You are on page 1of 1

CHAPTER 3: LEARNING FROM OTHERS AND REVIEWING RELATED LITERATURE!

LESSON POSTTEST P.92

1. WHAT IS PLAGIARISM? Plagiarism is presenting someone else work or ideas


as own, with or without their consent, by incorporating it into your work without
full acknowledgement.

2. GIVE THREE EXAMPLES OF CASES OF PLAGIARISM. Turning in someone


else work as your own. Copying large pieces of text from a source without citing
that source. Taking passages from multiple sources, piecing them together, and
turning in the work as your own.

3. GIVE THREE TIPS IN MAKING CITATIONS. Make a list of all the sources
you read or use. Use quotation marks when directly re-stating another persons
words. Take clear, accurate notes that distinguish your original ideas from others.

4. WHY DO YOU NEED TO CITE YOUR SOURCES OF DATA


INFORMATION? To display your reader you’ve done right research through list
reassets you used to get your information.To be a accountable pupil through
giving credit score to different researchers and acknowledging their thoughts.

CHAPTER POSTTEST P.97-98

 REVIEW OF LITERATURE : A Literature evaluate is a top level view of the


formerly posted works on a particular topic. The time period can seek advice
from a complete scholarly paper or segment of scholarly paintings which include
a book or an article.
 CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWOK: It is a bit like a recipe or a blueprint. It provides
an outline of how you plan to conduct the research for your thesis, it also helps to
guide fellow researchers or advisers who are analyzing your thesis.
 HYPOTHESIS: A hypothesis is an informed speculation, the possible
relationship between two or more variables.
 PLAGIARISM: The practice of taking someone else work or ideas and passing
them off as ones own.
 CITATION: The way you tell your readers that certain materials in your work
came from another source. Also gives you readers the information necessary to
find the source you used .

You might also like