1 / 26

Session 12: Antidotes to Plagiarism

Session 12: Antidotes to Plagiarism. iWonder.

Download Presentation

Session 12: Antidotes to Plagiarism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Session 12: Antidotes to Plagiarism

  2. iWonder A great reflection on the inquiry process comes form Blue Balliett’s novel Chasing Vermeer. Ms. Hussey the sixth grade teacher “announced on the first day of school that she had no idea what they were going to work on that year, or how. ‘It all depends on what we get interested in – or what gets interested in us.’” (6) Balliett, Blue. Chasing Vermeer. NY: Scholastic, 2004.

  3. Instruction

  4. Focusing Questions • How can educators create assignments that will lead the student to become an engaged investigator? • How can librarians and teachers collaborate in the Connect and Wonder stages to create an overarching / essential question focused research units?

  5. What’s the Problem? Print everything Take the first results Look it up on Google Look at it I’m Done! From “Beyond Cut-and-Paste” by Debbie Abilock http://www.noodletools.com Open a Word processor Paste interesting bits together

  6. The Tragedy of Plagiarism • When students plagiarize, they are not learning. • In an online environment, the temptation to plagiarize is even greater. • We need to think about creating assignments that engage students and that are relevant to the ways they communicate and the experiences they have had.

  7. Designing Projects with LPP(Low Probability of Plagiarism) According to Doug Johnson, LPP Projects: • Have clarity of purpose and expectations. • Give students choices. • Are relevant to the student’s life. • Ask students to write in a narrative rather than an expository style.

  8. Clear? Choices? Relevant? Narrative?

  9. Teacher/Librarian Goals • Collaborate to determine the essential question to focus students on authentic research. • Create a timeline of due dates for each stage of the research process. • Teach note-taking using methods such as IIM notefact sheet or dual index card method. • Introduce relevant graphic organizers for student to investigate and express. • Design culminating products that require original expression. • Clearly indicate learning goals and expectations.

  10. Learning Goals, Students will: • Understand the overarching essential question. • Connect the topic to their own experiences. • Use sources to acquire background information and brainstorm ideas for further information. • Write questions independently based on key ideas or areas of focus. • Define the purpose of the inquiry and align the question and investigation with the purpose. (i.e. social studies centric or science centric).

  11. Learning Goals, Students will: • Use online databases to locate newspaper and magazine articles. • Use organization strategies to make sense of information. • Create products and communicate results in a variety of formats: using maps, drawings, graphs, and charts to communicate meaning. • Evaluate and reflect upon their research process.

  12. Formulating Good Questions After the topic has been introduced and teacher has provided the essential question, students use the red and blue cube to formulate 3-5 powerful questions of their own which will guide them through the research in order to answer the essential question. The green cube indicates the level of thinking. Red cube: who, what, when, where, why, how Blue cube: will, would, did, can, is, might  Green cube: list, contrast, compare, verify, predict, analyze http://www.iimresearch.com/

  13. P.R.O.V.E. Students use different resources to PROVE the answers to their research questions. Students can use notefact sheets or the 2 index card method to write notefacts of research findings and to keep track of resources used (works cited). P - Pose a question R - Read O - Observe V - Visit E - Examine Nottage, Cindy and Virginia Morse. Independent Investigation Method: 7 Easy Steps to Successful Research for students in Grades K-12. NH: Active Learning Systems, 2005.

  14. Making Assignments Relevant • What experiences have kids had? Being evicted? Being an immigrant? Being a kid? Finding a job? Moving to a new neighborhood? Being in a restaurant? Being in a laundromat? Going to the mall? • What kinds of communication are they familiar with given their experiences?

  15. Engaging them by product • How can students communicate their learning? Brainstorm ways people communicate outside of school. For example, “How do people communicate at home?”

  16. Guided Practice • With the example of Ecosystems, I am going to design an LPP project for 6th graders. • How would a study of ecosystems look like as a recipe? What ingredients do you need in a tundra? In a desert?

  17. Recipe for a desert • Ingredients: • Directions:

  18. Work Time

  19. Getting started • I want you to create a LPP project on ancient civilizations. • Today and everyday I’d like us to create assignments that are relevant to the way kids communicate and to the experiences kids have had. • Put the fun back into it!

  20. Work Time • Decide in which fun, relevant way or ways students could communicate their learning. Example: They use calendars. Have them make a calendar. • Ask yourself, “What would a Chinese emperor’s calendar look like in?” What would phone messages look like? Recipe for a child living in Ancient China?

  21. Work Time • Hint: Recipes for ancient Chinese food does not work. They can copy. Visualize the fusion of traditional report content expressed in a familiar mode of communication. • Create an assignment or list of choices of assignments for students. • Refer to REACTS Taxonomy handout if you are stuck. • Use page 3 of Participant Agenda to record planning.

  22. Share

  23. Share: Great LPP assignment ideas

  24. Standards New York City Curriculum Resources • Information Fluency Continuum Phase: Investigate p. 18 Indicator: uses a variety of search engines to do advanced searching New York City Performance Standards • Applied Learning Standard 3a: Gather information to assist in completing project work • Applied Learning Standard 3b: Use information technology to assist in gathering, organizing, and presenting information

  25. Standards Technology Standards ISTE National Educational Technology Standard (NETS) Standard 5: Technology Research tools: -- Students use technology to locate, evaluate, and collect information from a variety of sources -- Students use evaluate and select new information resources and technological innovations based on the appropriateness to specific tasks.

  26. Evaluations • Please go to Survey Monkey to fill out the evaluation for today’s sessions. • Thank you

More Related