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Plagiarism and Chicago Manual of Style Citation

Plagiarism and Chicago Manual of Style Citation. Mr. Riso. Plagiarism : what it is, how to avoid it Chicago Style guide : what it is, how to use it and examples Worksheet: practice what you’ve learned. Plagiarism Defined…. Latin derivative: plagiarius (“kidnapper)

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Plagiarism and Chicago Manual of Style Citation

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  1. Plagiarism and Chicago Manual of Style Citation Mr. Riso

  2. Plagiarism: what it is, how to avoid it Chicago Style guide: what it is, how to use it and examples Worksheet: practice what you’ve learned

  3. Plagiarism Defined…. Latin derivative: plagiarius (“kidnapper) Done deliberately or unintentionally • “to take and use as one’s own, the thoughts, writings, inventions, etc., of another person..”

  4. Consequences of Plagiarism Plagiarism is a form of cheating. INTELLECTUAL FRAUD THEFT CONSEQUENCES: Contacting your parents. Failing/incomplete grade Suspended Expelled

  5. Be Responsible- Cite Your Sources! It is every student’s responsibility to • know and understand what plagiarism is • know how to cite sources properly.

  6. What does not need to be cited? Common knowledge capital cities major political figures names and titles notable dates in history Personal experiences or opinions

  7. What needs to be cited? Any information, ideas or data that is not your own and is not common knowledge: Direct quotes “…..” Paraphrased passages(indirect quotes) Facts that are not common knowledge

  8. How to Cite? Use CHICAGO MANUAL OF STYLE to cite your sources Chicago Style was developed by the University of Chicago Used for studies in the History, the Humanities, and English

  9. Where to Cite in your paper? In-essay citation: In the body of your essay/research paper Bibliography: Separate page at the back of your essay listing detailed information about the sources used

  10. Doing the research- what to note! Books: author, title, publisher, date of publication Magazines: title of the article, magazine name, issue info, page #’s of the article Online (internet): also need the name of the website or database, the database service, date accessed and the url address

  11. Your paper: Text should be consistently double-spaced, with the following exceptions: Block quotations, table titles, and figure captions should be single-spaced. Notes and bibliographies should be singled-spaced internally Page numbers begin in the header of the first page of text with Arabic number 1.

  12. In-Text Citation in Chicago Style Author-date style or Footnotes/Endnotes-Bibliography style (abbreviated as the NB system)

  13. In-Essay Citation- Author/Date In this style, use author’s name, the year of publication, and any specific page #’s

  14. Examples of In-Text Citation Paraphrasing an idea from a book: The Dieppe invasion taught the British and Americans that any major assault required a coordinated air and sea attack, improved ship to shore communications, and more and varied types of landing craft (Granatstein and Morton 2003).

  15. Examples of In-Text Citation Short quotation directly from a book: “Rommel feared that, when the invasion came, Allied air superiority would make it impossible for reinforcements to reach the defenders on the landing beaches” (Granatstein and Morton 2003, 284).

  16. In-Essay citations in Chicago Style Uses footnotes or endnotes for in-essay citation Footnotes – are placed at the bottom of the page Endnotes – are placed at the end of the paper

  17. In-Essay Citation- Notes/Bibliography In the body of the essay, insert Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3…) in superscript (like this1) at the end of a passage that has summarized or paraphrased another source; any direct quotation is similarly numbered. “Throughout the First World War, Allied commanders had, by and large made strategic plans – long-range projects with significant goals to be achieved. But they had attempted to carry out these schemes employing faulty tactics.”1

  18. In-Essay Citation- Notes/Bibliography These numbers have to correspond to footnotes (placed in the bottom margin of each page) OR to a page entitled “Endnotes” (placed at the end of the paper)

  19. Bibliography Appears at the end of the paper Each source cited in your paper must appear in the bibliography Only those sources used in your paper are listed. Entries are alphabetized according to the first author’s last name. A to Z listing!

  20. Bibliography - Book Book with one author: Lastname, Firstname. Title. Place of Publication: Publisher, year Stiglitz, Joseph. Globalization and its discontents. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002.

  21. Bibliography-Book Book with more than one author: Lastname, Firstname, and FirstnameLastname. Title. Place of Publication: Publisher, year. McWilliams, James, and R. James Steel. Amiens. Dawn of Victory. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 2001.

  22. Videos • Citing a book with one author

  23. Bibliography – Online Database Article This online article was found in the library database, Gale database: Lastname, Firstname. “Article Title.” Journal Title, Volume # (Issue #): Page range. Accessed date. Url. Ballingall, Alex. "The real story of Canada's worst military disaster: new evidence shows the doomed Dieppe raid had a vital mission--and a certain spy author--at its core." Maclean's 20 Aug. 2012: 16+. Accessed February 5, 2013. http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CA302110719&v=2.1&u=camb95167&it=r&p=GPS&sw=w

  24. Website Author of content as Lastname, Firstname. “Title of Web Page.” Title/owner of the site. Date (of publication/revision/access). URL. Brune, Nick, and Alastair Sweeney. Prelude to War. Northern Blue Publishing. (December 1, 2008). Accessed February 5, 2013. http://canadachannel.ca/HCO/index.php/1._Prelude_to_War

  25. Bibliography – Chicago style

  26. Online Resources University of Guelph Learning Commons: http://www.lib.uoguelph.ca/assistance/writing_services/resources/components/documents/chicago.pdf Purdue OWL: Chicago Manual of Style 16th Edition https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/717/1/

  27. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U-k6HJNnzuA

  28. Video Citing a website or other e-resources. Citing an article from a database.

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