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Plagiarism

Plagiarism. Citing and listing academic references. What is Plagiarism?. Plagiarism is defined as “Passing off someone else’s work as your own”. There are different types and different degrees of plagiarism. Plagiarism. Copying directly from a text, word for word

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Plagiarism

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  1. Plagiarism Citing and listing academic references

  2. What is Plagiarism? • Plagiarism is defined as “Passing off someone else’s work as your own”. • There are different types and different degrees of plagiarism

  3. Plagiarism • Copying directly from a text, word for word • Using an attractive phrase or sentence you have found somewhere • Using text copied and pasted from the internet • Paraphrasing the words of a text very closely • Copying from the work of another student • Downloading or copying pictures, photographs, or diagrams without acknowledging your source.

  4. Plagiarism • Even if you change words or sentences you have ‘borrowed’ or put them in a different order, the result is still plagiarism. • Plagiarism is treated very seriously and plagiarised work is usually disqualified.

  5. Use your own words • Even if you don’t think you write well – they count for more than copied text, and show your understanding.

  6. Why bother researching? • The quality of your research feeds into the quality of your final report/essay/article • It shows you have “read around” the subject • Gives you a better chance of doing good work & getting good grades

  7. Why bother citing references? • Taking another person’s work as your own is plagiarism • Basically it is CHEATING • Citing references shows you have researched and acknowledged your sources • Gives your work an academic “air”

  8. Why bother listing references? • Indicates the breadth of your research • Allows context of your quotations and citations to be checked • Allows the reader to do further reading on a particular area of interest

  9. The Harvard Referencing system • One of a number of referencing systems • Fairly straightforward • Gets easier with practice.

  10. Harvard referencing system • Boodle link • http://boodle.bcot.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=19 • We’ll get the gist of the system and then carry out a practice exercise

  11. Practice exercise • You will get 3 extracts from systems analysis text books • From these make up a coherent paragraph using parts of each extract • Cite your references in the text and list them according to the Harvard system • Harvard Referencing

  12. Conclusion • Do bother to research • Do bother to reference • Use the Harvard systems in reports and essays • It gets easier with practice.

  13. Quotation: • Quotation is using someone's words. When an exact quote of a few lines is used, the passage should be enclosed by quotation marks and the source should be documented according to standard documentation style. • The following is an example using the Modern Language Association's style (MLA) • According to an article in the Globe & Mail on May 7, 2002 an Ipsos-Reid poll showed that, "Almost a third of Americans consider Canada just another state, many mistakenly think Japan and China are their biggest trading partners and most say Britain is their country's best ally."(1) • For a longer quotation, do not enclose the passage in quotation marks; instead, indent the entire passage and use proper documentation.

  14. Paraphrase: • Paraphrasing isusing someone else's ideas by putting them in your own words. This is a skill you will learn to master when incorporating sources into your writing. Although you use your own words to paraphrase, you must still acknowledge the source of the information

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