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Plagiarism: What’s the big deal??

It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

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Page 1: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

Plagiarism:

What’s the big deal??

Page 2: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

Would you ever steal a car?

Page 3: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

Would you ever rob a bank?

Page 4: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

Plagiarism is theft.It involves:

stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music

And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

Page 5: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

Plagiarism: what is it?Plagiarize

verb: to steal and pass off as one’s own (the ideas or words of another): use without crediting the source: to commit literary theft.

"Plagiarize." Webster's third new international dictionary of the English language unabridged. Springfield, Mass.: Merriam- Webster, 1986. Print.

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It may look like everyone’s doing it…

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Things that make you go “hmmm…”

Is it cheating if…

You have written a research paper for your ENG 113-Literature-Based Research class. You ask your friend to proof-read it.

On the first day of classes you learn that the final paper is on a topic you wrote a paper for last semester for another class. You print off a new copy and turn it in with a new cover page.

Let’s find out!

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Plagiarism: what does it look like?

The Pinch Hitter

Copying someone else’s work or idea word for word to use as your own

Purchasing or downloading a paper online

image credit to Tim O’Brien on Flickr

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image credit to Christiane Struck on Flickr

Plagiarism: what does it look like?

The Patchwork Quilt

copying and pasting portions from several different sources to create one document

Page 10: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

image credit to Nina Matthews on Flickr

Plagiarism: what does it look like?

The Thesaurus-Rex

Using synonyms to replace keywords, yet maintaining the source’s original content

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image credit to Erik Veland on Flickr

Plagiarism: what does it look like?

Attack of the Clones

Paraphrasing from multiple sources (without citing) to create one document

Page 12: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

image credit to Taro Taylor on Flickr

Plagiarism: what does it look like?

The Doppelganger

Submitting a paper for one class that you previously used in another

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Plagiarism: what does it look like?

The Bait and Switch

Creating fake citations

Listing sources in a bibliography that you did not use in your paper

Providing inaccurate citation information

image credit to Mark Kobayashi-Hillary on Flickr

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Survey Says…You have written a research paper for your ENG 113-Literature-Based Research class. You ask your friend to proof-read it.CheatingNot Cheating

On the first day of classes you learn that the final paper is on a topic you wrote a paper for last semester for another class. You print off a new copy and turn it in with a new cover page.PlagiarismNot Plagiarism

Page 15: It involves: stealing from someone else Ideas Words/text Images Sounds/music And lying about it later By passing it off as your own work

I’ll take Plagiarism for $300, Alex

After reading several book chapters and articles on the fall of the Roman Empire for a Western Civilization class, you decide that none of them considered climate change. You put climate change in as your thesis statement about the fall without any citations.

PlagiarismNot Plagiarism

You are supposed to have 9 sources for a paper. You only use 7 in your research, so you enter in 2 additional sources you didn’t actually use in your bibliography.PlagiarismNot Plagiarism

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I’d like to buy a vowel, Pat

As you are writing a paper, you copy and paste into MSWord from different online journals, books and web pages. You go back and reword a lot of what you copied and rearrange the information so it makes sense. Since you have changed a good percentage of what you brought into your paper, you decide not to cite the sources.PlagiarismNot Plagiarism

It’s the night before a paper is due and you have a quote in your paper that is really good, but you can’t find the book or article where you got it. You decide to pass the quote off as your own idea and not cite it. It’s just one quote, after all. PlagiarismNot Plagiarism

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At Haywood Community College, plagiarism could cost you…

A passing grade on an assignment

A passing grade for a course

If the sanction results in a "W",

"WF", or "F" for the course, the

following could be negatively

impacted:

Scholarship or financial aid awards

A diploma, certificate, or degree from HCC

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How can you fight plagiarism?

Know the differences between:1. “ Quoting ” To repeat or copy, word for word,

from an author or person of authority

2. Paraphrasing To reword or restate the

meaning of a text in another form

3. Original ideas

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How can you fight plagiarism?

Cite the sources that you use accurately

Citation style guides

When in doubt, cite it out!

Why Cite? Show respect Breadcrumbs for others Avoid plagiarism

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Cite your sources, cite your sources, cite your sources

What does a citation look like?

• What makes up a citation?

Citing Books• Author• Title of work• Publication Date, Publisher• Page numbers

Citing Journal/Magazine Articles•Author•Title of Article•Title of Journal•Volume/Issue•Publication Date•Page Numbers

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What else?Use the resources available at HCC

3. The Teaching and Learning Center

4. Your academic advisor or instructor

“Librarian The Original Search Engine” image credit to cafepress.com

2. NCKnows (24/7 Reference)

1. The Library and its friendly staff

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THE

Image credit to Thomas Hawk on Flickr