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PLAGIARISM and HOW TO AVOID IT. A Workshop from the Writing Support Center . What Exactly Is Plagiarism?. Plagiarism is generally defined as representing another person’s words or ideas as your own by omitting proper citations and/or quotation marks. . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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INSPIRATIONfor change
PLAGIARISM and HOW TO AVOID IT
A Workshop from the Writing Support Center
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What Exactly Is Plagiarism?
• Plagiarism is generally defined as representing another person’s words or ideas as your own by omitting proper citations and/or quotation marks.
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All of the following are considered plagiarism if not cited/quoted properly:
• “Copying and pasting text from online media• Copying and pasting text from any website• Transcribing text from any printed material (books, magazines,
encyclopedias or newspapers)• Slightly modifying text from any of the above • Using photographs, video or audio without citing the source• Using another student’s work and claiming it as your own, even
with permission, is unethical and treated as plagiarism.• Translation from one language to another is not using your own
words.• Using an essay that you wrote for another class without
permission of BOTH instructors is considered ‘self-plagiarism.’” (http://www.ehhs.chich.edu/`mspears/whatis.html)
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3 General Types of Plagiarism:• Borrowing Ideas Without Giving
Credit
• Borrowing Language Without Giving Credit
• Borrowing Your Work From Another Class Without Permission of Both Instructors (Self-plagiarism)
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BORROWING IDEAS WITHOUT GIVING CREDIT
When you use someone else’s:• IDEAS, OPINIONS, or TERMINOLOGY
• THEORIES
• FACTS/STATISTICS
• GRAPHS, PHOTOS, VIDEOS
You must give credit to the source.
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Idea . . . Theory. . . Fact• Liberal feminists identify both “internal” and
“external” barriers to women’s achievement (Jaggar, 2004, p. 194).
• “Diffusion of responsibility” occurs when people in a group deny individual responsibility for their own behavior (Johnson, 2002, p. 23).
• Fourteen American children die from gunfire each day (“Child,” 2006).
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BUT…COMMON KNOWLEDGE NEEDN’T BE CITED
COMMON KNOWLEDGE = GENERAL INFORMATION THAT CAN BE FOUND IN MANY SOURCES
EXAMPLES:• LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY• THE DATE WORLD WAR II ENDED• MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.’S BIRTHPLACE
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Which of the following require citations? Why?
• Mountain lions can roam as much as 100 square miles.
• Twenty percent of all American children go to school without having eaten a proper breakfast.
• Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, Massachusetts in 1830.
• Einstein is best known for developing the theory of relativity.
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BORROWING LANGUAGE
• Borrowing significant phrases from the original text without using quotation marks
• Changing words from one form to another (e.g., a verb to its noun counterpart) and taking credit for the language as your own.
• Borrowing the structure of the original sentence too closely
Each of the following is considered plagiarism:
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OKAY, SO HOW DO I AVOID BORROWING LANGUAGE FROM MY SOURCE???
• Paraphrase it.
• Summarize it.
• Quote it.
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THE HOW-TO’S: PARAPHRASING1. Read the passage until its meaning is clear. 2. Close the book and restate the main point and any
important details in your own words.3. Check your version with the original to ensure its
accuracy and originality.4. Quote any borrowed phrases or terminology.5. Write your source next to the paraphrase
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_paraphr.html
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Original Version*“If the existence of a signing ape was unsettling for linguists, it was also startling news for animal behaviorists” (Davis, 2005, p. 28).
Unacceptable ParaphraseDavis (2005) observed that the existence of a signing ape unsettledlinguists and startled animal behaviorists.
Acceptable ParaphraseWhen they learned of an ape’s ability to use signlanguage, both linguists and animal behaviorists were takenby surprise (Davis, 2005).
*This slide directly quoted from D. Hacker’s A Writer’s Reference , 2003, p. 385
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Try paraphrasing this:“Students frequently overuse direct quotations in taking notes, and as a result, they overuse quotations in the final [research] paper. Probably only about 10% of your final manuscript should appear as directly quoted matter. Therefore, you should strive to limit the amount of exact transcribing of source materials while taking notes.” --Lester, James. Writing Research Papers. 2nd
ed. (1976): 46-47.
http//:owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_paraphr.html
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A POSSIBLE PARAPHRASE:Students often rely too heavily on direct quotations intheir research papers when, in fact, roughly 90% of one’s paper should be paraphrased. One suggested remedy isto paraphrase while note-taking during research (Lester, 1976). http//:owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_paraphr.html
A POSSIBLE SUMMARY:Students should paraphrase as much as possible duringnote-taking to avoid over-quoting in their research papers (Lester,1976). http//:owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_paraphr.html
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WHERE SHOULD WE PLACE CITATIONS IN THE FOLLOWING PASSAGE?
Since 1986, four children have been attacked in California. One of these attacks was serious enough to prompt officials to place Caspers Wilderness Park off-limits to children. “In July 1997 alone, two attacks on children, one fatal, occurred in different national parks in Colorado.”
Since 1986, four children have been attacked in California (“Mountain,” 2005). One of these attacks was serious enough to prompt officials to place Caspers Wilderness Park off-limit to children (Tran, 2001). “In July 1997 alone, two attacks on children, one fatal, occurred in different national parks in Colorado” (McPhee, 1998, p. 3).
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Common Concerns• My own language is not as impressive as the words of the author
I’m citing. Shouldn’t I just quote the author? →Trust your own voice and paraphrase consistently
throughout your paper. As you do so, your paraphrasing will improve. In addition, feel free to seek assistance from GSEP’s Writing Support Center.
• My research paper is filled with citations. Isn’t over-citing a sign of bad scholarship?
→As long as you’re paraphrasing, analyzing and discussing the material adequately, you needn’t worry about over-citing. In fact, consistent citing is a sign of responsible scholarship. However, be sure not to over-quote.
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A FINAL WORD . . .
When in doubt, cite the source; it’s always best to err on the side of being too careful rather than not being careful enough.
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