Spring 2005 |
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Plagiarism is the representation of someone elses words or ideas as ones own, or the arrangement of someone elses material(s) as ones own. Such misrepresentation may be sufficient grounds for a students receiving a grade of E for the paper or presentation involved or may result in an E being assigned as the final grade for the course. Any one of the following constitutes evidence of plagiarism:1. direct quotation without identifying punctuation and citation of source2. paraphrase of expression or thought without proper attribution3. unacknowledged dependence upon
a source in plan, organization, or argument |
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"By definition, a research paper
involves the assimilation of prior scholarship and entails the responsibility
to give proper acknowledgement whenever one is indebted to another for either
words or ideas" (74). Plagiarism is failure to give credit for including the
words and ideas of others in a paper by "quoting works accurately and
attributing quotations and ideas to their authors in notes...,
bibliographies...., and parenthetical references and reference lists (74)."
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Turabian, Kate. L. A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and Disserations, 6th ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996. |
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Three different acts are
considered plagiarism: (1) failing to cite quotations and borrowed ideas, (2)
failing to enclose borrowed language in quotation marks, and (3) failing to put
summaries and paraphrases in your own words. |
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This page on plagiarism from the SUNY Geneseo Online Writing Guide reprints articles about plagiarism cases. |