What is Plagiarism?
According
to Webster's dictionary – Plagiarism means “to steal & pass off (the
ideas or words of another) as one’s own, use (another’s production) without
crediting the source”.
or
Plagiarism is the
"wrongful appropriation" and "stealing and publication" of
another author's "language, thoughts, ideas, or expressions" and the
representation of them as one's own original work.
Every
school/college/university has its own policies with respect to the plagiarism.
Types of plagiarism: -
ü Clone
ü CTRL-C
ü Find – Replace
ü Remix
ü Recycle
|
ü Hybrid
ü Mashup
ü 404 Error
ü Aggregator
ü Re-tweet
|
1. Clone:
-
|
Submitting
another’s work, word-for-word, as one’s own
|
2.
CTRL-C:-
|
Contains
significant portions of text from a single source without alterations.
|
3. Find -
Replace: -
|
Changing
key words & phrases but retaining the essential content of the source.
|
4. Remix:
-
|
Paraphrases
from multiple sources, made to fit together.
|
5.
Recycle: -
|
Borrows
generously from the writer’s previous work without citation.
|
6. Hybrid:
|
Combines
perfectly cited sources with copied passages without citation.
|
7. Mashup:
-
|
Mixes
copied material from multiple sources.
|
8. 404
Error: -
|
Includes
citations to non-existent or inaccurate information about sources.
|
9.
Aggregator: -
|
Includes
proper citation to sources but the paper contains almost no original work.
|
10.
Re-tweet: -
|
Includes
proper citation, but relies too closely on the text’s original wording and/or
structure.
|
Common forms of student plagiarism: -
According
to “The Reality and Solution of College Plagiarism” created by the Health
Informatics department of the University
of Illinois at Chicago there are 10 main forms of plagiarism that students commit:
- Submitting someone’s work as their own.
- Taking passages from their own previous work without adding
citations.
- Re-writing someone’s work without properly citing sources.
- Using quotations, but not citing the source.
- Interweaving various sources together in the work without
citing.
- Citing some, but not all passages that should be cited.
- Melding together cited and uncited sections of the piece.
- Providing proper citations, but fails to change the structure
and wording of the borrowed ideas enough.
- Inaccurately citing the source.
- Relying too heavily on other people’s work. Fails to bring
original thought into the text.
6 Ways to Avoid Plagiarism: -
1. Paraphrase - So
you have found information that is perfect for your research paper. Read it and
put it into your own words. Make sure that you do not copy verbatim more than
two words in a row from the text you have found. If you do use more than two
words together, you will have to use quotation marks. We will get into quoting
properly soon
2. Cite - Citing is one of the
effective ways to avoid plagiarism. Follow the document formatting guidelines
(i.e. APA, MLA, Chicago, etc.) used by your educational institution or the
institution that issued the research request. This usually entails the addition
of the author(s) and the date of the publication or similar information. Citing
is really that simple. Not citing properly can constitute plagiarism.
3. Quoting - When quoting a source,
use the quote exactly the way it appears. No one wants to be misquoted. Most
institutions of higher learning frown on “block quotes” or quotes of 40 words
or more. A scholar should be able to effectively paraphrase most material. This
process takes time, but the effort pays off! Quoting must be done correctly to
avoid plagiarism allegations.
4. Citing Quotes -
Citing a quote can be different than citing paraphrased material. This practice
usually involves the addition of a page number, or a paragraph number in the
case of web content.
5. Citing Your Own Material - If
some of the material you are using for your research paper was used by you in
your current class, a previous one, or anywhere else you must cite yourself.
Treat the text the same as you would if someone else wrote it. It may sound
odd, but using material you have used before is called self-plagiarism, and it
is not acceptable.
6. Referencing - One
of the most important ways to avoid plagiarism is including a reference page or
page of works cited at the end of your research paper. Again, this page must
meet the document formatting guidelines used by your educational institution.
This information is very specific and includes the author(s), date of
publication, title, and source. Follow the directions for this page carefully.
You will want to get the references right.
Thank you!