Avoiding Plagiarism
Some students do not
know clearly about plagiarism; therefore, they usually make this mistake either
accidental or intentional. The best way to avoid plagiarism is to understand
what it is. Then take steps to avoid this mistake. This mistake will make some
serious consequences that influence whole learning result of someone.
1. What
is plagiarism?
According to Writing
and Humanistic Studies, they define that:
“Plagiarism is the use of someone else’s ideas
or language without acknowledging that they were not created by you. This
definition applies to ideas, words and unusual structures regardless of where
you find them—in a book, on a webpage, in an email.
Additionally, they
state:
“Whenever you include
another person's information or wording in a document, you must acknowledge the
source and include a citation that will tell your readers where you obtained
it—otherwise you are guilty of plagiarism.”
They also said:
“Plagiarism is intellectual
theft--plagiarism.
Beyond that, under
copyright law, a writer legally owns
Ideas
(unless they are general, common knowledge)
Words used to express
those ideas
Syntax (sentence
formation) –the word order (style, effect, and clarity)”
2. Consequences
of Plagiarizing:
The
main consequences were citation in www. writing.mit.edu:
Plagiarism in the
academic world can lead to everything from failure for the course to expulsion
from the college or university.
Plagiarism in the
professional world can lead to, at the very least, profound embarrassment and
loss of reputation and, often, to loss of employment.
3. Avoiding
plagiarizing by citing source
According to “Avoiding Plagiarizing”
of website: www.writing.mit.edu, they
point out, “There are three other terms that we need to define: quotation,
paraphrase, and summary.”
They explain that:
“Quotation: A quotation must use the exact words of the source. If the
quotation is relatively short (usually fewer than 3 lines or 40 words), those
words must be enclosed in quotation marks. For instance,”
For
example:
- As Steven Strang points out, “Contrary to some popular notions, most writers do not have full-blown ideas popping out of their heads like Athena” (48).
- Notice that the quotation is introduced (“As Steven Strang points out”), that the exact words are enclosed in quotation marks, and that the page number is given (using, in this case, the MLA style).
- At the end of the paper, there would be a bibliographical entry that would give the author, the title of the source, the publisher, date of publication, etc.)
Longer quotations are given in block
quotations (see the quotations from Ed White and john Edlund later on in this
entry).
Paraphrase: To paraphrase is to put the ideas in a passage into our
own words, usually following the order in which the ideas were presented in the
original. All major ideas are included. Usually a paraphrase is a bit shorter
than the original, but when terms or concepts have to be defined, a paraphrase
might actually be longer. Any paraphrase requires the same kind of citation as
an exact quotation.
There are only three good reasons
for paraphrasing:
1.
Translating technical material into
simpler language for a lay audience
2.
Paraphrasing because a professor has
explicitly requested that you do so
3.
“Translating” a poem into simpler
language so that we can understand where the ambiguities lie (and this type of
paraphrase rarely makes it into our papers)
Summary: A summary puts the major idea(s) of a passage into our own
words and significantly shortens it. Once again, you must attribute the ideas
to the original source.”
Eventually,
plagiarism is not good for education career, and it has so many serious
consequences that are really impossible to guess. So, the best way to avoid
plagiarism is to understand what it is. Then take steps to avoid this mistake.
Avoiding plagiarism is good for all of us.
Work cited
“Avoiding
plagiarism” Writing Humanities and studies. Web. 14 Jan, 2004
http://writing.mit.edu/wcc/avoidingplagiarism
Read more
Hi, Sinh:
ReplyDeleteI will count your efforts towards you summary. I wanted to see you Safe Practice exercise as well, to demonstrate if you can identify plagiarism and suggest how to avoid it. I will try and clarify further in class on Monday.
Cheers,
Andrea