Note: For some lecturers (especially the senior ones and professors) plagarism often equates to using material outside the course, in particular, sources that contradict their point of view (which are conveniently absent from their compiled unit materials). Whilst, paraphrasing whole slabs of their work (i.e. worshipping them) is fine...meh!Demandred said:From what I have experienced, the majority usually give you the benefit of the doubt, of course, there's always an minority who likes to go on a witch hunt for plagerism in every assessment.
Almost forgot, if you do get an unfair mark, for instance, plagerism, even though you truly have not, you can appeal for a remark. For most universities, you appeal to your lecturer/tutor, then to the unit co-ordinator, then his/her boss, and once last time to the boss of the boss of the unit co-ordinator. The downside is that it takes a long time to get through this process and you may even lose marks as well!
Oh yes. I don't think I used a single website as a source of research last year :S No wait - I lie! I visited the Lean Cuisine site for my Marketing assessment... (when I was researching advertising methods for Lean Cuisine products...)natstar said:From my experience, to battle plagerism, most lectures, when setting assignment make it a requirement to reference at least X number of ACADEMIC sources. As Alfie said, try not to do random googles for info. Academic sources means info from relevent academic/industry journals
I'm actually surprised the uni allows for there to be a clash, I'm not sure why you're asking here rather than somebody at the uni. But if it really came down to it (I'm sure the uni would be able to sort so that this wouldn't happen), you would have to go to your tute over your lecture. Generally tutorials are compulsory and lectures aren't, and lecture information is generally available on the net anyway. I actually found I went to very few of my lectures by half way through second semester. I know I haven't really helped your problem, but hopefully have helped your worrying.lourai*87 said:Thankyou!
I know i have asked this elsewhere but im getting nervy lol.
You menitioned about tutorials....well, I have 2 tutorials for Subject1 (one Monday one Tuesday), but the Monday one is at the same time and for the same duration as a lecture for Subject2. The problem is, the lecture for Sub2 only has that one time, and there is only one option for a tutorial for Sub2 as well. So do i forget about one of the Sub1 tutorials, or scrap the only lecture for Sub2?
Im heaps stressed, pls help?
Optophobia said:rote learning?
that part about mature aged students is not completely true.. they have the same path as a yr 12 person but they dun use UAI or they use it in combination with other things lik work experience and can get career credits if its in the same pathwaycraz said:An undergraduate is essentially your first degree but you are not eligible for concessions if you are a mature age which means not straight out from high school/ or taken a gap year!
A postgraduate means you are doing your second/third degree. Generally people who are postgraduates are people who have graduated, coming back for another or mature age students coming back to study. I could be wrong on this as im not a mature age student!
Um, here goes...glitterfairy said:DISCLAIMER: Written by a Mac student. I’ve tried to be general wherever possible, but if something I’ve written does not apply to your university, please let me know and I will edit accordingly!
Same as every uni, I think.withoutaface said:I dunno about mac, but city unis tend to be late Feb/early March...
Try the rest of your undergrad. We don't get new cards every year.miss_gtr said:-It is ok to look a bit nicer than usual on the day that you are taking your ID photo. You will have to stare at it for the rest of the year, and so will your friends, bus drivers, ticket inspectors, coop people, cityrail officer etc. Not that I endorse being vain, or the need to look immaculate at uni. Just a thought.
I LIKE THAT! I'm gona let my parents read that...poloktim said:Here is an important note:
University is not about getting a job. If you want a job, consult the newspaper on a Saturday, or seek.com.au or something. You go to university because you want to get an education about a chosen field that you could likely enter the workforce in. The reason this is important is because there are many people who'll choose a course of study at university having absolutely no interest in it, never getting an interest in it, only because of future job prospects. More often than not, these people fail.