HI 300 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Thesis Statement, Academic Dishonesty, List Of Fables Characters
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Note: there"s a mistake in the syllabus, the workshop is not until april 12th. Have 13 pages of your paper done by then and bring a paper copy of it. For thursday, read turabian 73-99 and read storey narrative techniques for historians, 77- As defined by the american historical association, plagiarism is the appropriation of the exact wording of another author without attribution, and the borrowing of distinctive and significant research findings or interpretations without proper citation. Most cases represent a failure to properly paraphrase, quote and cite sources. The aha considers plagiarism to be the failure to properly acknowledge the work of another, regardless of intent. Direct plagiarism: taking words and ideas from another writer and presenting them as your own. Indirect plagiarism: paraphrasing someone else"s work too closely even if accompanied by a citation. Inadvertent plagiarism: accidentally using another"s work through sloppy paraphrasing or lack of documentation.