ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Social Studies Videos 18 videos

Social Studies 4: Landform Creation and Changes
74 Views

Mountains can be formed by plates colliding and stacking on top of each other. And no, we're not just referring to the "mountains" your mom yelled...

Social Studies 4: Landforms
127 Views

Today we're going to get your butte into gear and teach you all about land forms. Yes, including buttes.

Social Studies 4: What Do Maps Do?
835 Views

Well...not really anything to be honest. They just kind of lay there. If they moved and did things on their own, that'd be pretty alarming. Oh, but...

See All

Social Studies 4: Plagiarism and Citing 138 Views


Share It!


Description:

You know how you can't copy someone else's answers on a homework assignment? Well the same goes for publishing someone else's ideas. That is, unless you include a citation and a references section. Then you're all good. Just don't go trying to cite your best friend on your math homework. The teacher probably won't be too happy.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

[Dino and Coop singing]

00:13

When you write a paper, it’s not enough to just say you know something. [Guy stating a fact in class]

00:17

You have to be able to prove it! [He is asked to prove it and walks away]

00:18

How do you prove it?

00:19

By doing research, and then citing your sources! [Coop pointing at a blackboard]

00:22

Oh, and word to the wise?

00:24

Your uncle’s Thanksgiving rant about taxes is not a reliable source for your paper on [Uncle waving a chicken drumstick at dinner]

00:28

U.S. economic policies.

00:30

Anyway, here’s the deal about research and citations: if you don’t do your research,

00:35

you won’t be taken seriously. [Guy holding up 'I didn't research' sign and dressed as a clown]

00:36

And if you don’t cite your sources, you’re committing a crime. [Kid being interrogated by a policeman]

00:39

Yup…you could be a hardened criminal by the time you graduate high school.

00:42

…Okay, maybe not hardened. [Kid being thrown into a cell]

00:44

Like…soft boiled, at best. [Coop with a hard boiled and runny egg]

00:46

But if you quote someone else’s words or even just use some or all of someone else’s ideas… [Student looking at Shakespeare's work in class]

00:52

… that’s called plagiarism.

00:54

And it’s not great.

00:55

Plagiarism is stealing, plain and simple. [Uncle Bob says "Just like taxes."]

00:59

It’s using someone else’s words or ideas and pretending they’re your own.

01:02

And it doesn’t matter if you got it from a book or website or anywhere else. [Someone copying and pasting text into their paper]

01:06

It’s still a crime and there’s a good chance you’ll get caught. [Policeman appears behind the computer]

01:08

Think about it – you’d never steal someone else’s cell phone and pretend it belongs

01:11

to you, right?

01:13

By the way, does it seem strange to you that Superman’s email is “clarkkent@dailyplanet.net”? [Girl running with a phone]

01:18

…Not that…we took his phone…. Okay, but seriously – plagiarism: Don’t [Lightbulb over a boys head is stolen]

01:23

even think about it.

01:24

College students have failed their assignments… [College student with a halo gets an F for his assignment]

01:26

… lost scholarships… … and even been expelled – or officially

01:29

kicked out of school – all because they were caught plagiarizing. [A big shoe kicks the student of the college]

01:32

Think about it – you’d never steal someone else’s cell phone and pretend it belongs

01:35

to you, right?

01:36

Whoops.

01:37

Guess we're plagiarizing ourselves. [Girl looks confused]

01:38

Luckily, there’s a way to avoid plagiarism: it’s called “giving credit where credit is due.” [Guy says "I would like to thank myself" and tomatoes are chucked at him]

01:43

And you do that on a “Works Cited” or “Bibliography” page.

01:46

Whether you’re writing a paper for middle school, high school, or, yes, even college… [Students working at computers]

01:50

… you’ll always include a works cited or bibliography page in order to give credit [Coop pointing at a blackboard]

01:54

to all the places you quoted or got ideas from.

01:58

Now if you'd excuse us, we have to return a certain superhero's phone to him…turns

02:02

out he gets a lot of emails about saving the world, and that ain't our scene. [Superman's phone with a text asking him to wash the dishes]

Related Videos

ELA 4: How Words Can Help
1205 Views

Sticks and stones, right? Well...only sometimes. It's a good idea to make sure your words aren't going to hurt others. Let's look at some ways to d...

ELA 4: Debating Like a Champ
744 Views

Learn to debate like a champ. It's way better than debating like a chimp. That just takes mudslinging to a whole new level.

ELA 4: Types of Biographies
277 Views

Today we'll learn about biographies and autobiographies. And no, the second one has nothing to do with the lives of cars. 

ELA 4: Complete Sentences
773 Views

In this lesson we'll subject you to some verbs and predicates. Each one is a necessary part of a complete breakfas—er...sentence.

ELA 4: Word Choice
222 Views

Choosing words carefully is important. You may end up vexing the assemblage of citizens you're conversing with...or you might even just plain bore...