Thursday 27 April 2017

Ed Sheeran and Plagiarism

Ed Sheeran and Plagiarism

Earlier this month it was reported in the news that Ed Sheeran was being sued for over 20 million dollars for copying an existing song (Amazing) and using parts of it in his song Photograph


Plagiarism

Using someone's work without gaining their permission to do so or giving credit to them is a serious and expensive business and the principle behind it applies to your academic work too. As you move forward in your studies, failure to credit your sources of information can result in disciplinary action. Most Universities (including UCP) require students to submit their work through a software program which checks whether it is their own work or copied from somewhere else (from the internet, for example).

When you are learning and writing assignments, you are of course expected to read and quote other people's work. This is part of the learning process. However if you do not give credit by citing and referencing the works you've read and used in your work, you will be committing plagiarism. Including references at the end of your work, even at College, can also earn you extra marks.


Learn about plagiarism and referencing

To help you understand and apply this correctly, Library+ has created an online learning activity which can be accessed from our Library 24/7 page on Moodle. The activity is made up of 4 parts:
1) Plagiarism
2) Referencing
3) Plagiarism quiz
4) Referencing quiz
The quizzes are intended to test your knowledge having completed the corresponding learning activities first
Lecturers can also ask Library+ for some code which will put a button on their course page to link to the resource. They can then see their students' test scores, if they need or want to.
For more information, please ask in Library+.

So why not have a go - either to learn from scratch or to remind yourself how to reference. The resource is new so if you have any comments on how it can be improved, then please also let Library+ know.

Thursday 20 April 2017

Proofreading

Proofreading


At this time of year, we receive quite a few enquiries from UCP students wanting someone to proofread their work. The College or UCP will not do this for you but you can get advice from a Specialist Support tutor (they are based in room 31b) and there is information to help you on the ARU website. See their guide to proofreading here.
For all students, it is a good idea to check your work before handing it in. It can boost your marks up to 10%. 

What is proofreading and how do you do it?

Proofreading is checking your work and making sure it is the best it can be before you hand it in. It involves making sure it can be understood as well as structure, spelling, grammar and referencing.

Photo of pen correcting text
CC0 image from www.pixabay.com

Proofreading tips

Here are a few pointers which I’ve taken from ARU’s guide.

·         Wait a few days after writing your assignment/ essay/ dissertation before reading it through (otherwise you are more likely to miss mistakes).
·         Look at it in a different format (e.g. why not print it out?)
·         Read it differently – read it aloud (or ask a  friend to), read it slowly or by starting from the last paragraph.
·         Pretend to be your reader – someone who has never read it before and needs to understand it. A marker will be looking for mistakes.
·         Concentrate and focus - block out outside noises and disturbances.

What should you be looking for?
  • Have you said what you mean? Does it make sense?
  • Have you said it concisely – or have you rambled on?  (Rewrite it if it doesn't read well).
  • Have you written consistently in the right tense?
  • Does each paragraph just explore one idea?
  • Have you mistakenly used slang?
  • Is your grammar correct? (including punctuation)
  • Are there words missing? Is there correct spacing between words?
  • Is your spelling correct? (Don’t just rely on your online spellchecker)
  • Have you cited and referenced all your resources?
  • Have you kept within the word count?

Other proofreading guides and help

For a simple introduction try BBC Skillswise.

Hull University has a guide http://www2.hull.ac.uk/lli/PDF/Proofreading.pdf which also contains links to other sites.

If you want to have a go at some exercises, then you may find  http://www.uefap.com/accuracy/accfram.htm useful. There are practice activities on punctuation and grammar which anyone may find useful.

Thursday 13 April 2017

Easter baking and finding recipes that work!

Happy Easter!

Easter is one of those times of the year when people like to bake. It can be very relaxing and you know which ingredients have gone into your creations.

Photo of Easter nest cakes
CC0 Photo from www.pixabay.com

Finding trustworthy recipes which work and have UK measurements

If you want to learn how to make some Easter cakes and bakes, how do you know which recipes to trust?

Instead of just searching using Google which will bring up all sorts of websites, try these tips:
  • Search for a famous chef’s website and then search for a recipe (e.g. Nigella, Jamie Oliver)
  • Most supermarket websites have recipe databases.
  • Well-known magazines often have recipe sections where the recipes have been tried and tested (e.g. BBC Good Food, Good Housekeeping).
  • Brands of ingredients (eg Stork, Allinsons, Whitworths, Philadelphia – other brands available) often provide a collection of recipes to promote their products.
  • Some food items have associations or boards which support those who work within the industry but also help promote the products to the public. E.g www.seafish.org supports the fishing industry but also has its own recipe site for fish http://www.seafish.org/eating-seafood/fish-is-the-dish
  • Instead of searching online, why not use a book. We have a collection of recipe books to support our Hospitality students in Library+ which anyone in College can borrow.

Limiting Google results to UK sites only

One problem with recipe sites is that if you find an American site, the measurements are in cups which is not useful for those of us in the UK. How do you make sure when you search for a recipe in Google, you only get UK results?
You need to put in your search site:.uk and this will restrict the search to UK sites.
So, in Google you might write “Easter biscuits” recipes site:.uk
(I have put speech marks round Easter biscuits to keep this as a phrase). Have a try!


To finish, here is a video recipe for Hot Cross Buns from Mary Berry (which because it is hers, we know we can trust it).


Thursday 6 April 2017

Planning your revision

Starting to revise

Although it’s the holidays next week, exams are nearly upon us and so it is a good time to start planning your revision.
Library+ subscribes to Which magazine and they have put together a guide for creating such a timetable and have pulled together tips from other students which might help you.

Photo of pen writing notes
Photo: https://www.pexels.com/photo/pen-writing-notes-studying-8769/

Study Stack

Some of you might like the idea of creating your own flash cards and revision activities and you can use a web resource like Study Stack to create these – whether you are student wanting to make your revision more enjoyable or a tutor wanting a way to help your students revise. Just the process of creating these activities will help you memorise your subject.


There are some existing flashcards on Study Stack which you might find useful but beware as none of these are checked by anyone for accuracy so you want to be sure they are correct before using them. Once you have your flashcards , your flashcards can be converted into other activities (eg hangman, crossword). There a  few tutorials on YouTube but they do not appear to be from the providers of Study Stack themselves so you might want to bear this in mind.