CS 4960
(Borrowed liberally from Dr. John
Sarraille's CS 4960 course description, with permission.)
How to Cite Your Sources of Information
It is very important to good scholarship and intellectual honesty that you
accurately and fully report the sources of information you employ in preparing
your report.
Your List of References
Make a list of references. In the list, cite all your sources of information
whatever be their form: written word, audio, image, video, material artifact.
Attach the list to the end of your written report.
The references in a list are always numbered or tagged in some way so that you
can specify exactly which one you mean when you speak or write about them.
Each item in your list of references is a guide to your reader. The
reader may want to examine your source material. You must describe each
of your sources so that the reader will be able to find a copy of the source as
easily as possible.
Here are some specific rules for citing a book, article, or web page:
Citations for other forms of writing, audio, video, images, and artifacts
should be made along the same lines.
Look here for a great deal of very useful additional information:
Restrictions on Sources:
Two of your sources must be either book(s) or article(s), citable
as described above.
WHEN YOU MAKE DIRECT USE OF A SOURCE
Direct use of source text means direct quotation or close paraphrase.
The term also applies to other kinds of "art." For example, if you
insert an image from one of your sources into your work, that is direct use
of a source. If you slightly modify or copy someone's art and then insert it
into your work, it is still considered direct use.
In the type of writing you are assigned to do for this class, it is permissable
to make limited direct use of source material. However, it is very
seldom appropriate to make extended direct use of source material.
For example, it is seldom appropriate to quote or paraphrase a long passage of
text from a source. It is seldom proper to include copious numbers of diagrams
and images from source material.
You must include acknowledgement with each direct use of a
source.
You must place quotation marks ("") around any text
that you copy directly (quote) from a source.
You must place the acknowledgement in very close proximity to the place
in your writing where you have used the source. The acknowledgement must
indicate which source you used and where to find the material within the
source. You may use an in-line comment or a footnote to identify the location.
For example, if you number the items in your reference list like this:
[1] Comer, Douglas E. 1999. Computer Networks and
Internets, 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN
0-13-083617-6.
[2] Sobell, Mark G. 1995. Unix System V: a practical guide, 3rd ed.
Boston, MA: Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-8053-7566-X.
Then you can identify the location of a quote with a simple in-line comment
like this:
As Comer states on page 158 of [1]: "To achieve high bit rates over
conventional twisted pair wiring, ADSL uses an adaptive technology in which a
pair of modems probe many frequencies on the line between them ..."
DEFINITION: To Plagiarize
From: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language: Fourth Edition. 2000. Houghton Mifflin Company.
Last accessed 8/28/06 http://www.bartleby.com/61/43/P0344300.html
If you make
direct use of a source without acknowledgement, then you are plagiarizing.
Do not plagiarize any part of what you write for
this class, or what you present visually or orally.
Penalties
If there is compelling evidence of plagiarism, I will withhold credit.