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Sunday, 31 October 2010
APA
Saturday, 30 October 2010
Avoiding Plagiarism
Make sure you reference all your sources at all times. Direct quotations with reference are often used for this purpose. So are paraphrases. Paraphrasing means rewriting the author's original words into your own words. But remember! When paraphrasing, you still have to provide the reference and source!
Friday, 29 October 2010
What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism is one of the most serious academic offences. It is using other people's work or ideas without crediting their work by referencing it. These days it's also rather easy to detect through plagiarism detecting software, and even through search engines. A reader familiar with subject content will also spot plagiarism relatively easily, and so will a reader familiar with the style and level of the writer's English.
Thursday, 28 October 2010
Daily Postgraduate English Newspaper
However, to access the newspaper, you will need to open a free twitter account if you do not already have one. (Make sure you become a follower of EMUPLD at the same time!)
Concordancer
Let's say, I want to know how to use the word 'research'; I enter the word into the keyword box, and select the corpus I want to use (it's a drop down box) and submit. You get something like the following back, and studying it you start to see how 'research' is used and the types of words that are commonly used with 'research'.
Wednesday, 27 October 2010
Frequency Counter
How might this be useful? Well, say, you were about to read an article, and you wanted to find the most important words in the article that you might need to know before reading it. Put the article in the frequency counter, and you'll find out.
You can also obviously learn something about the frequency with which you use certain words in your own writing.
Tuesday, 26 October 2010
International Night
Advice (based on last year): Come hungry!
Vocabulary Profiler in Action
A nice feature of the profiler is that you can edit your text in another window, changing words to make your vocabulary more varied and sophisticated.
Vocabulary Profiler
Some people say that very good academic writing makes use of more lower frequency words. You can get an idea of your profile by entering a text into the profiler, and comparing your writing, say, with an article from your field.
Monday, 25 October 2010
List-Learn
GSL (General Service Lists) 1000 and 1001-2000 lists. These are the most frequent 2000 words in English.
UWL (University Word List) and AWL (Academic Word List). These lists provide lists of additional words that their designers identified as being particularly useful in academic work.
Sunday, 24 October 2010
Lextutor
In the tests, you'll see references to K1 and K2. K1 refers to the most frequent 1000 words in English; K2 to the next most frequent 1000 words, and so on. What's the significance of this then? Take a look at the figures below. Basically, the first 1000 words in English are so common that they make up an average of 79.7% of any text you read. After that word families get less frequent and as a result harder to learn. But note that the 6000 mark has still not hit 90% - some way from the magic 95% number. Here's the link to the tests.
Saturday, 23 October 2010
Test your vocabulary knowledge
Friday, 22 October 2010
How good is your vocabulary?
Thursday, 21 October 2010
Academic Phrase Bank
Wednesday, 20 October 2010
Postgraduate English Workshops and Seminars
Tuesday, 19 October 2010
ISI Web of Knowledge
Find out more about the importance of citation in academic work by browsing the rest of this Wikipedia article.
Then learn more about citation indexes at Thomson Reuters.
Monday, 18 October 2010
Indian Film Festival
Plagiarism Checking
Out of interest, I pasted one of my published articles into the site in the original Word format. Sure enough, it found me out ! At the same time, because it conducts the search on the basis of relatively short phrases, it directed me to some sites and research I wasn't aware of, which was a useful bonus.
Of course, even GOOGLE can perform the same function, so it's sometimes worth self-checking work through such sites.
Sunday, 17 October 2010
Back up your work
i) keeping copies of your work on portable media.
ii) e-mailing work to yourself (free services like dropsend are available that will send large files by email).
iii) saving work on the Internet, e.g on GOOGLE docs or other similar web-based services that will store your work for you, and enable you to access it at anytime and any place.
These days, losing data and work will not be accepted as a good excuse or an unfortunate accident, but just viewed as carelessness.
Saturday, 16 October 2010
Translation Tools
Take a look at this. It's part of the original English of our first newsletter.
http://twitter.com/emupld
Friday, 15 October 2010
Spellchecking and more with Google
A quick spellcheck can also be conducted by sticking a word in the GOOGLE search engine. The results will also show the word is used in sentences and phrases.
If you want to check phrases, use the Advanced Search option (just to the right of the normal GOOGLE search window).
GOOGLE has many other specialised search options. Included as a link on this page is the GOOGLE Scholar Search, which narrows a search to academic material.
For example, if you are studying tourism, a general search may well provide hits of no relevance (e.g. travel agencies, airlines etc.); A GOOGLE Scholar search excludes this material.
Thursday, 14 October 2010
Pasting from Word into the Internet
However, according to the programmes you are using, you may sometimes see some funny results from your pasting with odd bits of computer code appearing. These come from the Word source.
To avoid this:
1) Some Internet sites have a special 'clean Word' copy icon to use to paste. Check toolbars for this.
2) Other Internet sites will ask you whether you want to keep or remove 'formatting'; Remove it.
This works the other way round as well, i.e. when copy-pasting from the Internet to Word. When doing this:
1) Instead of using paste, use paste special (go to 'edit' on your toolbar); and select paste as unformatted text.
This gets rid of images, codes and all other unnecessary material and makes the pasting a lot quicker as well.
EMU Research Newsletter
Wednesday, 13 October 2010
Grammar Check in Office
The grammar check is not always right!
Check out their advice here.
Tuesday, 12 October 2010
Paper Rater
Monday, 11 October 2010
Spellcheck Plus
Sunday, 10 October 2010
Careful with spellcheck!
Were are the students? I want to no if these are there books?
3 'spelling' mistakes but spellcheck won't notice any of them, because they are all real words.
Always use spellcheck!
Always check spelling again yourself!
Saturday, 9 October 2010
Gettting your spacing right!
Wrong Use: I have a big house,which is painted red.The neighbours hate it.
There are no spaces after the commas and full stops; The computer will count the part in red as one word, and indicate a spelling mistake.
Right Use: I have a big house, which is painted red. The neighbours hate it.
Readability statistics in Word
Now take a look at this explanation of the Reading Ease formula. As you'll see 17.7 means you need to be a college graduate to deal with the text. There is also a suggestion that the text may be confusing to some readers. Perhaps worth having another look, particularly to check on sentence length and punctuation?
Friday, 8 October 2010
Use spellcheck and grammar check in MS Office
Go to Tools and then Options, and check mark the options you want to make use of.
DO check the options for the Flesch Reading Ease, and Flesch-Kincaid reading ease scales.
Then check out this Wikipedia Entry to find out what they are.