Plagiarism in an Online Environment Mary Pat McQueeney Associate Professor of English at JCCC

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Common Core Standards (What this means in computer class)
Advertisements

Education 2012 Presented by Marina Ward. Online Catalogue: Searching the Catalogue PIN Reading History How to find journal articles (2 nd Term)
Cut-and-Paste Plagiarism Presented by Laura J. Toki Assistant Director Curriculum, Training and Development Services Appalachia Intermediate Unit 8.
Principles of Information Technology
Avoiding Plagiarism: and other writing tips…*
Plagiarism and Citations
Fighting the Fear: Plagiarism as an Expression of Technophobia Lanette Cadle Missouri State University.
Assignment Options Writing to learn and/or writing to communicate School-based audience, other audience Exploratory/Formal Low stakes/ High stakes Group/individual.
1/23/07 The Writing Department at Cambridge College1 Plagiarism Your “paper is a collaboration between you and your sources. To be fair and ethical, you.
Plagiarism - Causes of Plagiarism - Shared Responsibilities - Best Practices for preventing Plagiarism Kye Gon Larissa Ayesha.
Citing and Writing to Prevent Plagiarism Kean University Library Spreading the Word Team.
Proper Citation and Attribution Avoiding Plagiarism Lois S. Sadler and Janene Batten Yale University School of Nursing 2010.
21st Century Teaching Scholarship & Certificate Program Workshop 3 Bon Education.
Sharon Bede Mount Boucherie Secondary 2003 Project by Lindsay Loyd, Grade 12.
Starting Your Research Anthropology 108: Cultures of Latin America Library Instruction fall 2007 Mary S. Woodley
Preventing plagiarism through assignment design Laura Barrett, Undergraduate Services Librarian John Holmes, Reference/Instruction Librarian Tish Lopez,
USING STUDENT OUTCOMES WHEN INTEGRATING INFORMATION LITERACY SKILLS INTO COURSES Information Literacy Department Asa H. Gordon Library Savannah State University.
TECHNOLOGY AND THE ADMINISTRATOR Technological Influences on Plagiarism By Renee Becket, a Contributor Ben Randall Grit 687 Tech & the Admin.
1 Plagiarism and How to Prevent it Rick Greenfield EDTC 560 October 22, 2003 Home Page Home Page.
Preventing Plagiarism  1.Understanding what it is - Unacknowledged use of somebody else’s work - Unacknowledged use of somebody else’s work - Use of the.
What is it? How to Avoid it!
Carmen Genuardi, Librarian R esearch S trategies: From Information Consumers to Information PRODUCERS… YES YOU CAN! WELCOME!
Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) at Sojourner Douglass College Faculty and Staff Session One Saturday, November 9, 2013.
INFORMATION LITERACY Definition and Importance. The American Library Association  The American Library Association gives the following definition for.
Professional Development Presentation REED 526 ORGANIZING, IMPLEMENTING, AND EVALUATING SCHOOL READING PROGRAMS.
What is Plagiarism? THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF PLAGIARISM LEARN HOW TO AVOID PLAGIARISM CONSEQUENCES FOR PLAGIARISM.
Preparing papers for International Journals Sarah Aerni Special Projects Librarian University of Pittsburgh 20 April 2005.
Lecture 7. The Questions: What is the role of alternative assessment in language learning? What are the Reasons.
Why Research? To find information Expand our knowledge base To solve problems Is there more?
PlagiarismPlagiarism Christine G. Balmes Cristian S. Mendoza Maika E. Laguartilla.
DVC Essay #2. The Essay  Read the following six California Standards for Teachers.  Discuss each standard and the elements that follow them  Choose.
WHAT IS IT? WHY DOES IT HAPPEN? HOW CAN I AVOID IT? WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES? Plagiarism.
9/4/15 Do Now: -Take a plagiarism Word Splash from the front of the room and begin working on it Homework: -Signed Syllabus (Due 9/9) -Signed Plagiarism.
How to use Thematic Units……. The key to successful thematic unit development and teaching is careful and thoughtful planning, combined with a thorough.
CM220: Unit 1 Seminar “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” ~ Mohandas Gandhi.
Types of writing assignments Source:
Academic Integrity Policy
Integrating Web-based Blackboard™ into ESL Discussion and Writing Activities Presenter: Professor Lyra Riabov Southern New Hampshire University Presentation.
Research Skills. Electronic Sources of Information Search Engines Search Engines Databases Databases Communication Communication Tools Tools.
PSY 219 – Academic Writing in Psychology Fall Çağ University Faculty of Arts and Sciences Department of Psychology Inst. Nilay Avcı Week 4.
ECS 3390University of Texas at Dallas1 Activity: Ethics Scenario Memorandum Click on the audio symbol below to begin.
CM220 College Composition II Friday, January 29, Unit 1: Introduction to Effective Academic and Professional Writing Unit 1 Lori Martindale, Instructor.
Interactive Skills for Students How to Use What You Find On the Internet click your mouse or hit enter to advance animation.
1 CM 220 College Composition II Professor Linda Morris Freshwater, MFA General Education, Composition Kaplan University.
PBL Instructional Design. PBL Instructional Design Name: Name of PBL: Grade Level: Content Area:
COLLABORATIVE WEB 2.0 TOOLS IN EDUCATION USING WIKIS & BLOGS IN THE CLASSROOM.
Welcome to Academic Strategies for the Business Professional Unit 6 Seminar Robert Sullivan.
+ Blogging for Struggling Writers Jackie Misiak Integrating & Implementing Technology Fall 2012.
Preventing Plagiarism Kristine Brancolini, Dean University Libraries
Research Skills for Your Essay Where to begin…. Starting the search task for real Finding and selecting the best resources are the key to any project.
Banda Ramadan-Introduction1 Communication Skills (603281) Introduction to communication skills.
Patrick Love, Associate Provost for Student Success Sarah Burns-Feyl, Assistant University Librarian for Instructional Services Beth Klingner, Assistant.
Academic Integrity What does it mean to be honest? Another word for honesty is integrity.
Netiquette internet manners, online etiquette, and digital etiquette The social code of network communication The social and moral code of the internet.
Cut-and-Paste Plagiarism
Turnitin ; software for originality check
Reflections Chapter 19 In Concert Chapters 3 & 16
Chapter 22: Research and Ethos
Copyright for Kids CCISD
Plagiarism and Unfair Means
Writing to Learn vs. Writing in the Disciplines
click your mouse or hit enter to advance animation
Writing a Teaching Philosophy Statement
What It Is & How to Avoid It
Freshman Composition II Instructor A. Lee
An Introduction to the Research Process
PLAGIARISM AND CITATION BASICS
English 101 To be successful: Areas of Study 20% 30% 10% 40%
Academic Dishonesty and Responsible Use
Academic Honesty: Plagiarism Primer
Presentation transcript:

Plagiarism in an Online Environment Mary Pat McQueeney Associate Professor of English at JCCC

WPA Definition: “In an instructional setting, plagiarism occurs when a writer deliberately uses someone else’s language, ideas, or other original (not common- knowledge) material without acknowledging its sources.” --from “Defining and Avoiding Plagiarism: The WPA Statement on Best Practice” Council of Writing Program Administrators

Academic Integrity Pat’s policy statement from her syllabus: Represent your work honestly, and give credit according to accepted conventions to the work of others, whether you gained use of it from a paper, an electronic source, a visual, or from a conversation….

…Students who have someone else do their work commit fraud. Misrepresenting the work of others--their specific words or their ideas-- is plagiarism. Both fraud and plagiarism are serious offenses that will result in failure for the assignment and a letter submitted to the student's permanent file….

Take care to protect your files from theft or misuse. I will not sort out individuals’ intentions if I receive one paper submitted by two people.

Plagiarism Categories by Intention “Plagiarism” ConfusionIgnoranceDeception

Create learning environment: 1. Use CMS—students own learning 2. Promote student communication Class pictures (secure shell) and bios Discussion Board—peer review/cyber lounge Chat 3. Encourage civil discourse

4. Involve students in process Explain assignment strategies Disclose plagiarism deterrents 5. Encourage review of exemplary communication Listservs Individual and organizational web pages Journals online Student exchanges

Address confusion about …. Best places to search for a source Nature of a particular source or site What’s reliable Ownership of a text

Selection of best information Conventions for acknowledging sources URL paths Boolean logic Use of word processing programs Copy and paste Format Edit

Jamie McKenzie, writing about the “new plagiarism” emerging from technological factors, points out that “it is reckless and irresponsible to continue requiring Topical ‘go find out about’ Research projects in this new electronic context. To do so extends an invitation…to ‘binge’ on information.” --From “The New Plagiarism…” available at FNO.org 7.8(1998) Adapt to online environment….

Topic Tips: More options not better Specify some sources Tie curriculum to Theory Theme Student career goals Promote thinking Encourage higher order: how, why, and good/better/best inquiry. Value “narrow/deep” rather than “broad/shallow.”

Process Tips: Make writing real: Real audience and purpose. Publish end product. Scaffold assignments across a course. Chunk out tasks to permit damage control and accountability. Require peer feedback throughout process.

Draw on templates—with temperance Use support services Incorporate CAC As students begin-- Brainstorm in groups Report choice of topic to class As project progresses-- Give oral progress report to class or group At the end-- Present PowerPoint, Web, or scientific poster presentation Ask class for oral feedback

Deter fraud…. consistent policy Google (or other search engine) Commercial systems—with care and ethical reflection What will (and will not) system detect? Have students given permission to put papers in databases?

A positive final thought: How the increase of Internet Plagiarism has “improved” our instruction: Challenges traditional writing genres and trite assignments. Challenges the “banking model” of knowledge and education Promotes thinking about interrelationship of academic inquiry and thinking. --Russell Hunt

Slides and a linked bibliography are available at Writing Matters!, my web site, for the remainder of the semester. Go to Click on Teaching My