Navigating all the rules about plagiarism, copyright, and fair use can be difficult. Please click on the resources below. If you have questions, please visit me in the media center. I am here to help you too.
ALA Store. “Complete Copyright: An Everyday Guide for Librarians.” ALA, www.alastore.ala.org/content/complete-copyright-everyday-guide-librarians. “Avoiding Plagiarism.” Duke University Libraries, //library.duke.edu/research/plagiarism/. Accessed 4 December 2021. boy doing his homework. Clip Art. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 31 Aug 2017. quest.eb.com/search/314_1884356/1/314_1884356/cite. Accessed 5 Dec 2021. “Copyright for Libraries: Fair Use.” ALA, 21 March 2019, //libguides.ala.org/copyright/fairuse. Accessed 4 December 2021. “Copyright for Libraries: Videos/Movies.”American Library Association, //libguides.ala.org/copyright/video. Accessed 5 December 2021. “Copyright for Libraries: General Information.” American Library Association,//libguides.ala.org/copyright/general. Accessed 5 December 2021. Etchemendy, John. “Basic Copyright Principles.” Stanford Libraries, 11 March, 2002, //fairuse.stanford.edu/2002/03/11/basic-copyright-principles/. Accessed 5 December 2021.
ScholarWorks. “Copyright and plagiarism.” Duke, //scholarworks.duke.edu/copyright- advice/copyright-faq/copyright-and-plagiarism/. Accessed 4 December 2021. “U.S. Copyright Office Fair Use Index.” Copyright.gov, July 2021, //copyright.gov/fair-use/index.html. Accessed 5 December 2021.