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Don’t Fail Your Courses: Cite Your Sources! (International Version)

Don’t Fail Your Courses: Cite Your Sources! (International Version). SHAWN LOMBARDO JULIA RODRIGUEZ KRESGE LIBRARY & SHERRY WYNN PERDUE WRITING CENTER. What is Plagiarism?.

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Don’t Fail Your Courses: Cite Your Sources! (International Version)

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  1. Don’t Fail Your Courses: Cite Your Sources!(International Version) SHAWN LOMBARDO JULIA RODRIGUEZ KRESGE LIBRARY & SHERRY WYNN PERDUE WRITING CENTER

  2. What is Plagiarism? • Appropriating others’ words, images, lyrics, ideas, etc. without acknowledging their source. Two common forms of plagiarism are: • “Failing to enclose borrowed language in quotation marks. • Failing to put summaries and paraphrases in your own words.” (Bedford Handbook, 570) Note: Even when you acknowledge what you borrowed, faculty in the social sciences (and readers of APA publications) expect the student author to put others’ ideas into the student author’s own words, which may conflict with the preference of your high school English teachers. As such, do not over-rely on quotations.

  3. When is it Plagiarism? • Intentional: Purposely seeking NOT to do one’s own work. • Intentional copying/minimal paraphrasing in order to pass off another’s work as one’s own • Paper sharing/purchasing a paper from a term paper mills • Unintentional: Failing to learn how to translate another’s words and syntax into your own words and style and/or failing to properly document a source. • Improper paraphrasing: “If I change every 5th word, it’s not plagiarism, right?” • Unconscious plagiarism: Not knowing how to translate the language and meaning of the original into your own words, or thinking that what you recorded in your notes was actually in your own words. • Not understanding the cultural norms of higher education in the West as compared to that of the East. • Incomplete or improper source attribution

  4. Internet Plagiarism Internet searches, even those within scholarly databases, often yield many timely and relevant resources. In the face of abundance, the overwhelmed student might choose to cut and paste critical passages into her notes, sometimes without quotation punctuation and/or source retrieval data. Patches, papers that consist of excerpts from multiple sources, some with source documentation and others without, are common plagiarism products that look like a student paper. When readers look closely, however, they might notice that the paper is marked by different writing styles, diction, documentation styles, etc. Each paper needs to showcase your voice and ideas; sources should be used to support your claims and further your purpose, not the other way around.

  5. Paraphrasing: Is this Plagiarism? Original Source If the existence of a signing ape was unsettling for linguists, it was also startling news for animal behaviorists. (An excerpt from an article by B. Davis on p. 26) Version A The existence of a signing ape unsettled linguists and startled animal behaviorists (Davis, 2000, 26). This exercise is from The Bedford Handbook

  6. Answer A Original Source If the existence of a signing apewas unsettling for linguists, it was also startling news for animal behaviorists. Version A The existence of a signing apeunsettled linguists and startled animal behaviorists (Davis 2000, 26). Answer: Plagiarism. Even though the writer has cited the source, the writer has not used quotation marks around the direct quotation, "the existence of a signing ape." In addition, the phrase, "unsettled linguists and startled animal behaviorists," closely resembles the wording of the source.

  7. Paraphrasing: Is this Plagiarism? Original Source If the existence of a signing ape was unsettling for linguists, it was also startling news for animal behaviorists. Version B If the presence of a sign-language-using chimp was disturbing for scientists studying language, it was also surprising to scientists studying animal behavior (Davis 2000, 26).

  8. Answer B Original Source If the existence of a signing ape was unsettling for linguists, it was also startling news for animal behaviorists. Version B If the presence of a sign-language-using chimp was disturbing for scientists studying language, it was also surprising to scientists studying animal behavior (Davis 2000, 26). Answer:Still plagiarism. Even though the writer has substituted synonyms and cited the source, the writer is plagiarizing because the source's sentence structure is unchanged.

  9. Paraphrasing: Is this Plagiarism? Original Source If the existence of a signing ape was unsettling for linguists, it was also startling news for animal behaviorists. Version C Davis explained that linguists and animal behaviorists were unprepared for the news that a chimp could communicate with its trainers through sign language (26).

  10. Answer C Original Source If the existence of a signing ape was unsettling for linguists, it was also startling news for animal behaviorists. Version C Davis (2000) explained that linguists and animal behaviorists were unprepared for the news that a chimp could communicate with its trainers through sign language (26). Answer:No plagiarism. This is an appropriate paraphrase of the original sentence.

  11. A Summary of Proper Documentation • Exact phrases • Include quotation marks around the borrowed passage. • Cite the author in the text and on your Reference page. • Paraphrasing requires • Change the wording AND sentence structure. • Cite the author in the text and on your Reference page. • Ideas • Cite the author in the text and on your Reference page. • Common knowledge • Do not cite such common knowledge as the earth is round, or Obama is President of the United States.

  12. Documentation Guidelines • Note all information needed for a complete citation. • Consult the appropriate style manual for your discipline. • Seek the assistance of a writing consultant or a reference librarian.

  13. Avoiding Plagiarism: Organizing Your Work • Start early! • Create a working bibliography. • Keep copies of all sources. • Use RefWorks!

  14. Tips: Note Taking • Take careful notes! • Try “blind” paraphrasing. • Use index cards – one for each quotation/paraphrase/idea. • Try the “Green Ink” or double-entry note-taking method.

  15. Double-Entry Journal Example Text Material “Also be alert to the possibility of patchwriting, copying and only partially changing the language of a source. The National council of Writing Program Administrators defines patchwriting as a misuse of sources. Sometimes, though, instructors and college policies categorize it as plagiarism. In either case, patchwriting is not good writing” (Moore Howard, 2011, 129). The Student’s Interpretation ofor Response to the Text Material. While the definition of plagiarism varies by institution, I should strive for good writing, writing that reflects my understanding of others’ ideas in my own expression, which means changing both the sentence style and the words. The experts may quarrel over the exact definition of plagiarism, but I should strive for more than simply not plagiarizing. The means I must practice putting the ideas of the authors I read into my own words and style.

  16. Tips: Writing Your Paper • Use a graphic organizer to organize your ideas and sources; write your first draft from it rather than from the sources. • Use signal phrases to introduce quotes. When appropriate, add author credentials. • Place quotation marks around passages that you copy/paste from the Web, but remember that most of the writing should be in your words and style. • When in doubt, cite!

  17. Need More Help? • Randall’s ESL Cyber-Listening Lab • KL Writing Resources for Students • KL Citation Guides • The Writing Center! – 212 KL • Kresge Library Plagiarism Tutorial

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