Title: Avoiding Plagiarism
1Avoiding Plagiarism
- A guide for assignments
- written for Biology 100L
- UMBC Department of Biological Sciences
2Outline
- Why we care.
- Why you should care
- Whats plagiarism?
- How to avoid plagiarism
- How do I give credit?
- What NOT to cite
- Common misconceptions and FAQs
3Why we care.
4Why do scholars care so much about citations?
- Citations help us judge the reliability of a
piece of information. - Citations help us find information thats not
indexed. -
- Not giving a scholar credit for his/her work robs
them of the recognition for their work that they
have earned.
5Whats the big deal about plagiarism?
- A university is a community of academic or
scholars. Like many professions, scholars have
their own culture. A feature of human cultures
is that they have sets of values that govern the
way people conduct themselves. - Plagiarism violates the cultural norms of
academia.
6Why you should care
7Plagiarism Penalties
- Some of the penalties given to plagiarizing
students in the past are - Refusal to accept a paper until it is
plagiarism-free, resulting in late penalties
AND/OR - Loss of credit for the assignment AND/OR
- An additional plagiarism penalty of 5-30 off
the top of your end-of-semester grade, AND/OR - A Notice of Academic Misconduct filed with the
Provosts office or the UMBC Academic Conduct
Committee, AND/OR - An automatic F in the course.
8UMBC Rules
- At UMBC, before arriving at a penalty for an
incidence of plagiarism, instructors are required
to consult with the Academic Conduct Committee to
protect students against arbitrary and capricious
grading. However, the university gives EACH
INSTRUCTOR the freedom and the authority to make
the final decision as to what they feel is an
appropriate penalty. - For a complete explanation of UMBC policy,
consult the UMBC Academic Handbook, or
www.umbc.edu/integrity
9Protect your reputation in this community
- As a member of UMBCs academic community, you
want your professors to think well of you. - Besides making your interactions in class with
them more pleasant, you also may be counting on
them to say nice things about you in letters of
recommendations for jobs, internships, or
professional school. - Students who plagiarize are viewed as being
unethical because they have violated one of the
most fundamental cultural values of academia
respect for other peoples contributions.
Faculty members who witness a student robbing
another scholar of credit for their work think of
those students as immoral. This impression
will color all future interactions between
professor and student, beyond what the student-
who comes from another culture- may think is
reasonable. - If you want to protect your reputation in this
department, you should take great care to learn
how to properly cite your sources.
10Whats plagiarism?
- Plagiarism. Incorporating someone elses
intellectual work into your own writing without
giving them credit.
11What is intellectual work?
- CREATIVE WRITING
- IDEAS
- INFORMATION or DATA
12What is intellectual work?
- CREATIVE WRITING- A particular choice or
sequence of words to express an idea or fact. - Example Three different ways to explain the
symptoms of diabetes. - polydipsia, polyphagia, and polyuria. . .(1)
- extreme thirst, frequent urination and
increased appetite(2) - Are you hungry and thirsty a lot? Are you
inconvenienced by an overactive bladder? These
are all signs that you might have diabetes.
13What is intellectual work?
- IDEAS- Interpretations of events, data or facts.
- Example
- Using an analogy of empty chairs to explain how
enzymes are affected by substrate concentration.
14What is intellectual work?
- INFORMATION- Facts, measurements or results of an
experiment. - Example
- The PKU gene is located on chromosome 12 3.
15Ways to plagiarize
- The ones you probably know
- Purchasing a paper from an internet paper-mill
site. - Copying a paper written by another student.
- Copying sentences or phrases word-for-word from
books, encyclopedias, journal articles WITHOUT
enclosing the words in quotation marks.
16Ways to plagiarize
- Also plagiarism . . .
- Presenting the information in another authors
work in your own words (a.k.a. paraphrasing)
without citing the source of the original
information. - Reporting facts you just finished learning from
reading a website without citing the website. - About 50 of Biology 100L students will do one of
these on their first paper.
17Summary
- If its information, creative writing or ideas.
- AND you got it from another author
- You MUST cite the source
18Avoiding Plagiarism
19Avoiding plagiarism
- Take careful notes
- Summarize in your own words
- Mark others intellectual work with quotation
marks and/or in-text citations. - Provide bibliographic information for your
sources in a reference list.
20Note-taking
- Avoiding plagiarism begins with good note-taking.
As you take notes from your reading, be sure to
keep track of where your information comes from.
In your notes, you should mark which words are
your own summaries (paraphrasing) of someone
elses information, which are your own ideas, and
which are direct quotations.
21Note-taking strategies
- Before you begin to read a source, prepare a
blank piece of paper for your notes. Head the
paper with the complete bibliographic information
you will need for your reference list. - Read the material once, from beginning to end,
then turn the source over (or turn your monitor
off) and write- in your own words- what you
learned from the source that you didnt know
before. Leave space after each of your
paraphrased statements. - Now go back and fill in the missing details
(numbers, facts, etc.). If you must copy a
phrase verbatim (word-for-word), put quotation
marks around it.
22Summary techniques 5
- Two ways to summarize information youve learned
from somewhere else - Paraphrasing
- Nut shelling
23Nut shelling
- Strip details, examples and extraneous
information from the source, then rewrite the
main ideas of the paragraph in your own words in
a nutshell.
24Nut shelling example 5
- Original text Even though it was located but
seven miles from Savannah, in terms of style and
grace the Pin Point, Georgia, of the 1940s and
1950s was light-years away from its big city
neighbor to the west. With a population of 500,
Pin Point was more hamlet than town, more
drive-past than drive-in. The thought that this
bump in the road could be the birthplace of a
child who would rise to become a justice of the
United States Supreme Court a black child who
would rise to become a justice of the United
States Supreme Courtwas inconceivable. The
distance from here to there, or, as the justice
himself would grow fond of saying, from the
outhouse to the courthouse, was simply too great.
A black child from Pin Point, Georgia, becoming
a member of the U.S. Supreme Court? It simply
couldnt happen. Except that it did. 4 - Nutshell Greenya 4 notes that in the small,
insignificant town of Pin Point, Georgia, no one
would have predicted that one of its citizens,
particularly a black citizen, would become a
justice for the highest court in the land.
However, that is exactly what happened when
Clarence Thomas became the second black Supreme
Court Justice.
25Paraphrasing
- Decide what the author means by each sentence
in the passage, then report the meaning in your
own words. - Details are preserved in paraphrasing.
26Paraphrasing example 5
- Original text Even though it was located but
seven miles from Savannah, in terms of style and
grace the Pin Point, Georgia, of the 1940s and
1950s was light-years away from its big city
neighbor to the west. With a population of 500,
Pin Point was more hamlet than town, more
drive-past than drive-in. The thought that this
bump in the road could be the birthplace of a
child who would rise to become a justice of the
United States Supreme Court a black child who
would rise to become a justice of the United
States Supreme Courtwas inconceivable. The
distance from here to there, or, as the justice
himself would grow fond of saying, from the
outhouse to the courthouse, was simply too great.
A black child from Pin Point, Georgia, becoming
a member of the U.S. Supreme Court? It simply
couldnt happen. Except that it did. 4 - Paraphrase In his book, Greenya 4 compares
the hometown of Clarence Thomas, Pin Point,
Georgia with the well-known town of Savannah and
finds Pin Point to be a much less desirable place
to visit. The author comments on how
unfathomable it seems that this bump in the
road place would give rise to a Supreme Court
Justice. More unbelievable than that would be
the thought of that Justice being a black man.
However, Greenya points out that the seemingly
impossible happened when Clarence Thomas became
the second black Supreme Court Justice.
27Good and bad paraphrasing
- When paraphrasing, it is important to avoid
copying phrases and sentence structure.
Paraphrases must be rewritten in your own words.
What follows are examples of plagiarized
paraphrases that simply shuffled phrases and
substituted synonyms.
28Bad paraphrasing 6
- Original text
- In research writing, sources are cited for two
reasons to alert readers to the sources of your
information and to give credit to the writers
from whom you have borrowed words and ideas. 7 - Plagiarism
- In research writing, we cite sources for a couple
reasons to notify readers of our information
sources and give credit to those from whom we
have borrowed 7. - NOTE In this example, providing a citation is
NOT enough. The author of the plagiarized
passage has also used the creative writing of the
author of the original text without crediting
him/her appropriately.
29Fixing bad paraphrasing 6
- Rewrite in your own words or, if you cant think
of any other way to say it, enclose the original
phrases in quotation marks - Original text
- In research writing, sources are cited for two
reasons to alert readers to the sources of your
information and to give credit to the writers
from whom you have borrowed words and ideas. - Acceptable paraphrases- NOT plagiarism
- A researcher cites her sources to ensure her
audience knows where she got her information, and
to recognize and credit the original work 7. - In her book A Writer's Reference, Diana Hacker
7 notes, In research writing, sources are
cited for two reasons to alert readers to the
sources of your information and to give credit to
the writers from whom you have borrowed words and
ideas.
30How to properly cite
- To cite someone elses intellectual work you
have to do two things - Mark the passage that is not your own with an
in-text citation mark and quotation marks (when
appropriate). - List the bibliographic information for the source
of the passage in a reference list.
31Citing direct quotations ( i.e. word-for-word
copying)
- Put quotation marks around copied words.
- Even two-word phrases copied from a source- if
they are unique- must be enclosed in quotation
marks. - Put an in-text citation mark after the final
quotation mark.
32Example Citing direct quotations
- Put quotation marks around copied words.
- Even two-word phrases copied from a source- if
they are unique- must be enclosed in quotation
marks. - Put an in-text citation mark after the final
quotation mark. - In research writing, sources are cited for two
reasons to alert readers to the sources of your
information and to give credit to the writers
from whom you have borrowed words and ideas. 7
33Citing paraphases
- Put an in-text citation mark at the end of each
sentence that contains new information, even if
it came from the same source as the previous
sentence. - Putting one in-text citation mark at the end of a
paragraph is NOT sufficient. - Example- a 1-sentence paraphrase
- A researcher cites her sources to ensure her
audience knows where she got her information, and
to recognize and credit the original work 7.
34Citing paraphases Example
- Put an in-text citation mark at the end of each
sentence that contains new information, even if
it came from the same source as the previous
sentence. - Putting one in-text citation mark at the end of a
paragraph is NOT sufficient. - Example- a paragraph-length paraphrase
- Giardiasis, the most common waterborne disease
caused by an enteric parasite in humans, is
produced by the flagellated protozoan Giardia
lamblia (1). The Giardia life cycle present two
morphologically distinct forms, trophozoites and
cysts. The disease is caused by the trophozoite
forms and frequently presents as acute or chronic
diarrhea (1). . . Transmission occurs through the
ingestion of Giardia cysts, usually from fecally
contaminated food or water or interpersonal
contact (2).8
35In-text citation marks
- There are two different ways
- Number-sequence systems
- Insert , () or at end of passages, with
replaced with a number representing the order in
the paper in which the sources appear. - If same source is cited later in the paper, the
number is the same. (e.g. all information from
Jones, 1983, is marked 3 throughout the paper
because its the third source mentioned in the
paper, even if the next time its mentioned comes
after source 12). - Author-year systems
- Insert (Author last name, year of publication) at
end of passages. - If two authors (Last name of first author last
name of second author, year) - If three or more authors (Last name of first
author, et. al., year).
36Which to use?
37Examples of Number-sequence
- Giardiasis, the most common waterborne disease
caused by an enteric parasite in humans, is
produced by the flagellated protozoan Giardia
lamblia (1). The Giardia life cycle present two
morphologically distinct forms, trophozoites and
cysts. The disease is caused by the trophozoite
forms and frequently presents as acute or chronic
diarrhea (1). . . Transmission occurs through the
ingestion of Giardia cysts, usually from fecally
contaminated food or water or interpersonal
contact (2).9 - This tutorial.
- The papers you will write for Biology 100L.
38Examples of Author-year
- Here is the same passage rewritten in author-year
format - Giardiasis, the most common waterborne disease
caused by an enteric parasite in humans, is
produced by the flagellated protozoan Giardia
lamblia (Adam, 1991). The Giardia life cycle
present two morphologically distinct forms,
trophozoites and cysts. The disease is caused by
the trophozoite forms and frequently presents as
acute or chronic diarrhea (Adam, 1991). . .
Transmission occurs through the ingestion of
Giardia cysts, usually from fecally contaminated
food or water or interpersonal contact (Craun,
1990).8
39Reference list
- Put at end of paper under a separate heading
Literature cited. - Organize in order cited if using number-sequence
system. - Organize alphabetically by last name of first
author for author-year system. - Bibliographic information to include depends on
type of source (website, journal article, book,
etc.) - Exact format varies. In Biology 100L we use the
format recommended by the Council of Biology
Editors.
40Minimum bibliographic information to include in
your reference lists
- Journal articles Authors names, name of
journal, volume and first page of article,
year of publication. - Books Authors names, title of book, year of
publication, name of publisher, city of
publisher. - WebPages Name of page author or page sponsor,
title of page, URL, date accessed.
41Example Reference lists
- Number-sequence
- Literature cited
- Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E. F. Maniatis, T.
(1989) Molecular Cloning A Laboratory Manual
(Cold Spring Harbor Lab. Press, Plainview, NY). - Holt, W.V. (1982) J Reprod Fertil 64485-9.
42Example Reference lists
- Author-year
- Literature cited
- Holt, W.V. (1982) J Reprod Fertil 64485-9.
- Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E. F. Maniatis, T.
(1989) Molecular Cloning A Laboratory Manual
(Cold Spring Harbor Lab. Press, Plainview, NY).
43When DONT I have to cite?
- When providing your own, original analysis of
other peoples intellectual work - When expressing an original thought of your own
- When relating information from your own research
or life experience - When reporting common knowledge
44When DONT I have to cite?
- When providing your own, original analysis or
summary of other peoples intellectual work - Example Making a generalization about a pattern
or trend in biology gleaned by reading other
peoples papers. E.g. Eukaryotic genes have
introns, but prokaryotic genes dont. - But If someone else makes an analysis or summary
that you agree with, its still not your own,
even if you thought of it before you read the
paper. In science, the first person to publish
an idea gets credit for it.
45When DONT I have to cite?
- When relating information from your own research,
or your own life experiences. - Example A common myth is that swallowed gum
sits in your stomach, undigested, for seven
years. - Example Any data collected by you or your lab
partners in your biology laboratory class.
46When DONT I have to cite?
- When reporting Common Knowledge
- Common knowledge. Information that the common
man among your peers is likely to already know
(without looking it up) before reading your
paper. - Use students whose knowledge is limited to what
they learned in courses that are pre-requisite to
the course you are writing for as your peer
group. - The pre-requisite for Biology 100L is a high
school diploma. At some schools, you can get a
high school diploma without taking high school
biology.
47Common Knowledge in Biology 100/100L
- EXAMPLES
- Diabetes is a disease caused by an inability to
either make or use insulin. - DNA is the genetic material in chromosomes.
48NOT common knowledge in Biology 100/100L
- EXAMPLES
- The symptoms of diabetes are polydipsia,
polyphagia, and polyuria. - Mice have 20 chromosomes.
49Common misconceptions
- I only need to cite the source of direct
quotations. - I dont need to cite information I get from the
internet. - When I summarize information in my own words,
(i.e. paraphrase) it becomes my work, so I dont
need to cite the information source. - If the instructor tells us to use certain
sources, he/she already knows where we got our
information, so I dont need to cite.
50FAQs 1
- Why dont I have to cite sources when answering
questions in my lab manual? - Questions in lab manuals usually ask you to do
one of two things - report or interpret your original results from an
experiment, - apply information youve been given to a specific
situation. - Your data, your interpretations of your data, and
your analyses are your own original work, and so
all of these are adequately cited by the name
(your name) at the top of the assignment.
51FAQs 2
- Ive written papers during the entire 3 years
Ive been in college, but this is the first time
Ive ever been charged with plagiarism. Why now? - A. Plagiarism is an issue that only comes up
when your assignment requires you to consult
other peoples writing. Unless you copy another
students paper, or are writing a library
research paper, its rarely an issue in your
creative writing classes (like Engl100). In your
lab courses, it only comes up when writing the
introduction or discussion sections of lab
reports. It also takes time, training, and
familiarity with the original sources to detect,
so perhaps your instructors missed it before.
52FAQs 3
- Q. Some places define plagiarism as
misrepresentation of authorship. While I
forget to put an in-text citation mark in my
paper, I also never put in a mark saying the
information was mine. So why is that
misrepresentation? - A. When you put your name at the top of a
paper, youre claiming that the words, ideas and
information in the paper is yours. In-text
citations and quotation marks show the reader the
exceptions to that rule. If a passage is not
marked, its assumed to be the authors work by
default.
53FAQs 4
- Q. I never see citation marks or reference
lists in newspaper articles or magazines. Are
you saying that THEY are plagiarizers? - A. Magazines and newspapers primarily use
interviews with experts or the man on the
scene as their source of information, so they
only need to mention the name and the
qualifications of the person they are
interviewing (e.g. according to John Jones, the
deputy chief of administration). The quality
of the information they give you, therefore, is
only as good as that experts memory or
knowledge of his/her field. Caveat emptor!
54But I didnt know!!
- Ignorance is not an excuse. It is your
responsibility to become informed. - This guide was written to address the surprising
lack of knowledge about plagiarism encountered in
students in our courses. However, it is your
responsibility to read it, understand it, and ask
questions if you dont.
55Resources
- Citation style guides (including Council of
Biology Editors). http//aok.lib.umbc.edu/referenc
e/BI/styleguides.php3 - UMBC Policies on Academic Integrity
www.umbc.edu/integrity - UMBC Kuhn Library webpage on plagiarism
http//aok.lib.umbc.edu/reference/plagiarism.php3
56Literature cited
- Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man, OMIM (TM).
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD. MIM
Number 222100 12/8/2003 . URL
http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/omim/. Accessed
1/10/2004. - Anonymous. Juvenile Diabetes Research
Foundation. Homepage. URL http//www.jdrf.org/i
ndex.cfm. Accessed 1/10/2004. - Anonymous. Phenylketonuria. Genes and
Disease. URL http//www.ncbi.nih.gov/books/bv.fc
gi?callbv.View..ShowSectionridgnd. Accessed
1/10/2004. - Greenya, John. Silent Justice The Clarence
Thomas Story. NJ Barricade Books, Inc., 2001. - Patricia Denver and LaTasha Tucker.
Plagiarism What it is and how to Avoid It. in
Lark Claassen, ed., Symbiosis. Boston Pearson
Custom Publishing, 2003. - Student Judicial Affairs, University of
California, Davis. October 1999. Avoiding
Plagiarism Mastering the Art of Scholarship.
http//sja.ucdavis.edu/avoid.htm. Accessed
October 2003. - Hacker D. A Writers Reference. London St.
Martins Press 1995. - HD Lujan, et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 93, 7628-7633.