Across
- 4. A great way to improve your work before submission is to get a _________ friend to read your report aloud to you. Ask them to stop and query things as they go along.
- 6. To avoid "getting stuck in the tramlines” of your source’s narrative, go back to your brainstorm of ____________.
- 8. By searching for the specific topic "take-out food" within the website Codex Alimentarius, the student could have found a more ____________ source of information.
- 11. Consider the ______________ of the person you are quoting. Celebrity-obsessed tabloids often ignore this rule, e.g. by quoting Hollywood actors instead of real experts. However, you're writing for a high-quality news channel.
- 13. An educational exclusion from ___________ laws, enables students and teachers to use extracts from copyrighted material as part of their studies, but such work probably shouldn't be published or posted on the web.
- 19. Removing the claim "food safety, nutrition and food security are inextricably linked" improves the ____________ of the paragraph.
- 23. What reputable global organisation is the source of the claim "food safety, nutrition and food security are inextricably linked" in the extract?
- 24. Consider doing your own _______________ to create high-quality visual content for your report.
- 25. In some cases you don't need the same level of _________ that the source gives, so simplifying it will help you to put claim in your own words.
- 27. If you report information from your sources ___________ it will leave more space for you to evaluate the information and build an argument.
Down
- 1. Where possible, the photographer should be given ________ by name.
- 2. This is the title of the section at the end of your report where you have to list the full MLA citations of all the sources you have used in the text.
- 3. To avoid plagiarising a source, you must either quote or ___________ the claim you take from it.
- 5. Words can be copied directly from a source without being plagiarised if they are put in ______________ marks (so long as the source is cited).
- 7. This extract from a draft report uses an ______________ citation: "Take Meituan, the Chinese take-out delivery company for instance: according to its official data, the number of take-out delivery drivers from Meituan already reached 7 million."
- 9. Your submissions are checked for _________ with published sources and previously submitted papers using Turnitin.com.
- 10. According to our librarian, Noodle Tools is better than other available tools to help you construct your __________ citations.
- 12. "Baidu" is a _______ not a publisher. This is why it is not a sufficient for attribution of a photograph.
- 14. An in-text citation is put in brackets after the claim or quote. It is usually the author's surname, though it may be the name of a website. __________ Tools can help you to generate the citation from information you input.
- 15. If a journalist uses an image without paying for it, they can be ______ for a lot of money!
- 16. Google has a ________ image search function which can help you to find the photographer’s name or the stock photo publisher.
- 17. Doing this means copying parts of the text of a source without using quotation marks. If it is submitted as your own work it can be considered plagiarism.
- 18. Some websites offer _________ free images which you can use legally without paying.
- 20. This is an example of a heading that is typical of academic writing but is not typically used in journalistic writing.
- 21. Some claims might not be given citations in journalism because they are considered "__________ knowledge", but academic papers require all factual claims to be cited.
- 22. To improve the paragraph "What is the policy?", the best solution is to ______ the claim that is off topic.
- 24. This is a well-known website where you can source legal free images.
- 26. Journalists often cite stock photography to ________ such as “Reuters”, instead of giving the photographer's name.
