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What is Plagiarism?

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What is Plagiarism? What is it? How can we prevent it? What are the consequences? Definition Academic Dishonesty: Acts of academic dishonesty include, but are not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is Plagiarism?


1
What is Plagiarism?
  1. What is it?
  2. How can we prevent it?
  3. What are the consequences?

2
Definition
  • Academic Dishonesty
  • Acts of academic dishonesty include, but are not
    limited to, the following

3
Plagiarism
  • Cheatingdistribution or use of external
    assistance relating to an examination, test,
    quiz, homework, project, or the like, without
    express permission of the teacher.
  • Fabricationfalsification or invention of data,
    citation, or other authority in an academic
    exercise.
  • Plagiarismuse of another's ideas, words, or work
    as one's own. Plagiarism includes, but is not
    limited to, the misuse of published material,
    internet material, and the work of other
    students.
  • Theft or Alteration of Materialsunauthorized
    taking, concealment, or alteration of student or
    teacher materials.

4
Copying from Another Student
  • Hey, did you do the homework in Mr(s). Xs
    class? Can I borrow it?
  • Sure.
  • And the student copies the answers and turns them
    in as his/her own work.

5
Is This Plagiarism?
6
Copying from Another Student
  • This is the most difficult form of plagiarism for
    teachers to catch. If the answer for 1 on the
    homework is A, or 4x, or George Washington, or
    anything that is a short answer, it is difficult
    for the teacher to determine if a student found
    the answer by doing the work, or by copying it
    from a fellow student.

7
How Can You Prevent It
  • Listen to your teachers when they tell you
  • dont share your work.
  • if you copy, then you are not doing the
    brainworkthe brainwork is why you were given the
    homework to do in the first place.
  • that the information you did not process (because
    you copied) will most likely show up again on a
    test
  • you will have to study more because you have
    spent your study time copying instead of doing
    the brainwork from the beginning

8
What Teachers Might Do
  • Teachers can design a variety of assignments so
    the majority of your homework assignments are not
    short answer or fill in the blank. Teachers can
  • ask students to show work.
  • grade worksheet or short answer types of
    assignments for credit only, then, to ensure
    students know the material, give a homework quiz
    asking students to answer questions relating to
    the questions that they did earlier on their
    homework.
  • confront students that teachers see copying
    homework while sitting with their friends before
    school or before class. Give the copied work to
    the students teacher.

9
Is This Plagiarism?
10
Background Info
  • The assignment was to choose one of the English
    language arts state standards, write a response
    to literature essay about a self-selected book,
    and apply the standard to that book.
  • This student chose to write about Tuck
    Everlasting, a book usually read in elementary or
    early middle school.

11
Indicators
  • The green text in her conclusion could be a
    paraphrase of the standard, and is not
    necessarily plagiarism.
  • The standard this student selected was
  • 3.9 Explain how voice, persona, and the
    choice of a narrator affect characterization and
    the tone, plot, and credibility of a text.

12
Indicators
  • However, the red text in her conclusion is
    quite sophisticated in word choice (and generic
    in detail), and did not match the writing style
    of the earlier part of the essay.
  • TurnItIn.com indicates that the red text has
    been plagiarized.

13
In addition to copying the text, she made no
attempt to quote it directly (with quotation
marks) or paraphrase it--both of which would
require a parenthetical reference to cite the
source.
14
Is This Plagiarism?
15
Background
  • The student was asked to pick a place he had
    visited, ask a question about the place, and
    research the answer.
  • This student selected the Coliseum in Rome, but
    the title immediately indicates that he has not
    answered a question about the Coliseum instead,
    this paper becomes a basic My Report on the
    Coliseum type of writing.

16
Background
  • Thus, the introduction becomes a series of facts.
  • He does give credit to two sources.
  • So, is this plagiarism, or is he simply a student
    who didnt quite complete the assignment?

17
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18
TurnItIn.com
  • This is a cut and paste version of the
    TurnItIn.com report. Overall, the report
    indicates that 69 of the paper was copied from
    Internet sources.

19
Know the Assignment
  • Many writing assignments ask questions about a
    topic--it is more difficult to find a paper on
    the Internet about How did the Coliseums
    structure and type of entertainment affect class
    distinctions in Roman society? then it is to
    find one simply about the Coliseum.
  • The more you have to pull facts from various
    sources, arrange them in your order, rewrite them
    in your words--the more the paper becomes your
    own thoughtful work, and not a copy of someone
    elses thought process.

20
Example of Sentence Combining
  • Practice finding a few facts then combining the
    facts into a sentence that you write on your own.

Actors often had to be creative with special
effects in plays during Shakespeares time,
hiding bladders full of pigs blood under their
costumes to create bloody fight scenes, or
rolling cannonballs to sound like thunder
(Martin).
21
Note Taking
  • Take notes. Writing one fact per notecard, etc.
    forces you to paraphrase and creates fewer
    chances for you to lift chunks of text
    (plagiarize) from your sources.
  • Notecards also allow you to combine facts from
    various sources. You can shuffle/organize the
    notecards by topic, which is a great way to use
    synthesis.

22
What Can Students Do
  • This advice is posted in most English classes and
    in the library. The poster advertises a book by
    Barry Gilmore about plagiarism.

23
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24
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25
Consequences
  • In all instances of academic dishonesty, a
    referral will be placed in the student's
    cumulative folder and parents will be contacted.
  • Any student guilty of academic dishonesty will
    receive a zero on the affected activity. That
    zero may not be dropped from the record and will
    be averaged into the student's grade. Upon a
    second instance of dishonesty in either semester
    of that course, the student will be removed from
    that course and receive a final grade of F/U.

26
PlagiarismConclusion
  • Ask the teachers expectations for an assignment
    if you are unclear.
  • Learn the consequences and expect to be held
    accountable.
  • Practice combining/synthesizing facts and asking
    research questions.
  • Note Here at LJHS we use MLA format for research
    papers.

27
  • Presentation by Carole LeCren
  • La Jolla High School
  • September 2009
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