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Exploring the Librarian’s Role in Promoting Academic Integrity on Campus Candice Benjes-Small, Eric Ackermann, & Kevin Tapp, McConnell Library, Radford.

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Presentation on theme: "Exploring the Librarian’s Role in Promoting Academic Integrity on Campus Candice Benjes-Small, Eric Ackermann, & Kevin Tapp, McConnell Library, Radford."— Presentation transcript:

1 Exploring the Librarian’s Role in Promoting Academic Integrity on Campus Candice Benjes-Small, Eric Ackermann, & Kevin Tapp, McConnell Library, Radford University LOEX 2006 Conference University of Maryland-College Park May 5, 2006

2 Academic Dishonesty  Self-reported data  Estimated percentage of undergraduates who cheated at least once while in college: 35.4% to 82% (Mustaine & Tewksbury, 2005; McCabe, et al, 2001)  Cheating trends (McCabe, et al, 2001) Test/exam: 39% (1963) to 64% (1993) Written work (incl. plagiarism): 65% (1963) to 66% (1993) Overall: 75% (1963) to 82% (1993)

3 ACRL Standards & Academic Integrity  Standard 2 Outcome 5a: Selects among various technologies the most appropriate one for the task of extracting the needed information Outcome 5c: Differentiates between the types of sources cited and understands the elements and correct syntax of a citation for a wide range of resources Outcome 5d: Records all pertinent citation information for future reference

4 ACRL Standards and Academic Integrity  Standard 3 Outcome 1c: Restates textual concepts in his/her own words and selects data accurately. Outcome 1d: Identifies verbatim material that can be then appropriately quoted  Standard 4 Outcome c: Integrates the new and prior information, including quotations and paraphrasing, in a manner that supports the purposes of the product or performance Outcome d: manipulates digital text, images, and data, as needed, transferring them from their original locations and formats to a new context

5 ACRL Standards and Academic Integrity  Standard 5 Outcome 3a: Selects an appropriate documentation style and uses it consistently to cite sources Outcome 3b: Posts permission granted notices, as needed, for copyrighted material

6 ACRL Information Literacy Standards  Created in a vacuum (by librarians only) No input from other stakeholders, i.e., faculty & administrators  Fills a void Perceived need no one else was filling  Without answering “Whose responsibility is it (or should it be) on campus?”

7 Plagiarism Activities  Plagiarism detection  Tutorials  Workshops for faculty and students Integrated into BI  What constitutes plagiarism? Different faculty, different ideas

8 Citation Styles  APA, MLA, Turabian, etc.  Professors increasingly picky  Students use sources that professionals might not cite

9 Bibliographic Managers  EndNote, RefWorks, NoodleBib  Are they research tools? Productivity tools?  Do they help or hinder students?

10 Questions to consider  Can academic integrity be taught in a vacuum?  Are the ACRL Standards the correct guidelines for librarians?  How can we better work with other campus units?

11 Contact us  Candice Benjes-Small (cbsmall@radford.edu)cbsmall@radford.edu  Eric Ackermann (egackerma@radford.edu)egackerma@radford.edu  Kevin Tapp (ktapp@radford.edu)ktapp@radford.edu


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