Be cautious. Over 50% of students did know any of 5 Good Habits for Evidence until they were graded using this method with a required source. In grading, not only must you use required sources but also your professor places side by side:
· Your paper (and then all other papers on the same question)
· The pages of the textbook that for this question and the pages of any primary source you are citing.
Think about this for a moment:
1. If students may use any source, professors cannot efficiently prove that the student’s statements are:
o factually incorrect
o plagiarized
o “half-copy” plagiarism
o based on an unreliable source
o
or any other action
contrary to the other Good Habits for Evidence.
2.
If students must use required, reliable sources,
students must prove they are following Good Habits for Evidence by their
work.
A professor can efficiently prove
the accuracy of grading.
This model for responsibility is closer to the one you will face on the job.
Bosses will:
·
Either instantly recognize
if you act contrary to the basic Good Habits for Evidence in a way that has
consequences for their business
Examples: Factual inaccuracy is likely to have negative consequences for
any business. With some businesses,
an employee who plagiarizes could put the company at risk of lawsuits.
For more examples, click here.
·
Or—if they do not notice and your action later has negative consequences on
their business—you will face the
consequences.
This model for responsibility is also closer to the one you will face with personal decisions. If you do not develop Good Habits for Evidence, you increase your odds that you will not notice your own error. If your actions have a negative consequence, you—and perhaps your family—will face the consequences.
If you do not already have the Good Habits for Evidence, develop them now. Good habits can protect you in classes, on the job, and in life.
Copyright C. J. Bibus, Ed.D. 2003-2016 |
WCJC Department: |
History – Dr. Bibus |
Contact Information: |
281.239.1577 or bibusc@wcjc.edu |
Last Updated: |
2016 |
WCJC Home: |