TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
Academic integrity and referencing 2019
1. Cambridge Judge Business School
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY &
REFERENCING
Ange Fitzpatrick @angefitzpatrick
Andrew Alexander @MrAndrew_A
Katie Hughes @KatherineAnneH
Information & Library Services
2. Cambridge Judge Business School
today’s session
• define plagiarism and the Cambridge specific rules
• real plagiarism examples from CJBS
• Harvard Referencing Style
• reference management tools
• how you’ll be caught and what might happen
• questions
Information & Library Services
3. photo credit: Castane via photopin CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Ed Sheeran
$20m
plagiarism
lawsuit for the
song
Photograph
4. photo credit: marcn via flickr CC BY 2.0
Melania Trump
speech bore
startling
similarity to
Michelle Obama’s
5. definition of plagiarism
Plagiarism: using someone else’s ideas, words,
data, or other material produced by them
without acknowledgement
Irrespective of intent to deceive
18. Harvard Referencing Style
Harvard Style is the preferred referencing style at CJBS.
Example for a book:
Direct quote in your text:
“When in doubt, go to the library” (Rowling, 1998, p. 189).
Reference in bibliography:
Rowling, J.K. (1998) Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
London: Bloomsbury.
20. Harvard Referencing Style
Reference in bibliography:
Rowling, J.K. (1998) Harry Potter and the Chamber of
Secrets. London: Bloomsbury.
Author Date Title
Place of
publication
Publisher
21. Harvard Referencing Style
Reference in bibliography:
Rowling, J.K. (1998) Harry Potter and the Chamber of
Secrets. London: Bloomsbury.
Comma
& Period
Parentheses Italics
Period Colon Period
22. Harvard Referencing Style
Example for a journal article:
Paraphrased in your text:
Crews (2013) highlights the impact of Professor Umbridge
immediately meeting with active resistance from Hogwarts
students in relation to…
Reference in bibliography:
Crews, J. D. (2013) ‘Harry Potter and the intentional change - a strategic
analysis of intentional culture at Hogwarts’, Organization Development
Journal, 31(3), pp. 17-22. Available at
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1467437336?accountid=9851
(Accessed: 5 June 2018).
23. Harvard Referencing Style
Example for a journal article:
Paraphrased in your text:
Crews (2013) highlights the impact of Professor Umbridge
immediately meeting with active resistance from Hogwarts
students in relation to…
Reference in bibliography:
Crews, J. D. (2013) ‘Harry Potter and the intentional change - a strategic
analysis of intentional culture at Hogwarts’, Organization Development
Journal, 31(3), pp. 17-22. Available at
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1467437336?accountid=9851
(Accessed: 5 June 2018).
24. Harvard Referencing Style
Crews, J. D. (2013) ‘Harry Potter and the intentional change - a strategic analysis of
intentional culture at Hogwarts’, Organization Development Journal, 31(3), pp. 17-22.
Available at https://search.proquest.com/docview/1467437336?accountid=9851
(Accessed: 5 June 2018).
Journal title
Date accessed
URL
Volume, issue number
and page range
Reference in bibliography:
settled out of court over claims hit track copied ‘note for note’ from X Factor winner Matt Cardle’s song Amazing
Reputational damage
So bad – 7 sins just wasn’t enough
Include copy and paste
Here are examples of plagiarism that have actually been submitted and caught at Cambridge.
The text in red was taken out of a Euromonitor report on travel retailing in Spain. The text in black is the only original sentence in the report.
This examples leans more towards the unintentional plagiarism. In the first paragraph, although the writer mentions Heifetz they failed to include an in-text citation at the end of the sentence.
The second paragraph forgot to include quotation marks and a citation (which includes the page number that the quotes were taken from).
The third paragraph uses ideas originating from another person which were also not cited.
Reasons: Poor note taking – leaving it until the last minute – carelessness – not thinking about referencing until starting to write up
Note taking e.g. page numbers
Start early
Why do we bother telling you all this? What is the purpose of referencing? Your work will always be informed by others and even if its in a very small way, your work will go on to inform future generations. Correct referencing allows anyone else to follow your train of thought to see how you reached your conclusions. It validates your work and adds credibility to your arguments.
Why do we bother telling you all this? What is the purpose of referencing? Your work will always be informed by others and even if its in a very small way, your work will go on to inform future generations. Correct referencing allows anyone else to follow your train of thought to see how you reached your conclusions. It validates your work and adds credibility to your arguments.