1 / 13

Avoiding Plagiarism

Avoiding Plagiarism. Presentor: Yoo D. Moon Date: November 18 th , 2008 Written by Purdue OWL. Last full revision by Karl Stolley. Last edited by Allen Brizee on September 30th 2008. Introduction. What is Plagiarism? The Causes of Plagiarism The Consequences of Plagiarism

uta
Download Presentation

Avoiding Plagiarism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Avoiding Plagiarism Presentor: Yoo D. Moon Date: November 18th, 2008 Written by Purdue OWL.Last full revision by Karl Stolley.Last edited by Allen Brizee on September 30th 2008.

  2. Introduction • What is Plagiarism? • The Causes of Plagiarism • The Consequences of Plagiarism • Intellectual Challenges In American Academic • Something that you need to give credit • Something that you do not need to give credit • Safe Practices • Citation

  3. What is Plagiarism? • Definition : --”In an instructional setting, plagiarism occurs when a writer deliberately uses someone else’s language, ideas, or other original (not common-knowledge) material without acknowledging its source”. • Examples --Buying, stealing, or borrowing a paper of and entire paper or article --Hiring someone to write your paper for you --Copying large sections of text from a source without quotation marks or proper citation.

  4. The Causes of Plagiarism • Fear Failure or Fear taking risks in their own work • Poor time-management skills • Students don’t find academic cheating as critically important. • Proper authorities fail to report cheating • Some students do not know what it is • Lack the knowledge of and ability to use the conventions of authorial attribution

  5. The Consequences of Plagiarism • A charge of plagiarism can be… • expulsion from a school • Loss of a job • A writer’s loss of credibility • Loss of professional standing

  6. Intellectual Challenges In American Academic • There are some contradiction in American Academic Writing. --”Develop a topic based on what has already been said and written but write something new and original” -- “Rely on opinions of experts and authorities on a topic but improve upon and/or disagree with those same opinions” -- “Give credit to researchers who have come before you but make your own significant contribution” -- “Improve your English or fit into a discourse community by building upon what you hear and read but use your own words and your own voice”

  7. Something that you need to give credit • Any individuals or any organization could be credited. Here is a brief list of what needs to be credited or documented: • -- Any words or idea presented in any medium such as a book, newspaper, songs, web page and etc. • Interviewing or conversation with other person • the exact same words or quatations • any diagrams, chart or table from other sources

  8. Something that you do not need to give credit • Your own experiences, observation and thought • Your experiment results • Common knowledge • Generally-accepted facts

  9. Safe Practices • Best Practices for research and Drafting • Reading and Note-Taking • Interviewing and conversing • Writing Paraphrases or Summaries • Writing Direct Quotations • Writing about another’s Idea • Marinating Drafts or Your paper • Revising, Proofreading, and finalizing your paper

  10. Best Practice For Teachers • Developing a strong course policy on plagiarism • Handling cases of plagiarism

  11. Citation • APA: psychology, education, and other social sciences. • MLA: literature, arts, and humanities. • AMA: medicine, health, and biological sciences. • Turabian: designed for college students to use with all subjects. • Chicago: used with all subjects in the "real world" by books, magazines, newspapers, and other non-scholarly publications.

  12. Work Cited • Robert, Delaney. "Citation Style for Research Papers." C.W. Post CAMPUS. Long Island University. 15 Nov 2008 <http://www.liu.edu/cwis/cwp/library/workshop/citation.htm>.

  13. Question Question???

More Related