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Most students understand that they have to cite a source when the use a direct quote, but many don't understand that they also have to cite the ideas of others, even when they're not quoting.
This is a sample video from a video tutorial course titled "How to Cite Sources and Avoid Plagiarism". You can find this and other tutorial courses at http://www.criticalthinkingtutorials.com.
Here's the table of contents:
Part 1: What is Plagiarism?
1.1 Plagiarism: the Basic Definition
1.2 Downloading or Buying Whole Papers
1.3 Cutting and Pasting from Several Sources
1.4 Changing Some Words but Copying Whole Phrases
1.5 Paraphrasing Without Attribution
1.6 The Debate Over "Patchwriting"
Part 2: How to Cite Sources
2.1 When Should I Cite a Source?
2.2 What Needs to be Cited?
2.3 How to Cite: Mark the Boundaries
2.4 Citing Exact Words
2.5 Citing a Longer Quotation
2.6 Citing a Source But Not Quoting
2.7 A Comment About "Common Knowledge"
2.8 Citation Styles: MLA, APA, CSE, Chicago, Turabian, oh my!
Watch video Avoiding Plagiarism: What Do I Need to Cite? online without registration, duration hours minute second in high quality. This video was added by user Kevin deLaplante 15 March 2010, don't forget to share it with your friends and acquaintances, it has been viewed on our site 252,47 once and liked it 39 people.