Title: Plagiarism what it is and how to avoid it
1Plagiarismwhat it is and how to avoid it
- Cathy Perkins
- Horrmann Library
- Spring 2008
2Wagner Academic Honesty Policy
- Student Academic Honesty Handbook
- http//www.wagner.edu/provost/filestore2/download/
30/honesty20handbook.pdf - The Wagner Academic Honesty Policy is also
located in every Student Bulletin - http//www.wagner.edu/registrar/catalogue_bulleti
n - Students are solely responsible for informing
- themselves about acceptable forms of academic
- conduct. Lack of knowledge of citation
- procedures, for example, is not an excuse for
- plagiarism.
3Wagner Academic Honesty Policy
- The two main types of dishonesty are plagiarism
and cheating. - Plagiarism is presenting as ones own work,
words or ideas of another without proper
citations or credits. - All work that comes from other sources must be
properly acknowledged, and even if the work of
others is paraphrased it should be clearly noted.
4What do you know about plagiarism?(10 question
pre-test)
5Common Knowledge
- There is no clear boundary on what is considered
common knowledge. Even experts on plagiarism
disagree on what counts as common knowledge. - many people only consider facts current and
historical events, famous people, geographic
areas, etc. to be potentially common knowledge - others also include nonfactual material such as
folklore and common sayings - some people limit common knowledge to only
information known by others in your class
6Common Knowledge Criteria
- There are two (2) criteria for determining common
knowledge - QUANTITY the fact can be found in numerous
places - UBIQUITY the fact is likely to be known by a lot
of people
7Quantity
- How do you tell if you have met the quantity
criteria? Some experts say that a fact is common
knowledge if it can be found in three independent
sources. Purdues Online Writing Lab recommends
finding five independent sources before
considering a fact common knowledge. - As you do more research on a topic, you are
likely to discover which facts count as common
knowledge because you will encounter these facts
in many places.
8Ubiquity
- How do you tell if a fact is ubiquitous? Some
facts may be well known within one discipline and
papers written within that group may assume the
information is commonly known. That same piece of
information used in other situations or by
non-experts may require attribution. - A good rule of thumb is to acknowledge ideas
which are not common knowledge among your peers
such as the other students in the course for
which you are writing the paper.
9Common Knowledge Best Practices
- If you are not sure, assume that an idea is not
common knowledge and cite the source. It is much
easier to remove a citation than it is to hunt
down a citation and try to add it later. Finally,
when in doubt, check with your professor. - Common Knowledge content from Plagiarism
Prevention for Students, Cal State San Marcos
Library http//library.csusm.edu/plagiarism/index.
html
10Paraphrasing
- Many people believe that putting a piece of text
or an idea into their own words avoids the
issue of plagiarism. This is called paraphrasing.
- The purpose of paraphrase is often to summarize
or simplify the authors ideas, making them
easier to understand, more approachable. You
might also use paraphrase to emphasize a
particular idea or train of thought from the
original authors text.
11Paraphrasing Pitfalls
- Close paraphrase, where trivial changes are made
such as substituting similar words or changing
the sentence order, is essentially the same as
copying the authors words directly. This is not
enough to count as an original expression of the
idea and is still considered a form of exact copy
plagiarism. - Original Idea any type of paraphrase that
includes the original authors ideas must be
cited even if it has been substantially
re-expressed.
From What is Plagiarism? http//library.csusm.ed
u/plagiarism/WhatIs/what_is_para.htm
12How to Paraphrase
- Original source If the existence of a signing
ape was unsettling for linguists, it was also
startling news for animal behaviorists - Source Language of the Apes, by Flora Davis,
London Routledge, 2008, p.26. - Incorrectly paraphrased in paper
- If an ape that could sign was disturbing for
linguists, it was also a surprise for animal
behaviorists. - Correctly paraphrased in paper
- According to Flora Davis, linguists and animal
behaviorists were unprepared for the news that a
chimp could communicate with its trainers through
sign language (Davis, 26).
13Direct Quoting
- Accurately quote the original author's words.
- Enclose the quotation within quotation marks.
- Follow quotation using an in-text citation e.g.,
(Miller, 2006, p. 276), the format of an in-text
citation varies by citation style. - Introduce the quotation with a 'signal phrase'
e.g., Miller states that .. - A list of references with full citation
information is also required at the end of the
paper.
From Avoiding Plagiarism A Guide for Students,
http//libweb.uoregon.edu/guides/plagiarism/studen
ts/
14How to use a Direct Quote
- Original source
- "Buddhadasa's conception of human beings as
active controllers of their own material and
spiritual progress is most clearly presented in
his view of work as integrating both social and
spiritual activity." Source Buddhadasa A
Buddhist thinker for the modern world by Peter
Jackson. Bangkok, Thailand Siam Society, 1988.
p. 200. - Correctly cited direct quotation in the text of a
paper - Jackson (1988) notes, "Buddhadasa's conception
of human beings as active controllers of their
own material and spiritual progress is most
clearly presented in his view of work as
integrating both social and spiritual activity."
(p. 200)
15Reading and Taking Notes
- Plagiarism prevention begins as soon as you begin
reading - Save yourself time and trouble by taking notes
from what you read, and include the citation
information, page numbers, and author or
speakers name in your notes right away
16Five Tips for Avoiding Plagiarism
- Use your own ideas. It should be your paper and
your ideas that should be the focus. - Use the ideas of others sparingly--only to
support or reinforce your own argument. - When taking notes, include complete citation
information for each item you use. - Use quotation marks when directly stating another
person's words. - Take 30 minutes and write a short draft of your
paper without using any notes. It will help you
think through what you want to say and help
prevent your being too dependent upon your
sources.
From Owens Library SearchPath Tutorial, http//www
.nwmissouri.edu/library/courses/communication/sear
chpath/mod6/06-tips-plag.html
17Citing Your Sources
- Horrmann Library Website http//www.wagner.edu/lib
rary - Use the Citation Management Tools link this
will bring you to the library blog entry on
citation tools. At the bottom are links for
Online Style Manuals (in APA, MLA, and Chicago
formats) - Questions?
- Ask your professor, a librarian, or a writing
tutor!
18What is Acceptable Use?Test Yourself