academic (dis)honesty and plagiarism

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Academic (dis)Honesty

“Suzzallo Library at the University of Washington” by Michael Matti licensed by CC BY-NC 2.0

Cheating and plagiarism hamper

your learning capabilities

“The purpose of assignments is to develop your skills and measure your progress. Letting someone else do your work

defeats the purpose of your education…”- Florida Tech Student Handbook

Studying students inside of Powell Library by Josh Lee, licensed by CC BY-SA 3.0

What is Academic Dishonesty?

“A Not-So-Subtle Cheating Technique” by Mr_Stein licensed by CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

PLAGIARISM

Which of the following is an example of plagiarism?A. Not citing your sources in a paper.B. Rearranging words in a quotation and then using

it in your paper without citing the source.C. Buying a paper online, or having someone else

write a paper for you, and then turning it in as your own.

D. Forgetting a citation.E. All of the above.F. A and C.

Which of the following is an example of plagiarism?A. Not citing your sources in a paper.B. Rearranging words in a quotation and then using

it in your paper without citing the source.C. Buying a paper online, or having someone else

write a paper for you, and then turning it in as your own.

D. A and C.E. All of the above.

Is this plagiarism?You used quotation marks around a direct quotation, but forgot to include an in-text citation.

Is this plagiarism?You used quotation marks around a direct quotation, but forgot to include an in-text citation.

Yes, this is still plagiarism.

Plagiarism is frequently unintentional

•Students may forget to cite their sources•Students may have trouble paraphrasing, and may accidentally make a direct quotation without meaning to

Four Types of Plagiarism

Unauthorized or unacknowledged

collaborative work

Passing off another’s work as

your own

Improper Paraphrasing

Not citing and improper citations

CHEATING AND OTHER FORMS OF ACADEMIC DISHONESTY

Helping another student cheat

“The Answer to #2 is CHEAT!” by Mr_Stein licensed by CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

What would you do?You need to collect data for a lab project. Something happens that prevents you from performing your data collection (inclement weather, a failed experiment, faulty equipment, etc). How do you respond?

What would you do?You need to collect data for a lab project. Something happens that prevents you from performing your data collection (inclement weather, a failed experiment, faulty equipment, etc). How do you respond?

You must collect (or recollect) your data, or explain why your experiment failed. You cannot fabricate data to finish the assignment.

ConsequencesA grade of 0 (zero) on the assignment or examA grade of 0 (zero) in the courseSuspension or expulsion from Florida Tech

How do we avoid plagiarism?

We cite our sources!

When should you cite material?

Did you think of it? Is it common knowledge? Cite it

Do not cite it

No No

Yes Yes

Adapted from Harris, 2001

There are other reasons for citing…

Citing your sources helps others understand your work

“Citation needed” by futureatlas.com licensed by CC BY 2.0

Resources• Academic Support Center•Writer’s Den•OWL at Purdue• RefWorks• Evans Library Tutorials• Citing Sources and Plagiarism research g

uide• Your Library Liaision

References• Harris, R.A. (2001). The Plagiarism handbook:

Strategies for preventing, detecting, and dealing with plagiarism. Los Angeles, CA: Pyrczak Publishing.• Jones, L.R. (2011). Academic integrity and academic

dishonesty: A handbook about cheating and plagiarism. Melbourne, FL.

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