Here are some of the helpful resources I came across during my research. I also posted my paper on my blog.
U.S. Copyright Office
(2012, June). U.S. Copyright Office. Retrieved August 12, 2012, from http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html
United States Patent and Trademark Office (2006,
August 21). What is Intellectual Property.United States Patent and Trademark
Office. Retrieved August 12, 2012, from http://http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/museum/1intell.htm
Huffman, S. (2010). The Missing Link: The lack
of citations and copyright notices in multimedia presentations. TechTrends, 54(3),
38-44.
Veltsos, J. R., & Veltsos, C. (2010).
Teaching Responsibly with Technology-Mediated Communication. Business
Communication Quarterly:Focus on Teaching, 463. doi:10.1177/1080569910385397
Zmuda, A., & Harada, V. (2008). Looking to
the Future: Providing Resources to Support 21st century learning. In Librarians
as learning specialist:meeting the learning imperative for the 21st century.
(1st ed.). (p. 107). West Port, CT/USA: Libraries Unlimited.
I would agree with your journal resources about the lack of knowledge, even by teachers, at citing resources. Technology is constantly evolving and the copyright and fair use laws are not always quick enough to adjust to the changes. Add in the need to cite Web 2.0 resources and the water becomes even murkier. I am constantly referring to http://owl.english.purdue.edu/ to try and insure I am citing resources properly. As with most things in technology, this is a constantly evolving process. What we know now is likely to change as the tools themselves change. I agree with the need to teach students to give credit where credit is due. Even an incorrectly cited resource shows evidence of a student's recognition of the need to avoid plagiarism.
ReplyDeleteVal, I love your statement, "Even an incorrectly cited resource shows evidence of a student's recognition of the need to avoid plagiarism." Students have to be taught the resources to be respectful learners. Their effort in giving credit to source owners is valuable, even if it isn't perfect.
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