Monday, June 29, 2009

Digital Rights Management, Copyright, and Citing Sources

If you can handle scatological terms there's an interesting thread to this discussion started elsewhere. Part of the goals of this class include the effective integration of the words and ideas of others. We need to all follow some practices to maximize communication (meta data rocks) and participate in a larger scholarly discourse community, whilst covering our collective and individual assets.

Citing sources impresses me - don't hide your research. Failing to give credit where it is due, to fail to "give props" in the popular parlance, is at best rude and at worst legally actionable. Give a shout out to the influences on your ideas when you can.

Some faculty have told me it stems from an inability to distinguish fact from opinion. Maybe...I have doubts. The unwillingness to express an opinion is not evidence of a lack of rational thought. It just appears that way in class. I'll also address this topic in an audio rant, I mean "lecture."

No citation is needed for ideas that are common knowledge - unless you use the specific language of someone else. That's lazy and doesn't impress anyone, but not illegal (as long as you place the other's words in quotes and provide citation information). That's one reason English faculty tend to look at Wikipedia with such disdain. To most writing instructors, using Wikipedia is like peeing in the shower. Maybe everyone does it (present company excluded), but no one talks about it in polite company.
Wikipedia is great for technology and math topics, where facts are relevant and opinion less so. Where knowledge can be debated, socially created references are of dangerous or lesser use
Make an effort to be fair to your sources and to your readers. Works Cited pages give readers an added resource - we can go find the same sources if we're interested. FYI: Links themselves are generally seen as citation in web publications. Material posted in ANGEL has an added safeguard of being behind a firewall.

We will be using Turnitin.com - which is a great resource for protecting ourselves from charges of intellectual misappropriation, regardless of our intentions.

New Open

China and Chinese speaking countries will be the largest English speaking populations within a few years. How new users impact the language interests me. While living in Taiwan I noticed "New Open" used the way we in the states use "Grand Opening." The Chinglish version is more succinct and communicates the same information - even communicates it better to non-native English speakers (NNS) than the idiomatic phrase that sounds right to locals of these united states. The language likes economy of word use.

Welcome to my JCCC writing blog Grand Opening. This blog will share educational philosophy, (aka pedagogy, or the more correct but more easily misunderstood andragogy (no that has nothing to do with androids)), as well as resources for students of composition.

Goal: to post content of use to composition students using multiple modes of expression.

And a bit of trivia: I changed the title because I couldn't decide if the title should read "as clearly as possible," or "as clear(ly) as possible"?

For original source of these cartoons go to http://xkcd.com/