Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s work or ideas as your own, with or without their consent, by incorporating it into your work without full acknowledgement. All published and unpublished material, whether in manuscript, printed or electronic form, is covered under this definition.
Many colleges run student papers through a program like Grammarly or TurnItIn to check for potential plagiarism. This is how TurnItIn works:
- Submitted work is matched against a database of previously submitted work from every institution which subscribes to Turnitin, (including international institutions); current and archived internet pages and databases of books, journals and periodicals.
- Turnitin does not detect plagiarism: it is text-matching software which provides an “originality report” on what proportion of a student’s submission is original (not matched to other sources) or unoriginal.
- Turnitin also offers an online marking tool – GradeMark, allowing teachers to add text-based comments and marks to assignments submitted to Turnitin.
A recent syllabus from a FESHE certified college course provided this guidance on the course research report: The report will be graded on subject matter, grammar, spelling, and originality. There is absolutely no allowance for plagiarism, or cutting and pasting of Internet material.
Dartmouth Institute for Writing and Rhetoric has an excellent and comprehensive resource on Sources and Citations at Dartmouth. It discusses why learning to cite sources is an essential part of your education, with many examples and a great section on “Quality of Sources.”
What has been your experience with plagiarism?
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