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Plagiarism

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Plagiarism. The uncredited use, both intentional and unintentional, of somebody else s words or ideas. Young writers often aren t aware, or don t know how to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plagiarism


1
Plagiarism
  • Karl Stolley Allen Brizee
  • The OWL at Purdue

2
Overview Contradictions
  • Plagiarism
  • The uncredited use, both intentional and
    unintentional, of somebody elses words or ideas.
  • Young writers often arent aware, or dont know
    how to properly give credit where credit is
    due.
  • Gaining a familiarity with these rules is
    critically important.

3
  • A charge of plagiarism can have severe
    consequences
  • Expulsion from a university
  • Loss of a job
  • A writers loss of credibility professional
    standing

4
Unquestionable Acts of Plagiarism
  • Buying, stealing, or borrowing a paper and
    passing it off as your own
  • Copying an entire paper or article from the web
  • Hiring someone to write your paper for you
  • Copying large sections of text from a source
    without quotation marks or proper citation

5
The Grey Areas
  • Using the words of a source too closely when
    paraphrasing (restating or rewording)
  • Building on someone elses ideas without citing
    their spoken or written work
  • Teachers at our school see no difference in
    deliberate and accidental plagiarism

6
A Brief List of What needs to be Credited or
Documented
  • Words or ideas presented in a magazine, book,
    newspaper, song, TV program, letter,
    advertisement, or any other medium
  • Information you gain through interviewing or
    conversing with another person, face to face,
    over the phone, or in writing
  • When you copy the exact words or a unique phrase

7
  • When you reprint any diagrams, illustrations,
    charts, pictures, or other visual materials
  • When you reuse or repost any electronically-availa
    ble media, including images, audio, video, or
    other media
  • Bottom line Document any words, ideas, or other
    productions that originate somewhere outside of
    you

8
Certain Things That Do Not Need Documentation
  • Writing your own lived experiences, your own
    observations insights, and you own conclusions
    about a subject
  • When you are writing up your own results obtained
    through lab or field experiments
  • When you use your own artwork, digital
    photographs, video, audio, etc.

9
  • When you are using common knowledge, things
    like folklore, common sense observations, myths,
    urban legends, and historical events (but NOT
    historical documents)
  • When you are using generally-accepted facts,
    e.g., pollution is bad for the environment

10
Deciding if Something is Common Knowledge
  • You can regard something as common knowledge if
    you find the same information undocumented in at
    least 5 credible sources.
  • It might be common knowledge if you think the
    information youre presenting is something your
    readers will already know, or something that a
    person could easily find in general reference
    sources.
  • When in doubt, cite!!!

11
Best Practices for Research and Drafting
12
Reading Note-Taking
  • In your notes, always mark someone elses words
    with a big Q, for quote or use big quotation
    marks
  • Indicate in your notes which ideas are taken from
    sources with a big S
  • Mark your own insights with ME
  • Record which source you are using in your notes

13
Writing Paraphrases or Summaries
  • Use a statement that credits the source somewhere
    in the paraphrase or summary, e.g., According to
    Dara Kelly,
  • If youre having trouble summarizing, try writing
    your paraphrase or summary of a text without
    looking at the original, relying on your own
    memory and notes

14
  • Check your paraphrase or summary against the
    original text correct any errors in content and
    accuracy, and be sure to use quotation marks to
    set off any exact phrases from the original text.
  • Check your paraphrase or summary against sentence
    and paragraph structure, as copying those is also
    plagiarism

15
  • Put quotation marks around any unique words or
    phrases that you cannot or do not want to change,
    e.g., Playing such an iconic character is what
    Cusack enjoys (Kelly).

16
Writing Direct Quotations
  • Keep the source authors name in the same
    sentence as the quote
  • Mark the quote with quotation marks, or set it
    off from your text in its own block (4 or more
    lines of continuous quote)
  • Quote no more material than is necessary if a
    short phrase will suffice, dont quote the entire
    paragraph

17
  • To shorten quotes by removing extra information,
    use ellipsis points () to indicate omitted text,
    keeping in mind that
  • There ellipsis points indicates an in-sentence
    ellipsis, and four points for an ellipsis between
    two sentences.
  • e.g., Humiliated by his povertyPoe returned to
    Richmond and visited the home of his fiancee,
    Elmira Royster, only to discover that she had
    become engaged to another man in Poes absence
    (Poes Life).

18
  • To give context to a quote or otherwise add
    wording to it, place added words in brackets.
    be careful not to editorialize or make any
    additions that skew the original meaning of the
    quotedo that in your main text, e.g.,
  • CORRECT With those he loved he was very
    gentle and devoted (Edgar Allan Poe).

19
  • Use quotes that will have the biggest impact in
    your paper
  • Too many direct quotes from sources may weaken
    your credibility, as though you have nothing to
    say yourself

20
Writing About Anothers Ideas
  • Note that the name of the ideas originator in
    the sentence or throughout a paragraph about the
    idea
  • Use parenthetical citations to refer readers to
    additional sources about the idea, as necessary
  • Be sure to use quotation marks around key phrases
    or words that the ideas originator used to
    describe the idea

21
Revising, Proofreading, and Finalizing Your Paper
  • Proofread and cross-check with your notes and
    sources to make sure that anything coming from an
    outside source is acknowledged in some
    combination of the following ways
  • In-text citation, otherwise known as
    parenthetical citations
  • Works Cited Page
  • Quotation marks around short quotes longer
    quotes set off by themselves

22
  • Indirect quotations citing a source that cites
    another source
  • If you have any questions about citations, ask
    your teacher well in advance of your papers due
    date, so if you have to make any adjustments to
    your citations, you have time to do them.

23
Maintaining Drafts of Your Paper
  • Sometimes innocent, hard-working students are
    accused of plagiarism because a dishonest student
    steals their work.
  • Always protect your papers by password
    protecting, saving in multiple locations, locking
    your computer when away, and saving as multiple
    names.
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