Academic
Integrity Week (AIW) 2016!
Sept. 19-23
This year’s Academic Integrity
Week features drop-in sessions, presentations, and discussions on various
topics from citation management tools, online tools for academic honesty,
publishing, creative common licenses, and plagiarism. All sessions are open to
students, staff, and faculty. Academic Integrity Week 2016 is sponsored by the UNL
Libraries. Sessions are also listed on the website: http://ethics.unl.edu/academic-integrity-week
Organizing your Articles—Citation
Management Tools: RefWorks, Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote
Drop-In sessions
Location: 221 Love Library South
(Peterson Room)
Tuesday, September 20, 11:00 a.m.
– 1:00 p.m.
Thursday, September 22, 11:00
a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Friday, September 23, 11:00 a.m.
– 1:00 p.m.
Need help managing your research?
Start the semester off right and explore some tools that will help you organize
your articles, and format the in-text citations and bibliography for your
papers. Bring your laptop and drop-in
anytime during the two-hour session. Our
experts will provide an overview of the tools and also help you
set-up your account in the tool that you prefer to use-
RefWorks, Zotero, Mendeley or Endnote.
Avoiding
Accidental Plagiarism—Online tools for Students
Drop-in sessions
Location: Adele
Hall Learning Commons
Tuesday,
September 20, 11:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Thursday, September 22, 11:00
a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Concerned about
citing sources and avoiding accidental plagiarism? Drop-in and talk to a
librarian about using SafeAssign and Turnitin to check your papers.
Consultation area across from the ASKus desk, in the Adele Hall Learning
Commons.
Safe Assign, Turnitin,
Vericite: Online Tools for Academic
Honesty
Location: Nebraska Union, Regency
A
Wednesday, September 21, 11:30
a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Lunch & Learn
Maintaining academic integrity is
a vital skill that students of all levels should understand and the UNL
Libraries are here to help both students and faculty in the pursuit of
maintaining academic honesty. Associate Professor Signe Boudreau and Research
Specialist Anna Wigtil will provide an introduction to SafeAssign, Turnitin and
Vericite, three online tools that help students learn the importance of
original writing, how to prevent plagiarism and how to properly cite sources.
Publishing: What Authors Ought to
Know
Location: 224 Love Library (Witt Room)
Wednesday, September 21, 1:00-2:00
p.m. (Witt Rm.)
Months or years of research, long
nights of writing and revising, weeks of waiting for a decision – you just want
to sign whatever and get it over with! But down the road, what will that mean?
Have you just signed away all your rights for the rest of your life, or are
there alternatives? Come, listen, and discuss. The panelists are: Paul Royster,
Sue Gardner, Linnea Fredrickson
Using Creative Commons: Licenses to
Share Knowledge
Location: 221 Love Library South
(Peterson Room)
Thursday, September 22, 1:00 – 2:00 p.m.
Creative Commons-licensed
resources, including Open Educational Resources (OERs), are increasing in
popularity among faculty and students. Please join Paul Royster, the UNL
Libraries’ coordinator of scholarly communications and Andrew Cano, the virtual
learning librarian to learn more about the different types of Creative Commons
licenses and how to correctly incorporate them in your work. Teaching faculty
and graduate students are particularly encouraged to attend.
Narrating Academic Integrity: A
Reading and Conversation with Author Jennine Capó Crucet
Location: Nebraska Union,
Centennial Room 226
Thursday, September 22, 4:00 –
5:00 p.m.
Make Your Home Among Strangers is the story of Lizet, the daughter of Cuban immigrants in Miami and a first-generation college student. Author and UNL Professor of English and Ethnic Studies Jennine Capó Crucet will read selections from her debut novel that focus on Lizet's challenges in navigating her first year of college, including her experiences as a student charged with plagiarism--when she's not even entirely sure what that means. Following the reading, Crucet will participate in a conversation about the novel and expanding the types of conversations we have on campus around plagiarism and academic integrity.
Make Your Home Among Strangers is the story of Lizet, the daughter of Cuban immigrants in Miami and a first-generation college student. Author and UNL Professor of English and Ethnic Studies Jennine Capó Crucet will read selections from her debut novel that focus on Lizet's challenges in navigating her first year of college, including her experiences as a student charged with plagiarism--when she's not even entirely sure what that means. Following the reading, Crucet will participate in a conversation about the novel and expanding the types of conversations we have on campus around plagiarism and academic integrity.
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