Sunday, January 27, 2013

Exploring Topics Summary

In this section I found several things interesting. The first would be that I have been a student at Clark College off and on for about 2 years yet had not heard about Gale Virtual Reference Library. I know that I will find it very helpful in not only this class but in many of my future classes as well.

The second thing I found interesting was in the forum. While reading what the other students had posted about how they find information, a majority of the people used Google. I am a Google user as well but didn't realize how many other people did as well.

I felt this assignment was mainly to help the students see the different sources they can find and also to give them an intro to citation. I found it helpful to refresh my current knowledge and to remind me to be careful about the sources I am looking at.

Exploring Topics Questions


Exploring Topics Questions

1. What things associated with privacy are most concerning to people?
2. Who would benefit from invasion of privacy? protection?
3. What area of privacy concerns me most?

Exploring Topics Part Two: Wikipedia

The topic I searched was privacy
The tool I used this second time was Wikipedia
Additional information found:
-Privacy is a western concept
-There is person privacy, informational privacy, organizational privacy, spiritual privacy, and intellectual privacy.


  • Page name: Privacy
  • Author: Wikipedia contributors
  • Publisher: Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
  • Date of last revision: 29 June 2012 09:22 UTC
  • Date retrieved: 11 July 2012 09:00 UTC

Exploring Topics Part One: Gale Virtual Reference Library


The topic I searched was Privacy.
The tool I used was Gale Virtual Reference Library
Keywords: 
-Employers
-Protection
-Conspiracy
-Social Network
-Bill of RIghts
-Internet
-Cultural value
-Intrusion
-Healthcare
-Ethics
-Fourth Amendment
-Right of Privacy

Privacy. William Sims Bainbridge.
Encyclopedia of Community. Ed. Karen Christensen and David Levinson. Vol. 3.  Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Reference, 2003. p1101-1104. Word Count: 2391.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Plagiarism

The first thing that jumped out at me while looking through the readings was that on the second page of the overview is says to memorize this "The problem of plagiarism occurs when you fail to give credit for information, such as ideas and words, that are not originally yours."



As someone who is working on their second degree I feel it should be common knowledge not to claim some ones else's work as your own, whether it be full or partial. Unfortunately, there are still many students who don't feel that way or just ignore that it's ethically wrong because they are too lazy or busy to do the work themselves. 

For me, I make sure that when I'm writing a paper I highlight what information Im using and then include where it is from. If I'm using a quote then I cite it using proper MLA format. After make it a system for myself and having various instructors engrain the consequences of plagiarism into me it is something that I avoid. If I question the possibility that it could be mistaken for plagiarizing I ask my instructor or go to the writing help center. 


Part 2:

1. Last summer, my family and I traveled to Chicago, which was quite different from the rural area I grew up in. We saw the dinosaur Sue at the Field Museum, and ate pizza at Gino's East.

I see no need to make changes. There are no citation errors since these facts are coming straight from the source.

2. Americans want to create a more perfect union; they also want to establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty for everybody.

I question where this material comes from. It needs a citation or some kind of attribution.

3. I find it ridiculous that 57% of high school students think their teachers assign too much homework.

This statistic is coming from some place and the author needs to inform the reader where it's coming from.

4. Martin Luther King was certain that nobody would want to be contented with a surfacy type of social analysis that concerns itself only with effects and doesn't deal with root causes.

This is a small summary of the original works. I do not feel it needs to be cited since the writer doesn't actually use quotes or specific details.

5. Martin Luther King wrote that the city of Birmingham's "white power structure" left African-Americans there "no alternative" but to demonstrate ("Letter from the Birmingham Jail" para. 5)
This writer quoted some one else’s work and then appropriately cited it.

6. In "Letter from the Birmingham Jail," King writes to fellow clergy saying that although they "deplore the demonstrations taking place in Birmingham, your statement fails to express a similar concern for the conditions that brought about the demonstrations."

This writer used attribution but didn’t cite. I would have included proper MLA citation to avoid any confusion or possible consequences.


7. My friend Kara told me that she loves living so close to the ocean.

This is a statement talking about a friend and what she said so I wouldn’t include citation. The writer attributed it appropriately.

8. Americans are guaranteed the right to freely gather for peaceful meetings.
This is a widely known part of the constitution but I would have included citation to clarify.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Off to a good start!

Here it is. The digital space where I'll tell you about what I'm learning.
What I've learned so far; I really need to start remembering my passwords for things. I forgot my student e-mail password so this blog is under my personal account.
I'm a pretty avid Facebook user as well as Twitter, Instagram, and I have my own blog on Tumblr. I'm very connected to my friends and the rest of the world digitally.