Combating Plagiarism William Harroff Holman Library Dr. Brenda Boudreau The Writing Resource Center “If we cannot place a reasonable degree of trust in.

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Presentation transcript:

Combating Plagiarism William Harroff Holman Library Dr. Brenda Boudreau The Writing Resource Center “If we cannot place a reasonable degree of trust in our scholars, we cannot trust anyone.” A.D. Nuttal, Professor of English, University of Oxford from his book, Dead From the Waist Down

This tutorial will cover the basics for you to combat plagiarism Major Topics Covered –Defining Plagiarism –Becoming Aware of the Problem –Rules to Avoid Plagiarism –McKendree College’s Policy –Benefits to Following the Rules –Style: the Basics –Plagiarism Tutorial –Resource WebPages

What is Plagiarism? A paper or assignment actually written in whole or part by another. A paper or assignment copied word-for-word or with only minor changes from a book, magazine, or other resource. A paper copied in part from one or more sources, without proper identification and acknowledgment of the sources. A paper which is merely a paraphrase of one or more sources, using ideas and/or logic without credit, even though the actual words may be changed.

What is Plagiarism? Definitions Fraud: outright purchase or copying of an entire paper, perhaps with a new introduction and conclusion added. In some cases, such copying may entail copyright infringement. Substantial plagiarism: widespread or considerable borrowing of material, passing off borrowed passages as original, failure to indicate quoted evidence or give bibliographical sources or other appropriate credit. Incidental plagiarism: small-scale borrowing, copying, downloading, or insertion without appropriate quotation, credit, or acknowledgement. Free of plagiarism: Fully original research and writing with total acknowledgement of all ideas, quotations, cited evidence, and sources. Note the definition differences in the Oxford Reference Collection Oxford Reference CollectionOxford Reference Collection

Strategies of Awareness: Educate yourself about plagiarism Understand why students cheat. Students are most tempted to copy a paper when they have planned poorly and run out of time near the due date for a paper. If you structure your research so that intermediate parts of it (topic, early research, prospectus, outline) are accomplished at regular intervals, you will be less likely to get in a time-pressure panic and look for an expedient shortcut. As easy as it is to "borrow" someone else's paper over the Internet, it is even easier to detect. There are several hundred online services where you can purchase or receive free term papers. Don't ruin your academic career over an impetuous act or laziness.

Two Simple Rules for Avoiding Plagiarism Do your own work. Give credit where credit is due.

Cite Your Sources Properly Let the reader know whose thoughts are being used to make the point and provide the appropriate documentation Campus Policy –No person shall submit as his own to an instructor any work which contains ideas or materials taken from another without full acknowledgment of the author & the source. McKendree’s Academic Integrity Policy

The Benefits of Citing Sources Properly Many students do not seem to realize that whenever they cite a source, they are strengthening their writing. Citing a source, whether paraphrased or quoted, reveals that they have performed research well and synthesized the findings into their own argument. Using sources shows that a student is engaged in "the great conversation," the world of ideas, and that the student is aware of other thinkers' positions on the topic. By quoting (and citing) writers who support the student's position, the student gains strength for the position. By responding reasonably to those who oppose it, the student shows that there are valid counter arguments. In a nutshell, citing helps make the essay stronger and sounder. It's never been more important for you to get in the habit of giving credit to those who supplied you with valuable ideas, pictures, photographs, etc. And, it's never been simpler to cite them correctly. Check the Citing Sources hyperlink from the Library’s homepage.Citing SourcesLibrary’s homepage

Strategies of Awareness: Ethical and Legal Issues Recognize the larger issues regarding information literacy and plagiarism. These ethical questions do not go away once you are finished with school. They deal with how you are perceived and judged in the “real world” – at home, at work and professionally. After all, stealing is illegal, immoral & unethical. Just ask an Enron manager. The information literate student understands many of the economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information and accesses and uses information ethically and legally. Understanding the legal and ethical issues surrounding information is much more than plagiarism, the current "hot topic." Other significant aspects include the freedom of speech, privacy, intellectual property, fair use & more.

Advice on Changing Attitudes & Behaviors Change bad habits. In the past, it may have been satisfactory to get “facts” from any information source. Now you will be required to EVALUATE the sources you examine, providing quality information from experts and the actual facts. Every faculty member at McKendree College is interested in helping you write and perform research effectively. You have many resources to reach out to: your professor, Holman Library, the Writing Center and Style Manuals.

Information Literacy Defined Within the context of lifelong learning and the broad information continuum which ranges from data to knowledge to wisdom, information literacy competency focuses on six broad abilities: to recognize the need for information to know how to access information to understand how to evaluate information to know how to synthesize information to be able to communicate information to be able to ethically use information

Bibliographic Style Aids at the Library

Tutorials Tutorials are available any time and cover almost every one of our databases

The Issues: For More Information Avoiding Plagiarism by Sharon Williams Hamilton College Writing Center Center for the Study of Ethics in the Professions Electronic Plagiarism Seminar by Gretchen Pearson Le Moyne College Evaluating Information by Betsy Richmond University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire Plagiarism: What It is & How to Recognize & Avoid It Writing Tutorial Services, Indiana University Resource Guide for Promoting Academic Honesty College of Arts & Sciences, Syracuse University

Need Help?: Visit the Writing Resource Center Our philosophy at the Writing Resource Center is to help writers help themselves. What that means is that we will not just proofread a paper. Our job is instead to help students become better writers. We offer help with the following: 1. Developing invention techniques 2. Creating a good thesis 3. Improving organizational skills 4. Improving audience awareness 5. Improving unity and coherence 6. Improving proofreading skills 7. Improving grammar skills 8. Developing sentence clarity 9. Developing methods of revision 10. Improving research and documentation skills Clark 201, , Clark 201, ,

Please visit, call or Bill Harroff Dr. Brenda Boudreau