ACADEMIC DISHONESTY POLICY: "Plagiarism consists of any of the following: quoting directly from any source of material -- including other students' work and materials purchased from research consultants -- without appropriately citing the source and identifying the quoted material; knowingly citing an incorrect source, using ideas (i.e. material other than information that is common knowledge) from any source of material -- including other students' work and materials purchased from research consultants -- without citing the source and identifying the borrowed material." (Student Handbook, http://academic.udayton.edu/elearning/onlineTraining/Plagiarism/UD_Resources/UD_PlagiarsimPolicy.htm) UD policy mandates heavy penalties for plagiarism. Don't risk your future!
WRITTEN ASSIGNMENTS POLICIES:
All assignments must be typed, double-spaced, for this class. Historical
analysis requires precision and clarity in order to succeed. For
this reason, students in college history courses must -- at a minimum --
master the basics of spelling and English grammar. Papers which have
three or more sentence-level errors (spelling, basic grammar, unidiomatic
use of language) will be returned for revision and one letter grade will
be deducted from the paper's grade. If the revised paper still violates
this standard, additional revisions will be required and additional letter
grades will be deducted from the paper's grade. (How
to get help with your writing assignments.)
| Confused about grammar? | |||
| "A student must not forget their homework." | "The student's went to Sear's to find Michael Jordans Nike's." | "My professor assigns too much homework, she doesn't understand me at all." | "He could of told me." |
POLICIES ON CITATIONS: History papers are based on historical data. The source of that data must be cited, even if the data are not in the form of a quotation in your paper. If you have never done this before, perhaps you have never written a true research paper. For any essay written not only for my courses, but for any history course at UD, readers should be able to use your citations to go back and examine the original data for themselves. One or more letter grades, depending on the severity of the problem, will be deducted from papers which do not follow this standard. You cannot simply make up a citation style. Historians prefer to use a style known as the Chicago or Turabian or footnote/endnote style, because this style makes it easier to distinguish primary from secondary sources. In my HST 101/02 courses, you may use either the MLA citation style OR the Turabian/Chicago/footnote-endnote style, though the latter is preferred. In upper level classes, you must use the Turabian/Chicago/footnote-endnote style.
CITATION STYLES: You will learn a great deal more about citation styles from your professor in ENG 101/102 and from your copy of The Little, Brown Handbook. There is also more information available at the websites listed below. This website provdes only a few pointers to help you get started.
| From Microsoft Word Help:
To insert a footnote or an endnote
1. Click where you want to insert the note reference mark 2. On the Insert menu, click footnote 3. Click Footnote or Endnote. 4. Type the note in the footnote pane, and then click in the document to continue typing. |
Turabian/Chicago/footnote-endnote Style citations are indicated by a superscript number in the text which matches a citation that includes source information either at the bottom of the page (footnote) or at the end of the paper (endnote). There is a new number for each and every citation! Full source information is included in these notes, so that no Works Cited list is required; other professors, however, may require a bibliography in addition to these notes.
Even data from the internet
must be accompanined by a citation. For more information on how to
do this using the Chicago style, click on
http://www.lehigh.edu/~inhelp/footnote/turabn.html.
Two good websites that explain how to cite online sources in MLA style
are:
http://www.mla.org/
and http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/online/citex.html
More Help:
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Writer's Handbook -- http://www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/Documentation.html
Karla's Guide to Citation Style
Guides -- http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/journalism/cite.html