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Avoiding Plagiarism.

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Presentation on theme: "Avoiding Plagiarism."— Presentation transcript:

1 Avoiding Plagiarism

2 What is Plagiarism? Idea comes from someone else You don’t give credit

3 Can plagiarism be accidental?
Standards vary. Some say accidental representation of others’ thoughts as your own is also plagiarism. Example: Using words of a source almost same as original, though you meant to paraphrase. Avoid even appearance of plagiarism.

4 Standards Vary Standards differ among classes, schools, and countries.
In the U.S., there are strict consequences for plagiarizing, which can include failure in the course and even expulsion from school.

5 Examples of Plagiarism
Buying an essay Borrowing a paper to copy parts Stealing an essay Paying someone to write your paper Copying portions of a text (from anywhere) without using quotes or proper “citation.”

6 Different from “Cheating.”
Examples of Cheating: Copying answers from another student during test or exam. Using a copy of the test for study without teacher approval Using any info during exam that’s not approved by teacher.

7 When to Give Credit? If you are sharing an idea from an outside source that is not “common knowledge,” you need to include a “citation” (tell us who said this and where it was said). You need to do this even if you have put that idea in your own words.


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