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Plagiarism
What it is, how to avoid it
- PLAGIARISM
- DEFINITION #1: Plagiarism is copying something without crediting the source.
- DEFINITION #2: Plagiarism is stealing.
The difference between quoting and paraphrasing
When you write a paper, you read a lot of material about the topic. This
helps you to examine the various aspects of a topic to understand it.
By the time you have thoroughly researched what has been written, you
will start to form ideas of your own, see patterns, and be able to think
about the topic in your own words.
Along the way, you probably took a lot of notes, copied articles, and searched the Web looking for information. The material you find and include in your paper is what you have to list (or reference) in your bibliography.
Quoting
What is quoting? To state what someone else has written, word for word, using
their words.
Sometimes something you read is exactly the point you want to make, and is written so well you want to use it directly. You can do so legally by quoting. Anything you directly quote must be put in quotation marks and referenced.
Paraphrasing
What is paraphrasing? To paraphrase is to say the same thing, but in your
own words.
Sometimes you like the content of a paragraph or section of something you read, and want to paraphrase, or restate it in your own words for your paper. Although it is not illegal, paraphrasing in scholarly papers must be cited as a professional courtesy. You need not use quotation marks unless the statement is word-for-word as it appears in your source, but if you paraphrase in papers required for school, you must acknowledge you are doing so with a footnote/endnote or parenthetical (see page 8 of this unit for more information on how to do these).
How do you avoid plagiarizing?
- Give the author of the material credit by " documenting" or " citing" your sources (terms which mean you credit your source).
- Give credit whenever you use a direct quote by placing it in quotation marks and giving the author credit.
- Give credit whenever you paraphrase (state/write in a different way) a thought, idea, or words within the research paper and at the end of the paper in the bibliography
- Give credit within a research paper through footnotes or parenthetical remarks.
- Give credit at the end of a research paper in the bibliography.
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