human resources1

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HRMWK1.docx

Instructions

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Please review the curated presentations below.  These presentations will prepare you for writing deliverables that meet the expectations of this course.  We want you to be successful in all your courses so please refer back to this tool often. This presentation is located in the library and the Student Center.  To view an presentation, please click on the button below.  Be sure to review all three presentations for this week!

Presentation One: Academic Integrity

( https://lms.nimblywise.com/courses/course-v1:American-Public-University-System+BUS-Orientation+2020/block-v1:American-Public-University-System+BUS-Orientation+2020+type@sequential+block@158b340764334bfc852061683fdb3c4a/new_tab )

Presentation Two: Citation & Plagiarism

(https://lms.nimblywise.com/lti_provider/courses/course-v1:American-Public-University-System+BUS-Orientation+2020/block-v1:American-Public-University-System+BUS-Orientation+2020+type@sequential+block@aa190b0f1a6f48119429fed88f4f4b7c)

Plagiarism

Plagiarism involves using someone else’s work or research as your own. There are many types of plagiarism, and it doesn’t always happen on purpose. You can plagiarize by accident, so it’s important to be aware of how you are utilizing and incorporating sources in your assignments.

Cloning: Cloning is the most severe form of plagiarism and involves taking the entirety of someone else’s work and using it as your own. An example of this would be copying and pasting a Wikipedia article into a Word document and turning it in for an assignment.

Copy/Paste: Copy/Paste is a type of cloning but done on a smaller scale. You may copy a sentence, a paragraph, or an image and paste it in an assignment without citing the source or providing context.

Self-Plagiarism: You can plagiarize yourself. Recycling a paper you wrote in another class can be considered plagiarism if you don’t properly cite yourself. Re-using work, even if properly cited as your own, must have prior instructor approval.

Aggregate: Aggregating happens when your assignment contains very little if any of your own language or voice. Instead, aggregates look like quotes, summaries, or paraphrases strung together without any original thoughts.

When students reuse a previous paper, they may  inadvertently plagiarize by not realizing that the information they are reusing actually came from another source, especially if the sources weren’t properly cited in the original paper.

Presentation Three: Writing Your Paper

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