Hypertext Workshop
Use Sources Ethically
You must cite all sources (printed,
online and human) which you used in the creation of your annotation.
Follow MLA guidelines as far as possible, and the
Columbia Guide to Online Style
for electronic sources. You should:-
**
on your primary file,
include a citation for the source of the text you are using, and
a link to the source, if it is online
**
also on your primary file, link to
a Works Cited file, where you include all texts to which you refer
**
in your Works Cited file, acknowledge not only all the written, visual
or aural texts you have used but also the help you receive from:
*
fellow students
with whom you discussed your annotation, or who helped you build your
hypertext
*
from your instructor (say, in a class discussion or conference)
*
from anyone else (say, the
assistant in the STAR lab. who helped you solve a problem with your
linking)
Remember that not only text but
images, graphics, sound files and other multimedia elements are
copyrighted to their creators. Do not steal others' work. You must
acknowledge all work you use, even if you think you are using it under
the Educational Fair Use exemption.
Check the university's DoIT
Copyright guidelines
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