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Plagiarism Session 2013 AP Conference
1.
2. Is it a problem?
In his survey of 24,000 students at 70 high schools, 64
percent of students admitted to cheating on a test, 58
percent admitted to plagiarism and 95 percent said they
participated in some form of cheating, whether it was on
a test, plagiarism or copying homework.
Meyer, Jeremy P. "Students' Cheating Takes a High-tech Turn." - The Denver Post.
N.p., 27 May 2010. Web. 04 Aug. 2013.
3. transitive verb
: to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of
another) as one's own : use (another's production)
without crediting the source
intransitive verb
: to commit literary theft : present as new and
original an idea or product derived from an
existing source
"Plagiarize." Merriam-Webster.com. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. 3 Aug.
2013. <http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plagiarize>.
4. The word plagiarism
actually derives from the
Latin word for kidnapping.
"plagiarism." Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper, Historian. 03
Aug. 2013. <Dictionary.com
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/plagiarism>
5. No documentation at all
◦ Ghost writer
◦ Photocopy
◦ Potluck Paper
◦ Poor Disguise
◦ Labor of Laziness
◦ Self-Stealer
“Types of plagiarism.”Plagiarism.org. Accessed Aug 2, 2013.
http://plagiarism.org/resources/studentmaterials
Turnitin.com and Research Resources
6. With sources cited
◦ Forgotten Footnote
◦ Misinformer
◦ Too-Perfect Paraphrase
◦ Resourceful Citer
◦ Perfect Crime
“Types of plagiarism.”Plagiarism.org. Accessed Aug 2, 2013.
http://plagiarism.org/resources/studentmaterials
Turnitin.com and Research Resources
8. Answer 2 questions
Is it widely known?
Can it be found in multiple places?
Examples
"Common Knowledge." - The Library. N.p., n.d. Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
12. #10
“I can get away with it.”
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?
N.p., n.d. Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
13. #9
“Everyone else
is doing it.”
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference? N.p., n.d.
Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
14. #8
Tendency to “search” rather
than “research”
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference? N.p., n.d.
Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
15. #7
Pressure to get
good grades
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference? N.p.,
n.d. Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
16. #6
ESL Difficulties
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?
N.p., n.d. Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
17. #5
Lack of reading
comprehension skills
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference? N.p., n.d.
Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
18. #4
Unclear criteria and
expectations for assignments
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference? N.p., n.d. Web. 03
Aug. 2013.
19. #3
Lack of
good planning skills
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference? N.p., n.d.
Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
20.
21. #1
Laziness: it’s easier and
faster
"Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference?" Plagiarism vs. Cheating: What Is the Difference? N.p., n.d.
Web. 03 Aug. 2013.
22. Teach them about plagiarism.
Show them how to cite properly.
Require that students show actual print sources.
Try designing assignments that would make
plagiarizing much more difficult.
If needed, use online sources to determine if
plagiarism has occurred.
23. So…students can understand
that it is important not to cheat
through plagiarizing in school
possibly…but what is the big
deal, really???
Ghost writer—writer turns in someone else’s paper as his/her own Photocopy—uses significant portions of a source without alteration Potluck—writer fits together several sources but keeping most of the information the same Poor disguise—changed keywords but kept the original content virtually the same Laziness—the writer spends time on paraphrasing instead of writing original content Self—borrows from previous essays written for other classes/assignments without citation
Forgotten footnote—writer mentions the author but does not give enough information to find the original content Misinformer—writer purposefully provides inaccurate information making it impossible to find the original content Too-Perfect—writer forgets to use quotation marks indicating that he/she wrote the content by paraphrasing Resourceful—everything is cited—but no original work is included Perfect crime—writer cites correctly in some places but does not in other places