Paraphrasing
Referencing system
Research skills
Reliability of sources
100

Why do you need to paraphrase?

To avoid plagiarism; 

to show understanding;

to gain credibility

100

What is the name of the referencing system you use here?

Harvard Referencing System

100

Which websites can you use to find out research articles?

e.g. Bing academic; Stirling library website

100

Explain ‘authority’ in your own words

It means how experienced the author is in their own field

200

Paraphrase the sentence - ‘The best way of learning anything is by doing.’

Practice improves learning.

200

What information do you need when you give a citation?

Author’s last name and year

200

When you do research, what do you put in a search bar?

Key words of the research question

200

Why do you need current sources?

In order to get updated information

300

List three reporting verbs

state, suggest, believe, describe, agree, disagree

300

What is the difference between citation and reference list?

Citation is in the text vs. Reference list is put in the end; citation only includes author name and year, while reference list has more source information

300

List the synonyms of ‘challenge’ and ‘opportunities’.

e.g. difficulties/barriers; benefits/potentials

300

List two differences between research articles and advertisements.

e.g. to inform vs. to sell; 

formal language vs. informal language; 

plain text vs. visual

400

How are ‘assert’ and ‘propose’ different as reporting verbs?

‘assert’ is a strong reporting verb to express believing; ‘propose’ is neutral to make suggestion

400

List the information you need when you reference a journal article.

Author’s last name; year; article title; journal title; volume; issue; page numbers; DOI/URL (accessed date)

400

List three types of evidence.

e.g. statistics; examples; quotations

400

How do you know if the information is objective/unbiased?

e.g. it shows different points of views; it admits its own limitations

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