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Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

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Page 1: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Paraphrasing and Plagiarism

How to conduct honest research

Page 2: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

What is plagiarism?

Plagiarism is using another writer’s words and not giving them credit.

Page 3: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

http://gladstone.vsb.bc.ca/library/cheating/

Page 4: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Examples of plagiarism

• Copying text from a source on the internet, pasting it in a Word document, and presenting it as your own

• Changing the name on a relative or friend’s report and presenting it as your own

• Copying or purchasing a report found on the internet

Page 5: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Plagiarism and Consequences

• All schools have policies about ethics or academic honesty, and consequences for cheating.

• Be aware that teachers work in departments and compare student work.

• Be aware that many schools use plagiarism detection services such as Turn It In.

• Universities in particular have sophisticated methods of finding plagiarism, and they apply harsh consequences.

• Practice conducting honest research NOW so that college is easier for you.

Page 6: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Plagiarism

Some students plagiarize without intending to. It is also considered plagiarism when you try to put another writer’s ideas into your own words, but do not succeed in doing so.

Page 7: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Avoid Danger Spots

• Don’t surf to paper mills.

• Don’t use the Web to look for “easy’ paper sources.

• Don’t turn in other students papers as your own.

Page 8: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

How do I avoid plagiarism?

• Take notes properly

• Credit the original author when you use direct quotations

• Summarize correctly

• Paraphrase correctly

Page 9: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Remember CHoMP when taking notes

• Print or photocopy your source material• Cross out grammatical words (a, an, the,

conjunctions, prepositions)• Highlight important information• Make notes that are NOT in complete sentences• Put the notes in your own words

Gilmore, Barry. Plagiarism: A How-Not-To Guide for Students.

Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 2009. Print.

Page 10: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

CHoMP example

Page 11: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Getting Started…

• What is a reference list?– A reference list at the end of a paper provides

the full information necessary to identify and retrieve each source. It cites works that specifically support a particular article.

– References should be alphabetically listed by author’s last name at the end of the paper or presentation.

• A bibliography/works cited?– A bibliography cites works for background or

for further reading.

Page 12: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Getting Started…

• What is a Citation?

– References and citations in text are the formal methods of acknowledging the use of a creator’s work.

• An In-Text Citation?

– Direct citations and quotations are acknowledged in the body of a research assignment.

(Right in the sentence or paragraph)

Page 13: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Direct Quotations

• It is acceptable to copy lines from the original source material IF you credit the source in the text of your report, in a parenthetical citation.

• Use quotations sparingly. They may be used when the original material contains unforgettable language, when a paraphrase would be too complicated or awkward, or when you want to emphasize a very important idea.

Page 14: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Direct Quotes

• If you use someone else’s writing without putting it in quotes, you have blatantly plagiarized.

• Even if you add the source in your bibliography, it is still plagiarism.

Page 15: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Example Quotation

There should be plenty of opportunities in the future because “jobs for registered nurses will grow much faster than the average for all occupations through 2018.” (Levine.)

Page 16: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

To Put It Simple…

• If you didn’t produce it, you don’t own it.• So, if you don’t own it, and you don’t have

permission to use it……

Page 17: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research
Page 18: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Parenthetical Citations

• When you cite a source, you name or identify it.

• Parenthetical citations appear in parentheses inside the body of a report.

Page 19: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

CITATIONS IN TEXTDefinition

In text citations identify the source of a quotation or a personal communication used in research. Citations within the writing (paragraph) are quick and limited in information.

Citations point you to the full information on a back References page.

Purpose

1. Whether paraphrasing or quoting an author directly, the source must be credited.

2. In text citations refer the reader to a References page. The reader then knows where the information came from.

Page 20: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Parenthetical Citations

There should be plenty of opportunities in the future because “jobs for registered nurses will grow much faster than the average for all occupations through 2018.” (Levine.)

Page 21: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Summarizing

• A summary is a shortened, simplified version of a longer piece of source material. To summarize you must put the original ideas in your own words.

Page 22: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Example Summary

Page 23: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Paraphrasing

• A paraphrase is a restatement of a short passage or line of original source material. To paraphrase you must put the original ideas in your own words.

Page 24: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Example Paraphrase

ORIGINAL

The rest of the flight can be fairly easy if the weather is good because planes have computers and other gauges to tell pilots if their trip is going according to plan.

PARAPHRASE

When there are no storms or strong winds, pilots have easy flights because of all the computers and gauges in modern airplanes.

Page 25: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Putting it in your own words

• A true paraphrase only reuses a few key words from the original source.

• Your goal should be to only reuse 3-5 words from the original.

• Use synonyms to change all the other words.• Changing word order may be helpful.• Combining ideas from more than one sentence

may be helpful.

Page 26: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

In other words….

Cite your sources!

Page 27: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Using synonyms

ORIGINAL

The rest of the flight can be fairly easy if the weather is good because planes have computers and other gauges to tell pilots if their trip is going according to plan.

weather = conditions, sun, rain, storms, wind

Page 28: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Changing word order

ORIGINAL

The rest of the flight can be fairly easy if the weather is good because planes have computers and other gauges to tell pilots if their trip is going according to plan.

PARAPHRASE

When there are no storms or strong winds, pilots have easy flights because of all the computers and gauges in modern airplanes.

Page 29: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Combining ideas

ORIGINAL

Takeoff and landing are often challenging and require a great deal of piloting skill. As a result, pilots must be especially careful during those times. The rest of the flight can be fairly easy if the weather is good because planes have computers and other gauges to tell pilots if their trip is going according to plan.

PARAPHRASE

While takeoff and landing demand a lot of talent, being in the air is less difficult because of the computers in modern planes.

Page 30: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Source: http://www.fborfw.com/strip_fix/archives/000811.php

Page 31: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Works Cited

• This is a listing of the resources you used in your research, (encyclopedias, magazines or journals, web sites, interviews, etc.)

• Information goes in a VERY strict format so that anyone could find your original sources.

• Use the first word of your Works Cited entries for your parenthetical citations.

EXAMPLE

Levine, Chester. BLS Career Information. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Web. 28 Apr. 2011. <http://www.bls.gov/k12/>.

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For Better or For Worse – Lynn Johnston

Source: http://www.fborfw.com/strip_fix/archives/000809.php

Page 33: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Source: http://www.fborfw.com/strip_fix/archives/000810.php

H:\\samcgowan\Plagiarism&Citations.ppt

Page 34: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

So how can I use it?• You may rephrase anything that your read.

In other words, put it into your own words. Do NOT copy anything word for word. Unless…

• You are quoting someone. You may use direct quotes if you put it in quotation marks, and site your source in the content.

• You may legally use parts of a copyrighted work, but you must always give the author the credit for his/her hard work.

Note: This includes pictures, graphics, music and software too!!!

Page 35: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

Examples of Plagiarism…

• Copying and pasting text from online encyclopedias

• Copying and pasting text from any web site

• Using photographs, video or audio without permission or acknowledgement

• Using another student’s or your parents’ work and claiming it as your own even with permission

• Using your own work without properly citing it!

From: Mirka, 2004, The Plagiarism Trap. Powerpoint Presentation

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Tips for Avoiding Plagiarism

• Always put quotes from text in quotations. Never forget to do this as this is the easiest way to get accused of plagiarism.

Page 37: Paraphrasing and Plagiarism How to conduct honest research

What is Copyright?

• “The exclusive right to produce or reproduce (copy), to perform in public, or to publish an original literary or artistic work.” Duhaime's Law Dictionary

• Almost everything created privately and originally after March 1, 1989 is copyrighted and protected whether it has a notice or not.