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Auteur principal: Harris, Benjamin R.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2005
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ849007
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author Harris, Benjamin R.
author_facet Harris, Benjamin R.
Harris, Benjamin R.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Credit Where Credit Is Due: Considering Ethics, "Ethos", and Process in Library Instruction on Attribution Harris, Benjamin R. Plagiarism Citations (References) Ethics Information Literacy Librarians Library Instruction Process Approach (Writing) Writing Instruction Internet Undergraduate Study College Instruction Numerous reasons have been offered for the increase in plagiarism in the academy over the last decade, and most of the research has assigned primary blame to the influence of the Internet. Few writers have considered how changes in the location of research and citation instruction have had an impact on these statistics. The lack of such instruction in first-year writing courses, spurred by changes in pedagogical theory on the teaching of composition, has been a powerful but subtle influence on how (or even if) research process is truly "taught" to undergraduates. Further, as librarians have adopted and deployed information literacy initiatives in their institutions, their responsibilities related to the ethical and effective use of sources have grown. Considering options for instructing students "how" and "why" they will want to use sources will help teaching librarians achieve their information literacy initiatives and prepare for the new and changing roles they will accept in their institution's educational mission. (Contains 9 notes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ849007
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle Credit Where Credit Is Due: Considering Ethics, "Ethos", and Process in Library Instruction on Attribution
Harris, Benjamin R.
Plagiarism
Citations (References)
Ethics
Information Literacy
Librarians
Library Instruction
Process Approach (Writing)
Writing Instruction
Internet
Undergraduate Study
College Instruction
Credit Where Credit Is Due: Considering Ethics, "Ethos", and Process in Library Instruction on Attribution Harris, Benjamin R. Plagiarism Citations (References) Ethics Information Literacy Librarians Library Instruction Process Approach (Writing) Writing Instruction Internet Undergraduate Study College Instruction Numerous reasons have been offered for the increase in plagiarism in the academy over the last decade, and most of the research has assigned primary blame to the influence of the Internet. Few writers have considered how changes in the location of research and citation instruction have had an impact on these statistics. The lack of such instruction in first-year writing courses, spurred by changes in pedagogical theory on the teaching of composition, has been a powerful but subtle influence on how (or even if) research process is truly "taught" to undergraduates. Further, as librarians have adopted and deployed information literacy initiatives in their institutions, their responsibilities related to the ethical and effective use of sources have grown. Considering options for instructing students "how" and "why" they will want to use sources will help teaching librarians achieve their information literacy initiatives and prepare for the new and changing roles they will accept in their institution's educational mission. (Contains 9 notes.)
title Credit Where Credit Is Due: Considering Ethics, "Ethos", and Process in Library Instruction on Attribution
topic Plagiarism
Citations (References)
Ethics
Information Literacy
Librarians
Library Instruction
Process Approach (Writing)
Writing Instruction
Internet
Undergraduate Study
College Instruction
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ849007