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TRANSCRIPT
Chapter 48By Braylan, Laura, Austin M.
Summary• This chapter is about how you will always need to acknowledge any words and ideas that come
from others to give credit where credit is due. Shows readers where they can find sources and situate your own arguments in the ongoing conversation.
Key Points• Almost all info need to be cited such as: 1. Quotes 2. Arguable statements 3. Info you don't know or didn’t generate 4. Others' opinions 5. Collaboration or help from others• Sources that don't need citing: 1. Info readers already know 2. Widely known info 3. Well-known quotes 4. Material you gathered/created• Plagiarism, mostly, is unintentionally committed.• Acknowledge the sources by naming the author and including full bibliographic information in a works cited page.
Resources/Helpful Websites• https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/589/01/• http://www.hamilton.edu/academics/centers/writing/writing-resourc
es/using-sources • https://writing.wisc.edu/Handbook/QPA_plagiarism.html
Media
Test Questions• How do you give credit to someone, when writing a paper? • What sources do you not have to cite?• True or False: Most plagiarism occurs accidentally