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Plagiarism

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In the 'real world' plagiarism has resulted in the loss of ... Denver. Post 19 July 1997. 2nd ed.: A1. 'Mountain Lion Attacks on Humans.' Outdoor California. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plagiarism


1
Plagiarism
Plagiarism, defined simply, is the unattributed
use of someone elses words or ideas.
Every writer has the responsibility to learn how
to attribute sources accurately and fully.
2
Penalties for Plagiarism
  • The English department policy plagiarism
    results in a zero that cannot be made up and may
    be subject to failure for the course.
  • In the real world plagiarism has resulted in
    the loss of jobs and even criminal prosecution in
    the courts.

3
Plagiarism Detection
  • Turnitin.com is Benets primary source for the
    prevention and detection of plagiarism. Be sure
    to set up your user account and submit all
    required papers.
  • Keep all the components of your writing process
    These include brainstorm sheets, prewriting
    plans, TOS sheets and rough drafts to prove your
    work is original.

4
Knowing Which Sources to Acknowledge
  • Materials That Dont Require Acknowledgment
  • Common Knowledge
  • Fact
  • Your own ideas
  • Your own field of research

5
Materials That Require Acknowledgment
  • books, articles from journals or newspapers, and
    Web sites.
  • an interview you conduct yourself, or the
    instruction manual
  • Everything that you draw from another source,
    unless it falls into one of the categories
    described above (common knowledge, fact, your own
    ideas, and your own field research), must be
    cited.

6
Some guidelines for which materials require
acknowledgment in academic writing
  • Another persons words. Direct quotations must
    always be cited.
  • Another persons ideas. Even if you rephrase
    someone elses idea by paraphrasing or
    summarizing it, it must be cited. Citations for
    paraphrases and summaries look just like
    citations for quotations, except that there are
    no quotation marks involved.
  • Judgments, opinions, and arguments.

7
More guidelines
  • Visual information. If you use a chart, graph,
    or picture from another source-or if you use the
    information from that chart, graph, or
    picture-acknowledge the source.
  • Information that can be attributed to a company
    or organization rather than a single person. This
    is often the case with Web pages, which tend not
    to list individual authors.

8
Guidelines, continued
  • Information gathered from class lectures or from
    another aural source. If you heard it rather than
    saw it, you must still cite it.

9
Taking Notes During the Research Process
  • Keep index cards or a notebook to write the
    complete bibliographic information and page
    numbers- from each source you consult for a paper
    or project.
  • Avoid patchwriting thats taking notes which
    are not exact quotations, but which are too close
    to the original sources wording.

10
Summarizing
  • Example

11
Paraphrasing
  • Example

12
Direct Quoting
  • Example

13
The Benet Style Manual
  • Purchase one from the book store, or find it
    on-line on Benets Library Web page.
  • Accurately follow MLA guidelines for all English
    papers

14
Works Cited Page Sample
  • Garcia 9
  • Works Cited
  • California Wildlife Protection Coalition.
    California
  • Mountain Lion Page. 27 Mar. 1996.
  • Sierra Club. 24 Mar. 1999 lthttp//www.sierraclub
    .org/chapters/ca/mountain-liongt.
  • Eagan, Terrence M., Wayne Long, and Steven
    Arroyo. Re- buttal to Argument against
    Proposition 197. 1996
  • California Primary Election Server. 1996.
    California
  • Secretary of State. 24 Mar. 1999 lthttp//
  • primary96.ss.ca.gov/e/ballot/197again2.htmlgt.
  • Hansen, Kevin. Cougar The American Lion.
    Flagstaff
  • Northland, 1992.
  • Hornocker, Maurice G. Learning to Live with
    Lions.
  • National Geographic July 1992 37-65.
  • Lion Attacks Prompt State to Respond. New York
    Times
  • 18 Oct. 1995, late ed. A21.
  • McPhee, Mike. Danger Grows as Lions Lose Fear.
    Denver
  • Post 19 July 1997. 2nd ed. A1.
  • Mountain Lion Attacks on Humans. Outdoor
    California.
  • 21 Mar. 1996. State of California. Dept. of Fish

15
http//bcs.bedfordstmartins.com/smhandbook/pages/b
cs-main.asp?vchapters01000n00050i01050.01o
00050ns0
(Internal documentation link)
16
All information found in this presentation was
taken from the Bedford St. Martins tutorial on
plagiarism, (http//bcs.bedfordstmartins.com) and
reformatted as a powerpoint created by Mrs. Lori
Rogalski 8/30/05. Last updated 9/6/05. END.
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