1 / 34

MLA and AP Documentation Your step-by-step guide to avoiding plagiarism

MLA and AP Documentation Your step-by-step guide to avoiding plagiarism. Kristi Jenkins Somerset High School. When you are doing scholarly research, you must give credit to those whose work you are using.

tim
Télécharger la présentation

MLA and AP Documentation Your step-by-step guide to avoiding 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. MLA and AP Documentation Your step-by-step guide to avoiding plagiarism

  2. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School When you are doing scholarly research, you must give credit to those whose work you are using. One of the biggest misconceptions that young academic writers have is the belief that numerous sources indicate that you have not done any work.

  3. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School In reality, the opposite is true. In research writing, the goal is effective synthesis and analysis of varied, reliable, timely sources.

  4. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School When you begin your research, keep a running list of all the sources your information comes from. That includes all websites, books, newspapers, magazines, television shows, movies, news reports… Everything!

  5. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School I recommend to my students to open a word document and keep it minimized. Each time you pull information from a website, copy and paste the URL onto the page. Don’t worry about the proper citation. You can polish it later. If you are handwriting, index cards work well, too.

  6. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School You also need to mark in your text where the information comes from. I recommend to my students to use something simple like highlighting or a numbering system that matches up to your list of sources. Because it can be wasteful to print hardcopies of online research, I recommend you also save the cite as a favorite until you’ve complete your work.

  7. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School www.shakespeare.org1 www.thebard.com2 www.elizabethanengland/bbc.com3 Shakespeare was born in Stratford-On-Avon in 1564. The date is taken from baptismal records and is widely accepted as April 23. While very little is known about the personal details of his life, scholars have pieced together a fascinating and controversial biography. Remarkably, William Shakespeare’s academic records show only completion of grammar school. There is little information until church records indicate a marriage to Anne Hathway. 1 What you have to remember here is that this is a system for you to keep track of where the information you are using is coming from. There is no correct way. You will worry about documenting correctly at a final draft stage. After all, in revision you may ultimately delete some early work. 22 2 3

  8. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School You must cite everything! If it is not your original idea or theory, you must give credit for it. If it is not common knowledge, you must cite it. Also, do not forget that you have to cite pictures, graphs, charts, illustrations, etc. A chart like this can be a great addition to your research. If you make the chart, great. If someone else created it, then cite it. Both APA and MLA have guidelines on how to cite artwork, charts, photos, logos, etc.

  9. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Once you are nearing final draft, you will focus on accurately documenting your sources. Documentation involves two steps: • One is the Works Cited or Reference page. • One is parenthetical or textual notation.

  10. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Read the assignment carefully to be sure to use the correct documentation method. The two most widely used are MLA and APA. MLA was developed by the Modern Language Association. In general, it is used in English, other languages, and the humanities. APA was developed by the American Psychological Association. Because it emphasizes the date of publication, it is favored by the social, natural and biological sciences.

  11. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School For young writers, it is easier to focus on the Works Cited or Reference page first because we have likely listed sources at some point in an assignment. MLA uses a Works Cited page, which indicates that these are the books, articles, websites, documentaries etc. that are referenced within your work. APA calls this page References.

  12. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Often inexperienced writers confuse Works Cited or References with Bibliography. A bibliography is a list of everything that the writer read in preparing to write the piece, but some of that work may not actually be used in the writing. Works Cited and References are not inter-changeable terms, but are specific to MLA and APA, respectively.

  13. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School It is not realistic for me to show you how to cite every possible type of source you will use. You will need to use the MLA or APA style guide, both of which are available in book format and many universities have reliable online citation guides.

  14. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School The following samples show you how to cite the most common forms of publications in both MLA and APA. There is also a reference sheet available either from your instructor or on my website.

  15. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Book Last name, First name. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication. Medium of Publication. Put the title in italics. Gleick, James. Chaos: Making a New Science. New York: Penguin, 1987. Print. Medium of publication shows if you used a printed source like a book or an electronic source such as a website.

  16. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Periodicals Magazine Author(s). "Title of Article." Title of PeriodicalDay Month Year: pages. Medium of publication. Buchman, Dana. "A Special Education." Good Housekeeping Mar. 2006: 143- 48. Print. Newspaper Brubaker, Bill. "New Health Center Targets County's Uninsured Patients." Washington Post 24 May 2007: LZ01. Print. Follow the same basic format as a magazine except you have to include the section of the paper.

  17. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Websites Editor, author, or compiler name (if available). Name of Site. Version number. Name of institution/organization affiliated with the site (sponsor or publisher), date of resource creation (if available). Medium of publication. Date of access. Use n.p. if there is no publisher available and n.d if there is no date. Date of access is the date you accessed the cite. Davidson, Michael. The Heritage of College Football. Big Ten Conference, September 21, 2010. Web. August 10, 2014. www.bigten.org/football The MLA does not require inclusion of the URL, but many instructors prefer that it is included. It is never incorrect to do so. If you include it, place it at the end.

  18. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School The Works Cited page will always be the last page. There are rules to creating a Works Cited, and those rules are non-negotiable.

  19. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Works Cited is centered at the top with each word capitalized . List in alphabetical order by the first word Entries are single spaced with the hanging indent. Do not number the entries, use bullets or dashes.

  20. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Book Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital letter also for subtitle. Location: Publisher. Gleick, J.L. (1987) Chaos: Making a New Science. New York, NY: Penguin. List the city and postal code for the state without periods. The author is listed with initials instead of the given name.

  21. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Periodicals Magazine Author, A. A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (Year). Title of article. Title of Periodical, volume number(issue number), pages. Henry, W. A., III. (1990, April 9). Making the grade in today's schools. Time, 135, 28-31. Newspaper Schultz, S. (2005, December 28). Calls made to strengthen state energy policies. The Country Today, pp. 1A, 2A. Many academic articles have more than one author. This shows you how to list multiple authors. The example below shows only one author. If the article is printed on only one page, use p. You use pp. to show that it spans multiple pages. The letters indicate the section (Sports, Editorials, Lifestyle, etc.) of the paper that the article is in.

  22. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Websites Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of publication). Title of article. Title of Online Periodical, volume number(issue number if available). Retrieved from http://www.someaddress.com/full/url/ Bernstein, M. (2002). 10 tips on writing the living Web. A List Apart: For People Who Make Websites, 149. Retrieved from http://www.alistapart.com/articles/writeliving. This is clarifying that you are using an electronic source. The URL is listed after the word from as long as it will fit on the same line. It may appear from these examples that you need to put the URL on its own line, but that is just due to the font size.

  23. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School The References page will always be the last page. There are rules to creating References, and they are non-negotiable.

  24. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School References is centered Single space entries with a hanging indent List in alphabetical order by the first word Do not number the entries, use bullets or dashes.

  25. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School A Works Cited or References page provides the reader only half of the needed information.

  26. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School To complete documentation, you must match the information in the text to the sources. MLA calls this parenthetical notation. APA calls this in-text citation.

  27. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School If you use a direct quote, you note the source immediately following the quote. If you paraphrase information, you note the source at the end of the paragraph. Shakespeare was born in Stratford-On-Avon in 1564. The date is taken from baptismal records and is widely accepted as April 23 (Smith 28). “It is remarkable how much we are forced to speculate on the life of a man of whom so many instantly recognize his image and his work” (Jones 291). Remarkably, William Shakespeare’s academic records show only completion of grammar school. There is little information until church records indicate a marriage to Anne Hathway (Smith 32). You can see in this paragraph, the writer used information from two different sources from the notations.

  28. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School In-text citation works the same way in APA except that you include the date of publication with the author’s name and page number. Shakespeare was born in Stratford-On-Avon in 1564. The date is taken from baptismal records and is widely accepted as April 23 (Smith, 2012, p. 28). “It is remarkable how much we are forced to speculate on the life of a man of whom so many instantly recognize his image and his work” (Jones, 1998, p. 291). Remarkably, William Shakespeare’s academic records show only completion of grammar school. There is little information until church records indicate a marriage to Anne Hathway (Smith, 2012, p. 320.

  29. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School If you use a signal phrase, you will only note the page number for MLA or the date and page number for APA. According to noted Shakespeare scholar William Jones, “It is remarkable how much we are forced to speculate on the life of a man of whom so many instantly recognize his image and his work” (291). The AP notation would be (1998, p. 291).

  30. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Your notations in the text must match the Works Cited or References page and vice-versa. You cannot have a piece listed as a source, but not reference it in the text, nor can you have a notation in the text that does not match anything in the Works Cited or on References page.

  31. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Plagiarism is easy. The good news is documentation is, too. You just have to be careful. If it is not your original observation or knowledge, then give credit. It is academic fair play!

  32. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Plagiarism is the most serious academic crime, and the penalties are severe. It is easier than ever to plagiarize. It is also easy to get caught.

  33. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School You are ready to write!

  34. Kristi JenkinsSomerset High School Works Cited A+ Photograph. Collegeandfinance.com. Web. June 23, 2014. APA Style Guide. Photograph. Amazon.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Bailey, Jonathon. Viper Logo. Art. Plagiarismtoday.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Books. Photo. Themusesantacruz.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Cut and Paste. Art. Timeshighereduction.co.uk. Web. June 23, 2014. ESPN.com. Photo. Techhoops.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Gears. Animation. Wonderfulengineering.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Half house. Art. Thewisemanconcept.com. Web. June 23, 2014. MLA Style Guide. Photograph. Amazon.com. Web. June 23, 2014. New York Times. Photo. Businessinsider.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Newsweek Cover. Photo. Robyncooke-Styleguide.co.za. Web. June 23, 2014. Pizza half. Photograph. Buyadoo.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Referee. Photograph. Rapgenius.com. Web. June 23, 2014. Research. Art. Cerjhu.edu. Web. June 23, 2014. Sandal. Photo. Allwomenstalk.com. Web. June 23, 2014. SourceforgeLogo. Art. Sourceforge.net. Web. June 23, 2014. The Purdue OWL. Purdue U Writing Lab, 2010. Web. June 23, 2014. Turnitin Logo. Art. Currentit.PSU.edu. Web. June 23, 2014. You Tube Logo. Art. Metalinsider.com. Web. June 23, 2014.

More Related