Hello my dear followers!
Nice to meet you again. Today's topic is plagiarism.
In my previous post, I mentioned that the 21st-century education system is intertwined with technology and technology can help us in every area of our lives. We can access any information, picture, video or source we want whenever we want. Yes, this is a great convenience, but at the same time, many violations occur intentionally or accidentally.
Plagiarism is not just copy and paste, it is a crime. It has many serious legal and ethical consequences, such as fines due to copyright, expulsion from school or work. We should cite and paraphrase correctly to avoid plagiarism.
As teacher candidates, we should be careful about copyright and we should teach our students how to cite and paraphase.
Let's learn more about plagiarism. Here is a visual summary of plagiarism to help you understand it more easily.
Plagiraism Infographic - Znnr Blhn
I used Canva for the template and icons. I aimed to make it easier to understand without distracting the main idea with pictures.
Infographics are highly beneficial for language learners because they make it easier to understand even difficult topics with pictures and icons and make them permanent.
As a pre-service teacher, creating infographics develops our critical thinking and using tools like Canva increases our digital literacy. These skills are especially necessary for 21st-century teachers. I hope it helps you understand plagiarism.
How to explain plagiarism to our students?
How to use technology and avoid plagiarism at the same time?
If you have any questions or comments, please don't hesitate to share with me.
Stay tuned and interested. See you in the next post! :)
You can click the links to view the details.
References
Duran, M. (2022). Legal and Ethical
Issues in Educational Technology. In Learning
Technologies: Research, Trends, and
Issues in the US Education System (pp. 89-122). Springer International
Publishing.
Comments
Post a Comment