Turnitin Originality Report: Annotated Bibliography

Submitted By jyw62
Words: 1405
Pages: 6

Week 6 Lecture

1

Due:



Researching Section 2: Annotated Bibliography




Hardcopies with originality report in the first 10 minutes of your workshop.



After the first 10 minutes, it will be marked late and 10% deducted.



Will not be accepted if it does not meet submission requirements (i.e. typed responses in template etc.).



Turnitin Originality Report (highlighted assessment).


First report is very quick.



Second may take up to 24 hours – Use Turnitin Link 2 for resubmissions.

HW 08 (WK 06) – Chapter 7 Due Tues 3/9/2013 8:00am



RS2 Resources



RS2: Help Folder in Assessment Link




FAQs and Questions



Recorded Webinars



Pit-stops

Additional Resources Link





Library



MyWritingLab.

Attendance








HALL

You must attend the workshop you are officially enrolled in

If you are more than 10 minutes late your attendance will not be taken.

If you leave early you will be removed from the roll – you will not be marked as attended

Bring Workshop Readings to workshops or you will be asked to go and get them.

2

 Quoting


Incorporating Quotes

 Paraphrasing


Incorporating Paraphrases



Paraphrasing Strategies

 Integrating Sources
 In-text Citations

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Direct quotations are the exact words of another person.



The material quoted from another author's work is incorporated into a text, word for word, with a single quotation mark around the cited words.

4



Should only be used:


To capture an idea in a particularly succinct and interesting way;



To avoid ambiguity or misrepresentation of the source material; or



To define or clarify a specific term.

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Even if only one key word is used from a source, it still needs to be acknowledged.



Use them sparingly to support or reinforce – not to repeat – ideas.



Should constitute less than five percent of the work.



In many cases very good essays can be written without using a single quotation.
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There are many ways to incorporate quotations into your arguments, but you must always provide an acknowledgement of the information source.



Harvard UWS style in-text citations


The author-year-page(s) for direct quotes.



The page number(s) can appear either directly after the quote or after the date.



The full details of the sources are included in the reference list at the end.

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Examples


Quotes of less than 30 words


Tibballs (2005, p. 11) notes that during tsunamis ‘rocks weighing
20 metric tonnes have been plucked from sea walls and carried
180 metres inland’.



One indicator of the power of tsunamis is that ‘rocks weighing 20 metric tonnes have been plucked from sea walls and carried 180 metres inland’ (Tibballs 2005, p. 11).



Tibballs notes that during tsunamis ‘rocks weighing 20 metric tonnes have been plucked from sea walls and carried 180 metres inland’ (2005, p. 11) .
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Examples con’t
Quotes of more than 30 words



When pay TV was established in Australia, the notion of sport as entertainment was highlighted in that:
[f]rom the outset both pay TV operators and government acknowledged the central role of sport in the Australian national psyche: the former by offering a variety of sports channels, and the latter by attempting to ensure that sports events of mythic proportions in Australia’s sporting culture, such as the Melbourne Cup and the Australian Football final, would not be shown exclusively on pay TV (Appleton 1997, p. 175).
Therefore, anyone can still access these traditional sporting events free of charge.

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Indirect quotations are used to paraphrase or summarise another author’s ideas.



Information from an outside source is rephrased in the writer's own words without changing the meaning.



It is