What is St Pius' referencing style?
Your information sources should be given as citations formatted in APA 7th Edition; this is the College preferred style for all subjects. The College's online citation generator, Citemaker to help you create citations in this format.
These pages can help you create a bibliography for your assessment task:
Bibliography
Using Citemaker
What is plagiarism?
NESA defines plagiarism as
" when you pretend that you have written or created a piece of work that someone else originated. It is cheating, it is dishonest, and it could jeopardise your HSC exam results."
NSW Education Standards Authority, 2017
Examples of plagiarism include:
- Directly copying somebody else’s work
- Cutting and pasting from the Internet
- Paraphrasing with minor changes
How can I avoid plagiarism?
Acknowledge all sources of information NOT created by you, this includes:
Another person’s ideas, speech, information or research
All image or graphical sources, such as graphs, illustrations or photographs
Paraphrasing or summarising of another person’s spoken or written words
What's the difference between quoting, summarising and paraphrasing?
- Quoting is using the author's words exactly. (Enclose the author's words in quotation marks if it is a short quote, or set it off as an indented paragraph if it is a long quote.)
- A summary selects and condenses the main idea of a text.
- Paraphrasing is putting someone else's idea(s) into your own words. A paraphrase covers the points the author has made, while changing the words.
Why shouldn’t I plagiarise?
- It’s a form of academic cheating or malpractice.
- Teachers will impose penalties for plagiarism. This is explained in your Assessment Handbook.
- Putting information into your own words shows your understanding of a topic and this helps develop your critical and creative thinking, as well as your written communication skills.
How can I acknowledge my information sources?
Acknowledge all sources used in creating an assignment by including a bibliography.