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Showing posts from April, 2018

Week 11: Plagiarism and Citation

Part 1: Passages from Student Papers: 1.        ___ Kids don’t have any heroes to look up to in contemporary society, so we need to look to the past to find examples of leaders who approached perfection. We need to remember our Founding Fathers as men of unblemished good character and important accomplishments. For example, Joseph J. Ellis calls Thomas Jefferson a “fervent believer in human freedom,” a “sincere advocate of agrarian simplicity,” a man of “principled ideals,” and the author of “the most famous statement of equality in American history” (46). WORKS CITED  Ellis, Joseph J. “Jefferson’s Cop-out.” Civilization 3: (December/January, 1996-97): p 46-53. I would grade this as “F”. The writer uses direct quotes and cites his source but the original source is taken out of context. The writer uses the quotations to further his or her argument, but this is not what the original author is trying to say at all. 2.    ...

Evaluating Sources

My Research question is: What are some alternative treatments used for mood disorders besides those commonly used within Western biomedicine and pharmacotherapy? 1.      1.  Qureshi, N. A., & Al-Bedah, A. M. (2013). Mood disorders and complementary and alternative medicine: a literature review.  Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment ,  9 , 639–658. http://doi.org/10.2147/NDT.S43419 ·          This article is a review of the literature on complementary and alternative treatments for mood disorders. The author discusses the relevance of CAM in the treatment of mood disorders and evaluates a variety of alternative and complementary treatments. These include dietary supplements and herbs, meditation, yoga, acupuncture and exercise. While the author notes that none of these treatments are sufficient in the primary treatment of mood disorders, many are useful in adjunct to biomedical approaches such as pharmaco...