AVOIDING PLAGIARISM

After you have decided what source information to use, you will need to build that information into your essay. Three common methods for extracting information — summarizing, paraphrasing, and quoting — are discussed in Chapter 23. In general, it is best to paraphrase or summarize information rather than quote it directly unless the wording is unusual, beautiful, or unique or if you want to provide the exact statement of an expert on the topic. Quotations are also appropriate when discussing works of literature and historical (primary) sources. (More information on integrating quotations into your paper appears below.)

Regardless of how you integrate sources, be sure to acknowledge and document all ideas or information you have borrowed from sources that is not common knowledge. Remember that you must cite your sources regardless of whether you are using direct quotations, paraphrases, or summaries and regardless of whether the information or ideas came to you from a book, an article, a Web site, or even a conversation. Failing to cite a source, even by mistake, may be considered plagiarism.

WHAT IS PLAGIARISM?

Plagiarism is the use of someone else’s ideas, wording, organization, or sentence structure without acknowledging the source. At most schools, both intentional (deliberate) plagiarism and unintentional (done by accident) plagiarism are considered serious forms of cheating and carry the same academic penalties, generally a failing grade or even permanent expulsion.

Buying a paper and submitting it as your own work is plagiarism, but so is cutting and pasting text directly from an electronic source into your notes and then into your essay without giving credit.

Instructors may use Internet tracking resources like Turnitin.com, or they may paste a student’s paper into a Google search box to check for plagiarism, so managing the information you have borrowed from sources is crucial. The quick reference guide below can help you determine if you have plagiarized.

QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE TO PLAGIARISM

You have plagiarized if you:
  • copied information word for word without using quotation marks, whether or not you acknowledge the source,
  • paraphrased information (put it in your own words and sentences) without acknowledging the source,
  • borrowed someone else’s organization, sentence structure, or sequence of ideas without acknowledging the source,
  • reused someone else’s visual material (graphs, tables, charts, maps, diagrams, and so on) without acknowledging the source, and
  • submitted another writer’s paper as your own.

HOW TO AVOID PLAGIARISM

Plagiarism is a serious matter, but it can be avoided if you follow these tips.

DECIDING WHAT TO DOCUMENT

You must document all information and ideas you get from a source unless that information is common knowledge. But what is common knowledge, and how can you tell? Common knowledge is information that is widely available and undisputed. The fact that George Washington was the United States’ first president is common knowledge; so is the fact that the earth revolves around the sun. A good rule of thumb is that if a piece of information is available in a minimum of three reliable sources, then it is considered common knowledge. Of course, you will never be wrong if you cite the source, and you can always ask your instructor or a reference librarian if you are unsure about whether to document something. Table 24.1 also summarizes the types of material that do and do not require documentation.

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