PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT
DISCLAIMER NOTICE
The
positions taken by or represented by Philip Pecorino on the pages of this
site should not be taken as representing the positions or views of either Queensborough
Community College or the City University of New York, the host institution
for this instructional web.
YOU ARE
RESPONSIBLE FOR WHATEVER USE YOU MAKE OF SITE RESOURCES
The author of this page, and its related pages, has made every
effort to ensure the accuracy of the information herein. Neither
Queensborough Community College nor the City University of New York nor its
agents and representatives are responsible for the contents of this site.
They cannot accept any liability for any loss or damage resulting from the
use of the material contained herein. The information is believed to be
correct, but no liability can be accepted for any inaccuracies. Unless
otherwise indicated, the names of people, institutions, businesses, and
organizations mentioned in the assignments or exercises presented in this
and the related instructional pages on this website are intended to be
fictitious. Any resemblance to actual entities is therefore purely
coincidental and not intended.
Neither Queensborough Community College or the City University
of New York, the host institution for this instructional web, nor Philip
Pecorino, its author, is responsible for the content of any linked site not
on a web server of the college nor for the content of any linked sites
beyond it. If you choose to leave these pages on this website for other sites on the World
Wide Web, you do so with the understanding that the outside linked sites
contain content not endorsed by either the College or Philip Pecorino, and
that you have made an informed decision to proceed.
NO WEB SITE IS A
SUBSTITUTE FOR RELIABLE RESEARCH STRATEGIES
If you are involved in a research effort you
should keep in mind that the internet is not yet capable of providing all
that is available and all of what you might need or even the most important
information that you need. So you must be aware that the world
wide web is both incomplete and filled with information of highly
questionable accuracy. It is increasing in its volume daily and much
of the materials are simply not reliable for inclusion in any serious
research. For some time to come in order to get quality information
and reliable information you should and may still have to make use of the
resources of a standard physical library.
If you are writing an essay or term paper for a course, you
must still make use of reliable bibliographic research indexes, e.g., The
Philosophers' Index , The
Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature and other such listings .
Internet search engines are no substitute for a systematic search of the
literature in a standard research index. Moreover, you may still have to
"manually" access one or more of your sources.
CITING WWW
SOURCES
You must remember to provide the full citation
for any materials that you use in your papers and essays and reports. You
must identify where the ideas were found and to whom they are properly
attributed. All information on the internet is someone's intellectual
property and those who are the originators or authors must be given due
credit for the ideas. This applies to work that you paraphrase as well
as for quoted material. The college has a Academic Integrity program
and you do not want to violate the college's code for Academic Integrity and
risk receiving a failing
grade or dismissal for academic dishonesty.
Instructors now have several means to check on
the source of materials submitted by their students. One of the means to determine if you have
plagiarized someone else's content is to use the
sophisticated search engines like Google or HotBot or dogpile or deep web
searches to scan the Web for questionable or familiar or out of character phrasings,
writing, and organization found in
a student's work. Another means are powerful programs that the university
provides to instructors that check the works of students against not only
the internet but to sites where people pay to obtain the papers. So
the testing for plagiarism
is fairly easily accomplished using these programs and inserting portions of
the texts in doubt as to their origin. So if you download or copy and paste someone else's ideas
you must identify the sources as completely as possible or the
consequences of not doing so could be severe. Check the College's
Academic Integrity information.
FAIR USE NOTICE
This site contains copyrighted material the use of which
has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are
making such material available for nonprofit educational purposes. We believe that our use of such material for
nonprofit educational purposes (and other related purposes) constitutes a
'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in the US Copyright
Law at Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for
purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission
from the copyright owner.