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Why is Plagiarism worse in the electronic world?
Information overload. New difficulties with summarising and
synthesising large quantities of information.
Unreliable quality of the information on the Internet.
The ease of cutting and pasting chunks of information with little reading, effort, originality or learning.
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
1. Learn about plagiarism by reading some excellent articles in sites such as:
• Student Plagiarism in an Online World [Click Here]
• Plagiarism: What it is and How to recognise and avoid it [Click Here]
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
2. Do not assume that students are clear on what exactly constitutes plagiarism or why it matters.
Discuss the meaning of plagiarism, including borderline cases, and the concept of academic honesty with students.
The following sites are useful in informing your discussion.
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
Plagiarism: What it is and How to Recognise and avoid it [Click here]
About Plagiarism and Pixels [Click Here]
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
3. Make expectations clear.
Put these expectations in writing and make the consequences of plagiarism clear to students.
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
Designing Questions
4. The question is the answerDesign research activities in such a way that the possibility of plagiarism occurring is minimal.
This demands creating questions which require students to synthesize and evaluate moving past just the gathering of information.
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
Designing Questions
What to avoid in questioningFree staff and students from the tedious and wasteful ritual “Go find out about…” research activities, because they beg for cutting and pasting of information and require no manipulation of the information.
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
Designing Questions
Emphasise questions at the top of Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Design tasks which require:- Explanation- Problem Solving- Choices and decision making
How can teachers help prevent plagiarism?
Designing Questions
Appropriate questions often begin with:
• Why?• How?• Which?Check out Jamie McKenzie’s site:“The Question is the Answer:”http://fno.org/oct97/question.html
More tips for helping students avoid plagiarism
Process5. Emphasise process in set tasks
• Guide students through the six steps of the information process –
define, locate, select, organise, present and assess.
• This will allow students to divide their work into manageable stages and encourage original work.
More tips for helping students avoid plagiarism
Process Teach appropriate skills for each
stage of the process. • E.g. the use of concept maps in the
defining stage.• E.g. listing of resources in the
locating stage.• E.g note taking skills in the selecting
stage.
More tips for helping students avoid plagiarism
Process Don’t assume the students know
how to take notes. Teach them to:• Take notes in point form• Learn the difference between an acceptable
paraphrase and an unacceptable paraphrase
• Cite paraphrases and quotes correctly• Create bibliographies according to accepted
formats
More tips for helping students avoid plagiarism
Process For clear examples of acceptable
and unacceptable paraphrasing go to:
• Plagiarism: What it is and How to recognise and avoid it [Click Here]
• Using sources [Click Here]
More tips for helping students avoid plagiarism
Process Keep in touch with note taking and idea
development by requesting • Idea outlines• Questions• Concept maps• Working bibliographies• Working notes• Drafts
More tips for helping students avoid plagiarism
Process Include process as part of the
assessment. Provide clear rubrics for valued
information handling behaviours. Here is an example which can be
printed with permission. Information skills rating scale [Click Here]
Tips for Detecting Plagiarism
Check for unusual formatting or formatting that does not match what you require.
In particular, check for website printout page numbers or dates, grayed out letters and unusual use of upper/lower case and capitalization.
Tips for Detecting Plagiarism
Notice any jargon or advanced vocabulary or sentence structure.
Review the bibliography. Is the correct citation style used? Are there many items that the school library does not have?
Identify unique phrases and search them in one of the large search engines such as Google or Yahoo.
Tips for Detecting Plagiarism
Browse these websites which provide ready-made papers for students:
Research Papers Online A+: [Click Here]
A1 Termpaper: [Click Here] Genius Papers: [Click Here]
References
Hamilton College 2003, New York, viewed 22 August, 2003, http://www.hamilton.edu/academics/resource/wc/usingsources.html
McKenzie, J. 1998, From Now On. The Educational Technology Journal, viewed 22 August, 2003. http://fno.org/oct97/question.html
Wilson, D. 2000, PLC Library & Information Services, viewed 22 August, 2003, http://www.plc.vic.edu.au/Library/plagiarism/plag.htm
Writing Tutorial Services, Indiana University, Indiana, viewed 22 August, 2003, http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html