4.4 References



NOTE:
These are the sources referred to in this plagiarism tutorial.



References

Atkinson, M. (2002). Fifty million viewers can’t be wrong: Professional wrestling, sports-entertainment, and mimesis. Sociology of Sport Journal, 9, 47-66.

Barnhart, R. K. (Ed.). (1988). The Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology. [Bronx, N.Y.]: H.W. Wilson Company.

Dowson, R. (2003, Fall). Dyslexia: the least known, most common learning disability. ATA Magazine, 84. Retrieved from http://www.teachers.ab.ca/PUBLICATIONS/ATA%20MAGAZINE/Pages/default.aspx Links to an external site.

Howard, R.M. (2001). Forget about policing plagiarism. Just teach. Chronicle of Higher Education, 48(12), B24.

Kennedy, M. (2003). Laugh stress away. Health, 17(4), 70-71.

Mackay, H. (2002). Media mania: Why our fear of modern media is misplaced. Sydney: UNSW Press.

McDonald, K. (1995). His pride, our fall: Recovering from the Trudeau revolution. Toronto: Key Porter Books Ltd.

Merriam-Webster's collegiate dictionary (11th ed.). (2003). Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster.

Pappas. B. (1999). Transparent eyeball. Forbes, 163(9), 45. Retrieved from http://www.forbes.com/ Links to an external site.

Sterngold, A. (2004). Confronting Plagiarism. Change, 36(3),16 -21.

Thomson, S. (2002, October 28). Campus: Cheaters punished. The Peak. Retrieved from http://newspapers.lib.sfu.ca/peak-1079/peak Links to an external site. Links to an external site.

Walden University (2015). Citing yourself. Online Writing Center. Retrieved from: http://writingcenter.waldenu.edu/656.htm (Links to an external site.)