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Social Studies 4: Plagiarism and Citing 138 Views
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Description:
You know how you can't copy someone else's answers on a homework assignment? Well the same goes for publishing someone else's ideas. That is, unless you include a citation and a references section. Then you're all good. Just don't go trying to cite your best friend on your math homework. The teacher probably won't be too happy.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Dino and Coop singing]
- 00:13
When you write a paper, it’s not enough to just say you know something. [Guy stating a fact in class]
- 00:17
You have to be able to prove it! [He is asked to prove it and walks away]
- 00:18
How do you prove it?
- 00:19
By doing research, and then citing your sources! [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
Full Transcript
- 00:22
Oh, and word to the wise?
- 00:24
Your uncle’s Thanksgiving rant about taxes is not a reliable source for your paper on [Uncle waving a chicken drumstick at dinner]
- 00:28
U.S. economic policies.
- 00:30
Anyway, here’s the deal about research and citations: if you don’t do your research,
- 00:35
you won’t be taken seriously. [Guy holding up 'I didn't research' sign and dressed as a clown]
- 00:36
And if you don’t cite your sources, you’re committing a crime. [Kid being interrogated by a policeman]
- 00:39
Yup…you could be a hardened criminal by the time you graduate high school.
- 00:42
…Okay, maybe not hardened. [Kid being thrown into a cell]
- 00:44
Like…soft boiled, at best. [Coop with a hard boiled and runny egg]
- 00:46
But if you quote someone else’s words or even just use some or all of someone else’s ideas… [Student looking at Shakespeare's work in class]
- 00:52
… that’s called plagiarism.
- 00:54
And it’s not great.
- 00:55
Plagiarism is stealing, plain and simple. [Uncle Bob says "Just like taxes."]
- 00:59
It’s using someone else’s words or ideas and pretending they’re your own.
- 01:02
And it doesn’t matter if you got it from a book or website or anywhere else. [Someone copying and pasting text into their paper]
- 01:06
It’s still a crime and there’s a good chance you’ll get caught. [Policeman appears behind the computer]
- 01:08
Think about it – you’d never steal someone else’s cell phone and pretend it belongs
- 01:11
to you, right?
- 01:13
By the way, does it seem strange to you that Superman’s email is “clarkkent@dailyplanet.net”? [Girl running with a phone]
- 01:18
…Not that…we took his phone…. Okay, but seriously – plagiarism: Don’t [Lightbulb over a boys head is stolen]
- 01:23
even think about it.
- 01:24
College students have failed their assignments… [College student with a halo gets an F for his assignment]
- 01:26
… lost scholarships… … and even been expelled – or officially
- 01:29
kicked out of school – all because they were caught plagiarizing. [A big shoe kicks the student of the college]
- 01:32
Think about it – you’d never steal someone else’s cell phone and pretend it belongs
- 01:35
to you, right?
- 01:36
Whoops.
- 01:37
Guess we're plagiarizing ourselves. [Girl looks confused]
- 01:38
Luckily, there’s a way to avoid plagiarism: it’s called “giving credit where credit is due.” [Guy says "I would like to thank myself" and tomatoes are chucked at him]
- 01:43
And you do that on a “Works Cited” or “Bibliography” page.
- 01:46
Whether you’re writing a paper for middle school, high school, or, yes, even college… [Students working at computers]
- 01:50
… you’ll always include a works cited or bibliography page in order to give credit [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 01:54
to all the places you quoted or got ideas from.
- 01:58
Now if you'd excuse us, we have to return a certain superhero's phone to him…turns
- 02:02
out he gets a lot of emails about saving the world, and that ain't our scene. [Superman's phone with a text asking him to wash the dishes]
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