What should you always do when you use another person’s graphic to support your conclusion?

Tell your audience where you got your information—state the author and title of the source.

Keep the source of your information quiet so everyone believes you came up with it yourself.

Create a very similar graphic that presents the same information but in a different style.

Leave the source information for the graphic out of a Works Cited page.

1 answer

When you use another person’s graphic to support your conclusion, you should tell your audience where you got your information—state the author and title of the source. Proper attribution is essential in academic and professional settings to give credit to the original creator and to maintain transparency and credibility in your work.