Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL...

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Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

Transcript of Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL...

Page 1: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg

PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT

INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL

PROPERTY

Page 2: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Plagiarism: failure to acknowledge the words and/or ideas of others

Copyright: Legal right to control the reproduction of any original work. To legally reproduce a copyrighted text you need written permission from the copyright holder. This protects the right of the authors to benefi t from their own work.

Fair use: Under this copyright law, you can quote a brief passage from a copyrighted text for an academic purpose, and not be infringed on copyright. To avoid plagiarism you must cite the source properly and also identify the passage as a quotation

Intellectual property: Includes patented inventions, trademarks, industrial designs, and similar creations that are protected by other laws

IMPORTANT TERMS TO KNOW

Page 3: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Write down your own thoughts and questions before looking into sources. Use these notes to keep track of changes in your ideas

Record your ideas in one color and the ideas of others in a diff erent color

As you continue your research, keep accurate records. Only use information if you know where you got it

In your notes always put quotation marks around words and phrases and note the pages. If you use end up using these phrases while summarizing the source, it needs to be in quotations. Changing a few words but keeping the sentence structure constitutes as plagiarism.

Don’t rely too much on one source or you might use that person’s thoughts instead of your own.

Cite the sources of all ideas, opinions, facts and statistics that aren’t common knowledge.

Use an appropriate documentation style consistently and properly

TAKING STEPS TO AVOID PLAGIARISM

Page 4: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

When working with sources from the web consider these guidelines:

Print or save any online sources you consult, note the date, and also keep the complete URL in case it’s needed in citation.

If you copy and paste from a website into a word-processing fi le, use a diff erent font

Acknowledge every website in your sources, even the ones you access through a link

Request the author’s permission when quoting blogs, newsgroup postings, and emails

HOW TO AVOID PLAGIARISM CONT.

Page 5: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Consider these four questions… What is the purpose of the use? Educational, nonprofi t,

and personal are usually considered fair What is the nature of the work being used? Often

imaginative and unpublished materials can only be used when the copyright holder gives permission

How much of the copyrighted work is being used? The use of a small portion of text for academic purposes is generally seen as more fair than a whole work for commercial purposes. One guideline is to quote up to 50 words from an article and 300 words from a book. Images and multimedia clips are considered entire works.

What eff ect would this use have on the market for the original? Seen as unfair if it would hurt the sales of the original

WHEN IN DOUBT ASK PERMISSION

USING COPYRIGHTED MATERIALS FAIRLY

Page 6: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Call number of the book, reference work, or printed source. URL for websites

Authors, editors, translators Title and subtitle of the chapter or article or web page Title and subtitle of the book, periodical, or web site in which

the chapter, article, or webpage appears Books- date of publication, place and publisher Periodical articles- date, edition, issue, and page numbers if

applicable Web source- date you consulted it, sponsor of website. If

available: publication information, date published or updated, other identifying numbers like a Digital Object Identifi er (DOI)

Article from a database- name of database and URL from the homepage

Music, fi lm, multimedia, etc.- name of author or creator

MAINTAIN A WORKING BIBLIOGRAPHY

Page 7: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Use bibliographic software like Endnote, ProCite, and Reference Manager. Ask your instructor before using any of these software’s

Note cards or a word processor- each source gets one card, record quotes and other information on the card. Also can use a computer fi le

Printing the results of online searches in databases and library catalogs- results of searches in online indexes and databases often include bibliographic information about sources they list. You can print these sources, or save them to a fl ash drive and transfer to a Word fi le. Record the name of database and the date of your search

Using photocopies and printouts from web sites- if you photocopy your source you can save time by noting the bibliographic information on the photocopy. If you print out a source you found on web, note the site’s author, name, sponsor, date of publication, URL, and date

WAYS TO RECORD A BIBLIOGRAPHY

Page 8: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Taking notes helps you think through research and read more systematically

Annotation should include a summary of the major points, your evaluation of the relevance and credibility, as well as where this would fit in your project

Taking notes in a research journal or log- keep track of your research. For journals write down leads for sources to record ideas and observations about your topic. Use quotations for any exact words from a quote.

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

Page 9: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Think about how these sources relate to one another.

Where do they agree/disagree?Write responses to your sources, it can help

you further understand them.Make sure to use many sources; do not rely

on just one or two.As writing style and purpose changes, so do

the necessary sources.Ask Yourself: Are your sources trustworthy?

Have your sources provided you with suffi cient facts, examples, and ideas? Do you look at your topic from different perspectives?

PARAPHRASE, SUMMARIZE, QUOTE, AND SYNTHESIZE YOUR

SOURCES

Page 10: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Paraphrase: to put someone else’s research into your own words and sentences.

Use paraphrasing when the info from a paragraph is important, but you cannot remember it for later.

Cite the original writer and put quotations around any exact phrasing from the source.

Do not simply use synonyms for some words and call it your own. USE YOUR OWN WORDS!

Make sure to change sentence structure. Imagine you are addressing an audience who has not

read the source material.Check your paraphrase against the original.

PARAPHRASING

Page 11: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Summarize: stating the main point of a source, and generally condense the original material.

Works best when source is very long, general idea is important, but details are not.

Do not simply restate, put the ideas into your own words and sentences.

If the text is long, divide it into sections to make it more manageable.

Check your summary against the original.

SUMMARAZING

Page 12: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

In general, a direct quotation will be used for Primary Sources, Sources with technical language, literary or historical sources, an authority figure in the field of your topic, or debaters explaining their argument.

Be careful to indicate that it is a direct quotation in your notes.

Most secondary sources call for paraphrasing rather than direct quotation.

Direct quoting: "I need to go to the store,” said Sarah

Indirect quoting: Sarah said that she needed to go to the store.

QUOTING SOURCES DIRECTLY

Page 13: Jackie Lyberger, Paige Sterns, Nathan Fugleberg PLAGIARISM, COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT, AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.

Decide whether or not your own interpretation may be better than the direct quotation you want to use.

Use short quotations should fl ow well Use a signal phrase that indicates who said the info that

you are quoting. “According to Blank” Use a colon after a complete sentence to introduce a quote. You can also use methods such as stating the quote before

or after after writing that someone “explains” or “says” Try integrating part of the quote into your own sentence

structure If a quote needs adjustment to make sense in your essay,

put these adjustments in brackets. Use parenthesis to indicate words have been omitted. Make smooth transitions between sources and your own

voice.

INTEGRATING QUOTATIONS