Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s work as if it were your own, whether you mean to or not. ‘Someone else’s work’ means anything that is not your own idea, even if it is presented in your own style. It includes material from books, journals or any other printed source, the work of other students or staff, information from the Internet, software programs and other electronic material, designs and ideas. It also includes the organization or structuring of any such material. To avoid plagiarism, you must give credit whenever you use
Section III. Proscribed Conduct
Class A Violations
A) A person who is found guilty of any of the following acts committed while a student on a University campus or on property controlled by a University or University affiliates or in connection with off-campus University activities shall be subjected to the maximum penalty of expulsion or any other penalty authorized herein.
1. Academic misconduct including all forms of cheating and plagiarism. Academic misconduct includes but is not limited to providing or receiving assistance in a manner not authorized by the instructor in the creation of work to be submitted for academic evaluation including papers, projects and examinations; and presenting, as one's own, the idea or works of another person or persons for academic evaluation without acknowledgment.
Plagiarism offenses result in disciplinary proceedings! For more information, consult the section on "Student/University Relations" in the WCSU Student Handbook.
Here's the ORIGINAL text, from page 1 of Lizzie Borden: A Case
Book of Family and Crime in the 1890s by Joyce Williams et al.: The rise of industry, the growth of cities, and the expansion of the
population were the three great developments of late nineteenth century
American history. As new, larger, steam-powered factories became a feature
of the American landscape in the East, they transformed farm hands into
industrial laborers, and provided jobs for a rising tide of immigrants.
With industry came urbanization the growth of large cities (like Fall
River, Massachusetts, where the Bordens lived) which became the centers
of production as well as of commerce and trade.
Here’s an UNACCEPTABLE
paraphrase that is plagiarism:
The increase of industry, the growth of cities, and the explosion
of the population were three large factors of nineteenth century America.
As steam-driven companies became more visible in the eastern part of the
country, they changed farm hands into factory workers and provided jobs
for the large wave of immigrants. With industry came the growth of large
cities like Fall River where the Bordens lived which turned into centers
of commerce and trade as well as production.
The preceding passage is considered plagiarism for two reasons:
If you do either or both of these things, you are plagiarizing.
Here’s an ACCEPTABLE
paraphrase: This is acceptable paraphrasing because the writer:
Here’s an example
of quotation and paraphrase used together, which is also ACCEPTABLE: This is acceptable paraphrasing because the writer: Note that if the writer had used these phrases or sentences in her own
paper without putting quotation marks around them, she would be PLAGIARIZING.
Using another person’s phrases or sentences without putting quotation
marks around them is considered plagiarism EVEN IF THE WRITER CITES
IN HER OWN TEXT THE SOURCE OF THE PHRASES OR SENTENCES SHE HAS QUOTED.
What makes this passage plagiarism?
NOTE: This paragraph is also problematic
because it changes the sense of several sentences (for example, "steam-driven
companies" in sentence two misses the original’s emphasis on
factories).
Fall River, where the Borden family lived, was typical of
northeastern industrial cities of the nineteenth century. Steam-powered
production had shifted labor from agriculture to manufacturing, and as
immigrants arrived in the US, they found work in these new factories.
As a result, populations grew, and large urban areas arose. Fall River
was one of these manufacturing and commercial centers (Williams 1).
Why is this passage acceptable?
uses her own words.
Fall River, where the Borden family lived, was typical of
northeastern industrial cities of the nineteenth century. As steam-powered
production shifted labor from agriculture to manufacturing, the demand
for workers "transformed farm hands into industrial laborers,"
and created jobs for immigrants. In turn, growing populations increased
the size of urban areas. Fall River was one of these hubs "which
became the centers of production as well as of commerce and trade"
(Williams 1).
Why is this passage acceptable?
The World Wide Web has become a more popular source of information for
student papers, and many questions have arisen about how to avoid plagiarizing
these sources. In most cases, the same rules apply as to a printed source:
when a writer must refer to ideas or quote from a WWW site, she must cite
that source. If a writer wants to use visual information from a WWW site, many of
the same rules apply. Copying visual information or graphics from a WWW
site (or from a printed source) is very similar to quoting information,
and the source of the visual information or graphic must be cited. These
rules also apply to other uses of textual or visual information from WWW
sites; for example, if a student is constructing a web page as a class
project, and copies graphics or visual information from other sites, she
must also provide information about the source of this information. In
this case, it might be a good idea to obtain permission from the WWW site's
owner before using the graphics.
Instead, read over what you want to paraphrase carefully; cover up
the text with your hand, or close the text so you can't see any
of it (and so aren't tempted to use the text as a "guide").
Write out the idea in your own words without peeking.
Common knowledge: facts that can be found in numerous
places and are likely to be known by a lot of people.
Example: John F. Kennedy was elected President of the United
States in 1960. This is generally known information. You do not need to document
this fact.
However, you must document facts that are not generally known and ideas
that interpret facts.
Example: According the American Family Leave Coalition’s
new book, Family Issues and Congress, President Bush's relationship
with Congress has hindered family leave legislation (6). The idea that "Bush's relationship with Congress has hindered
family leave legislation" is not a fact but an interpretation;
consequently, you need to cite your source.
Quotation: using someone's words. When you quote,
place the passage you are using in quotation marks, and document the source
according to a standard documentation style. The following example uses the Modern Language Association's style:
Example: According to Peter S. Pritchard in USA Today, "Public
schools need reform but they're irreplaceable in teaching all
the nation's young"; (14).
Paraphrase: using someone's ideas, but putting
them in your own words. This is probably the skill you will use most when
incorporating sources into your writing. Although you use your own words
to paraphrase, you must still acknowledge the source of the information.