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DPA Library Workshop. Catherine Johnson cajohnson@ubalt.edu 410-837-4276 June 21, 2011. 1. Outline. Scholarly Sources Finding Sources Giving Credit. DPA Resources at Langsdale. http://ubalt.libguides.com/publicadministration. 1. Scholarly Sources. Scholarly Sources. Why use only
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DPA Library Workshop Catherine Johnson cajohnson@ubalt.edu 410-837-4276 June 21, 2011 1
Outline • Scholarly Sources • Finding Sources • Giving Credit
DPA Resources at Langsdale • http://ubalt.libguides.com/publicadministration
Scholarly Sources • Why use only • scholarly info?
Scholarly or Popular? Appearance: plain or dynamic? Frequency: quarterly or weekly? Types of Articles: original research or news? Length: long or short?
Scholarly or Popular? pt.2 Popular or Scholarly? Audience: academics or general public? Sources: works cited or not? Publisher: university press or mass-market?
Finding Journal Articles Databases: • Public Affairs Index • ABI/Inform (business) • Business Source Premier (business) • Academic Search Premier (general)
Finding Journal Articles Do we own it? • Journal Finder Off-Campus • Log in to “Research Port” with barcode
Finding Books • University of Baltimore WorldCat
USA.gov • Government search engine • Explore Advanced Search • Look for longer research reports
Google U.S. Government • Specialized Google search • Federal, state, and local
All academic work uses the ideas of others… • “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” Issac Newton, Oxford Dictionary of Quotations
Citation Give Credit where Credit is Due
Why Cite? • Supports your argument • Honest • Legal • Helps reader find your sources
Plagiarism • “Plagiarism includes the copying of the language, structure, ideas, and/or thoughtsof another and representing same as one’s own original work.” [emphasis added] University of Baltimore. Student Handbook. Retrieved on Oct 13, 2006 from http://www.ubalt.edu/template.cfm?page=283
Plagiarism Cite every time you borrow: • language (quotation) • sentence structure (paraphrase) • ideas (paraphrase)
Plagiarism • Penalties can include: • “F” on the assignment • “F” for the class • Suspension • Expulsion University of Baltimore. Student Handbook. Retrieved on July 14, 2005 from http://www.ubalt.edu/template.cfm?page=283
Intentional Plagiarism • Knowingly, Without Citing… • Quoting (using words) • Paraphrasing (using ideas or structure) • Cutting and Pasting Entire Sections • Buying a Paper
Unintentional Plagiarism • Accidentally using an author’s words or ideas without citing them.
Unintentional Plagiarism • Accidentally using an author’s words or ideas without citing them. Causes: • Careless Notes • Incomplete/Lost Citation Information • Too Little Time… • Cultural Differences
Discussion • Which of the following scenarios are examples of plagiarism?
Why Worry About Format? Let’s Play Spot the Author!
“From Slip to Chip” in “Harvard Magazine”November/December 1990. Pages 52-57. Edward Tenner. • PC WEEK, volume 16, Issue 5. page. 3. Dodge, John. 1999. “When Listening to Customers is the Wrong Thing to Do.” • Special Section 361 (8246) 3. Drucker, Peter. The Economist. The Next Society. 2001
Nieuwenhuysen, P. (2000). Information literacy courses for university students. Campus-Wide Information Systems 7 (5): 167-173. • Fishman, D.L. (1998). Managing the virtual reference desk. Medical Reference Services Quarterly 17(1): 1-10. • Kuhlthau, C.C. (1993). Principle of uncertainty for information seeking. Journal of Documentation 49 (4): 339-355.
Disclosure Activity from: Dalhousie University Libraries. (2004). Citation Scramble. Retrieved July 11, 2005, from http://infolit.library.dal.ca/staff/activities/Citation_Scramble.htm
Citation Style APA style • Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (5th ed.) • Chapter 4 (Reference List)
Citation Style 3 parts to APA style • Quotation marks or paraphrase • In-text (parenthetical notation) • Reference List at end
Pt. 1: Quotation Marks Your paper: Recent studies indicate “that students are often unclear as to what constitutes plagiarism and correct forms of paraphrasing”(Roig 1997, 113).
Pt. 1: or Paraphrase Your paper: According to Roig, students don’t understand plagiarism (Roig 1997, 113).
Pt. 2: In-text Your paper: Recent studies indicate “that students are often unclear as to what constitutes plagiarism and correct forms of paraphrasing”(Roig 1997, 113).
Pt. 2: In-text Your paper (fancy version): A 1997 study by Roig indicated “that students are often unclear as to what constitutes plagiarism and correct forms of paraphrasing”(113).
Pt 3: Reference List After the paper: Roig, M. (1997). Can undergraduate students determine whether text has been plagiarized? Psychological Record 47(1), 113-122.
Endnote ($$) NoodleBib (individual citations) http://www.noodletools.com/noodlebib/express.php Word 2007 (not good with online articles) Zotero (Firefox extension)http://www.zotero.org Citation Shortcuts
Outline • Scholarly Sources • Finding Sources • Giving Credit
Questions? Catherine Johnson cajohnson@ubalt.edu 410-837-4276 June 24, 2010