Curriculum Writing Workshop Presentation by 2010 CTI Seminar Coordinators PART 2.

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Curriculum Writing Workshop Presentation by 2010 CTI Seminar Coordinators PART 2

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Set up your bibliography today! Add to it as you use the source Work smart!

Transcript of Curriculum Writing Workshop Presentation by 2010 CTI Seminar Coordinators PART 2.

Page 1: Curriculum Writing Workshop Presentation by 2010 CTI Seminar Coordinators PART 2.

Curriculum Writing Workshop

Presentation by 2010 CTI Seminar Coordinators

PART 2

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Bibliographies and Citations

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http://www.bibme.org/

• Set up your bibliography today!• Add to it as you use the source• Work smart!

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Be Very Careful Not to Plagiarize

• Webster’s II New College Dictionary (1995) defines “plagiarize” this way: “to steal and use (the ideas or writing of another) as one’s own.” Using another person’s words or ideas without acknowledging your debt to them is a form of cheating.

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Examples of plagiarism include:

• handing in as your own work a paper you did not write

• using the exact wording of another writer without enclosing the material in quotation marks and properly citing the source

• using another writer’s ideas or observations without properly citing the source, even if you if did not copy the source word-for-word

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When Do You Cite?

• In general, you do NOT need to provide citations for:

• ideas or facts which are common knowledge • proverbs or well-known quotes • your own ideas or your personal opinions • results of a study or experiment you

conducted

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You DO need to cite the source for:

• ideas or observations which are unique or unusual and are not your own

• results of studies or experiments you did not conduct yourself

• word-for-word quotations (must be enclosed in quotation marks)

• paraphrased or summarized passages—even if they are not exact quotations

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A safe rule: When in doubt, cite.• Dutton, Denis. “Plagiarism and Forgery.”

Encyclopedia of Applied Ethics. Ed. Ruth Chadwick. 4 vols. San Diego: Academic Press, 1998. Print.

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Appendix

Jeff Joyce

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Appendix

• NC Standards for curriculum alignment• Handouts related to specific activities in

the narrative• Glossary terms related to content area

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Mechanical Specifications

Catherine Perez

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How Your Unit Should LookFrom the 2010 CTI Handbook

• Everything is written in Chicago Style– See www.dianahacker.com

• Format your document according to the specifications in your handbook when you write your prospectus

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Think back……..

• Margins• Font style and size• Indentation• Spacing• Headings• Page Numbers

• Notes• Math Formulas• Special Characters• Quotations• Illustrations/Images• Annotated

Bibliography

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Forms

• Submit electronically with your unit

• Available at www.charlotteteachers.org under “Downloads”

1. Prospectus Form2. Indexing Form3. Curriculum Unit Cover Sheet Form

with 200-Word Synopsis