This lesson contains 10 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.
Items in this lesson
Referencing
What is referencing?
Why do we reference sources?
Slide 1 - Slide
Why?
To show that you have not cheated
To protect copyright
To allow you maximum marks
To impress your teacher by showing how many sources you've read
To protect yourself!
What do you know about referencing???
Slide 2 - Slide
What is the difference between a quoting and paraphrasing? You may use Google to look this up.
timer
4:00
Slide 3 - Open question
"Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted." - Albert Einstein This is an example of a...
A
Summary
B
Footnote
C
Quotation
D
Piece of data
Slide 4 - Quiz
If you are using quotation marks " ", does the quotation need to be exactly the same as the original writing?
A
Yes
B
No
Slide 5 - Quiz
You used 5 different websites and summarised 100 pages into 5 pages of notes. It's pretty much your work now. Do you need to reference the sites?
A
Yes
B
No
Slide 6 - Quiz
When to reference?
When you quote, paraphrase, summarise or copy information from the sources you are using to research your work, you must always acknowledge the source.
There are two places where you need to acknowledge the source: in the text, and at the end of the text.
Slide 7 - Slide
Where?
The place where you use the information in the text of your work should be shown with an 'in-text citation'. At the end of your work, you should provide a reference list of all the works that you have 'cited' in your work.
Slide 8 - Slide
Paraphrase
Rephrasing a spoken or written passage that is not your own. So putting someone else's idea in your own words.
No quotation marks, but you can start the sentences with:
According to Author( year)
or (Author, date) at the end of the sentence.
Slide 9 - Slide
Bibliography
Mraz, J et al. 2007, Humanities Alive Geography 2: for Victorian essential learning standards, John Wiley & Sons, Milton, Queensland.