are writing a letter to the high school
teacher of your son or daughter. You know that
the period covered in your child's course
includes what is commonly referred to as the
Middle Ages and you want to be sure that your son
or daughter is not taught the "flat earth error"
that seems to be implied in the textbook. In your
letter, describe the "error" as presented in
Russell's Inventing the Flat Earth, and explain
why it is important that a more accurate story be
presented to the class. - (http//www1.umn.edu/scitech/microtheme1.htm)
42Example Language Linguistics
- (First informal assignment) What do you think
about trying to keep the Lakota language alive
and flourishing? Write a page or two explaining
your position. - (Second assignment, after first is
discussed/handed in) - What do you think about trying to keep the
dialect spoken on Tangier Island alive and
flourishing? Write a page or two justifying your
position relative to your first response. - (Third assignment, after second is
discussed/handed in) - What do you think about trying to help keep
Ebonics alive and flourishing? Write a page or
two justifying your position relative to your
other two responses.
43Example Studies in the Family
- First informal assignment) What information,
perspectives, and strategies should prospective
parents know before they decide to have children?
Write a page or so explaining your position. - (Second assignment, after first is
discussed/handed in) - Should schools have a required curriculum on
parenting that teaches the information,
perspectives, and strategies you advocated in
Stage 1 of this informal assignment? Justify your
position. - (Third assignment, after second is
discussed/handed in) - Parental licensing programs have been suggested
to combat parental abuse and ignorance. The state
would require parents to demonstrate knowledge
(through tests or coursework) before getting a
license to have children. New parents who have
not obtained a license would be required to
obtain one immediately or face removal of their
child to protective custody. Argue for or against
this method of providing the information you
advocated in Stage 1 of the assignment.
44Example Physics
- The special theory of relativity rests on two
experimentally verified principles, one of which
(the constancy of the speed of light) is so
surprising and hard to accept that after hearing
it for the first time, most people either miss
the point or think they must have misunderstood
what was said. Explain this non-intuitive
property of light in a way that would be clear
and understandable to a non-scientist. Using
non-technical language and analogies from
everyday life, contrast the behavior of light
with that of familiar objects traveling at speeds
much less than c. Length One page. - (http//www.indiana.edu/cwp/assgn/biomods/p300.ht
ml
45Example Early Modern China
- Pick an event (the Sino-Japanese war, the Boxer
rebellion, the fall of the Qing dynasty or some
other event) which is discussed in this course
and find accounts of the event in at least two
newspapers published at the time of the event,
one of which must be from a newspaper which was
not published in the U.S. (You may not write on
an event which happened after 1917.) Your paper
should include a Xeroxed copy of the newspaper
accounts, plus your analysis of the accounts in
the light of the readings, lectures and class
discussions. - http//writing.umn.edu/tww/WID/history/assignments
/social_response.html
46Example Invertebrate Zoology
- Arrange the propositions below in a logical
order, connect the individual statements with
appropriate transitions, and arrive at a
conclusion that is supported by your argument.
Using all of the points supplied below, write a
2-page essay on the topic, The relationship
between coral and zooxanthellae.
- Coral reefs are formed by scleractinian corals
that typically occur in shallow (lt60m) water. - Hermatypic corals contain photosynthetic algae
(zooxanthellae) in special membrane- bound
cavities inside the cells of the gastrodermis. - Reef corals are limited to clear water because
suspended material interferes with the
transmission of light. - Over two-thirds of the metabolic requirements of
corals are provided by zooxanthellae. ETC. - cwp.missouri.edu/resources/ samples
47Your Turn . . . .
- Consider the twelve low-stakes assignments.
- In a small group, discuss which of the
assignments might realize specific learning goals
in your course. If you already use any of the
samples, explain what you do. Or collectively
come up with new ideas for low-stakes, creative,
learning-based assignments for your courses.
48Plagiarism-Proofing More Design Strategies
- If a specific, generalized form or genre is not
crucial, can you achieve the goal(s) through
highly particularized and unique assignments?
Cases? Hybrid or mixed genres? - What input from your course can you incorporate
into your assignment that comes only from your
course? - How can you break larger projects up into smaller
assignments?
49Design Opportunity
- Create unique kinds of assignments
- creative angles and topics
- hybrid genres
- multi-modal assignments
- episodic or multi-staged tasks
- cases and scenarios
50Mixed Medium FSN
- Goal Analyze and present known information
about nutrition within a specific culture while
respecting and valuing cultural traditions in
dietary practices. - Sketch of assignment Students investigate the
dietary practices of a specific cultural or
ethnic group (Cuban American, Japanese, Hmong,
Pakistani, Southeastern U.S., etc.). They write
up a nutritional analysis (and give a
presentation) in a way that balances an
understanding of and respect for the culture or
ethnic group.
51Opting for Speaking Chemistry
- Goal Apply biochemical knowledge to specific
situations and make critical judgments about the
accuracy of information. - Sketch of assignment. Students must look at Web
sites that have a possible biochemical bias.
Applying their knowledge from the course, they
then do a brief presentation accompanied by
Internet projection describing any bias they
find, or explaining why there is no discernible
bias.
52Particularizing Architecture
- Goal Critically evaluate existing designs and
eloquently express the results in writing for an
informed public. - Sketch of assignment Professional critique of a
built project familiar to the student. The
critique is intended for the "informed public"
(features in the New York Times or Columbus
Monthly, i.e., insightful and professionally
valid, yet also entertaining and eloquent,
reflecting a sophisticated knowledge of the
subject without being burdened with professional
jargon). - http//wac.colostate.edu/intro/com10f2.cfm
53Mixed Genre Studies in British Empire
Student Essay from the perspective of a foot
soldier My dearest Jane, After I left you
to join the army, many interesting things have
occurred. My light foot brigade has been
transferred to South Africa to fight the Boers of
Transvaal 1. They are determined to hold their
lands from us. We need the resources of South
Africa, like the gold and diamonds. The Dutchmen
have no honor, as they strike civilian trains,
and mutilate prisoners. . . .
academic footnote explaining info.
54Mini-Case American Literature
Imagine youre Hester, looking back over the
events in the novel. Choose one image (besides
the scarlet letter) thats most important,
meaningful, or relevant to you. Write 2-3 pages
in your (Hesters) journal explaining why. Try to
be authentic, i.e., avoid writing a journal entry
that sounds like a literary analysis.
55Design Opportunity
- Create class-specific assignments
- ask students to incorporate material from class
discussions/lectures - provide additional readings/materials for writing
- design assignments from course material
56Example Psychology
Decide whether the concept of natural selection
applies to human attraction, dating, and mate
selection. Refer to the article discussed in
class (about physical attraction data) to explain
and support your position.
57Design Opportunity
- Create specific audiences (or self-reflection)
for assignments - Consider asking students to write the same text
for different audiences and/or purposes - Ask for parallel texts in which students
reflect on their papers and processes
58Break
59Plagiarism-Proofing Support
- How can you build certain assignment processes
into your instruction and class time? - How can you relate discussions and activities to
your assigned projects? - How can you use less formal assignments to drive
your class sessions and enrich your course? - How can you sequence short assignments to build
up to larger projects?
60The Instructional Design Model
Develop Goals for Students Learning
Design Writing Assignments
Informal
Formal
Evaluate Learning
Create Supporting Activities for Student Learning
61Providing Support
- Analyzing sample data
- Extracting information (text, art, etc.)
- Practicing close observation
- Providing support for assertions
- Judging the validity of a source
- Finding the right persona or style
- Translating complex information for lay audiences
- Choosing/narrowing a focus
- Looking for the main point of a reading
- Articulating an opinion
62Example FSN
- Whats Needed Consult data on food nutrition
make conversions and calculations based on
estimated quantities consumed daily. - Supporting Activities A sample daily menu from
an ethnic group exempt from choice in the
assignment provides raw data in class. Students
work in groups, using nutritional tools, to
figure nutritional values and then share them in
brief reports, using an overhead, with the class.
63Example Biochemistry
- Whats Needed Explore the Web site, paying
special attention to its source and goals.
Collect statements, data, or other information
that potentially represents bias or, based on
course material studied so far, misleads the
viewer/reader in some way. - Supporting Activities A model site is given that
the class unpacks as a group, contesting some of
the statements at the site based on their own
knowledge of the facts, and citing appropriate
material as support.
64Example Architecture
- Whats Needed Observe built object take
critical notes attention to elements studied and
discussed in class.Formulate opinion and work
toward critique. - Supporting Activities A 3-D interactive photo
suite of a building and grounds is shown onscreen
in a computer lab. Students turn the building
around and examine it from different angles,
taking notes on what they see. Full-class
follow-up draws on their observations
collectively, showing how to look for various
elements.
65Your Turn . . .
- In a small group, share the assignment you
brought to the workshop. - For each assignment, discuss one or more
plagiarism-proofing methods from what weve
considered and try to apply it to a redesign of
your assignment. - What else would you need to change in addition to
the assignment itself? Consider various
supporting activities.
66Support Opportunity Process
Early ideas Freewrites Topic explorations Source
analyses Focus exercises
Drafts Reflections Peer responses Revisions/edits
Final Paper
67Support Opportunity Portfolios
- Student portfolios provide a collection of work
that documents progress over time - Portfolios can contain both primary documents
(the artifacts of assignments) and secondary
documents (reflections and commentary). - Students take ownership of and responsibility for
their portfolios. - Teachers can oversee portfolios development and
provide input along the way.
68What About Large(r) Classes?
- Design unique assignments.
- Use series of short, less formal assignments and
assess for evidence of learning and engagement. - Allow specifics of classroom to enter into the
genre of the writing. - Combine writing with other media
- Use writing in the class.
69Summary
- Our view of plagiarism is often shaped by our
assumptions about what writing is for in our
classes. - Starting with learning goals can help us to
create assignments that engage students and make
it difficult and unnecessary for them to
plagiarize. - Supporting larger projects engages students and
leads them through the process, averting
plagiarism. - Adding creativity and imagination to our
assignments not only engages students and helps
them own their work it also makes teaching
more fun for us.
70Issues and Discussion
71Good Luck!
chris_anson_at_ncsu.edu www.home.earthlink.net/thea
nsons/Portcover.html
72The WPA Statement
http//www.wpacouncil.org