You may meet with a librarian several times in classes over your time at Concordia. Librarians are often asked into classes to discuss information literacy concepts, to demonstrate searching techniques, and to support work-days for classes working on large research assignments. We are here to help you find the resources you need. We can often help you brainstorm ways to narrow your topic or ways to use resources to explore topics. We also help students write citations according to the citation style required in the class. While we cannot help you with the writing aspects of your assignment, we can refer you to the Center for Student Success, where writing tutors can provide tips and strategies to help you in your work.
All of these methods of helping you complete assignments are allowed within the Academic Integrity policy at Concordia. While it may be tempting to ask friends for help or to borrow from the work of others, the better choices involve coming to the library, the Center for Student Success, and your professors for guidance on your academic work; these are better ways to make sure you maintain academic honesty.
In case you would like to practice the skill of using sources responsibly before writing a paper on your own, this library guide has an option for that (see the bottom of the page for the Plagiarism Tutorial).
Knowing about Concordia's Academic Integrity Policy before you write papers, take tests, or work in groups will help you be successful without worrying about plagiarism or accidentally cheating. On this page of this library guide, you will learn ways to maintain academic integrity at Concordia.
While it will be important to read and understand the entire Academic Integrity policy, the policy generally covers these main points:
"Academic misconduct is defined as any activity that compromises the academic integrity of the college or undermines the educational process. Academic misconduct includes but is not limited to:
What is meant by "cite your work"?
Citing is the process of giving credit to the original authors of the idea, the work of art, the piece of music, etc. In the United States, the standard of academic honesty is that each person credits the original authors for any idea that the person did not come up with alone and on their own.
Usually, citing takes place in your footnotes or in-text citations, your Works Cited page, your Bibliography, or in another formal listing of all of the sources you used in a paper, a poster, a video, a digital work like a webpage or timeline, etc. Most citation systems require both the in-text citations or notes and the list of sources at the end of the work.
There are many systems of citation -- your professor will let you know which one is being used for your class, and the library and the bookstore have guides to help learn the citation system you need to know.
For help keeping up with your citations all through the research process, you may want to use a Citation Manager. The guide linked below provides an overview of Zotero and Mendeley citation managers.