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Plagiarism and Academic Honesty: Form and Content

Guide to explain what plagiarism is and the consequences. Includes a tutorial and quiz that can be used for classes.

Using sources properly

As already discussed, plagiarism is the result of using sources improperly. Problems arise when students include content from their sources without providing attribution (giving credit to the original creator) and when students don't properly summarize, paraphrase, or quote the source.

When to cite

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How to use sources in a paper

If you copy or repeat a passage or use the exact wording from a source: book, speech or document this is quoting. You might need to quote text of a formal definition or a passage of dialogue to ensure the exact meaning is made clear to your reader. Perhaps there is an exact turn of phrase that is particularly significant and cannot be conveyed by paraphrasing. Use quotations sparingly. You could try asking yourself the following questions:

  • Is the author eminent or an authority?
  • Are you directly quoting from literature?
  • Is the quotation particularly vivid or surprising?

If you are going to use a quotation then it is worth a comment. Tell the reader why you have chosen to use a particular quotation.

Advice for short quotes:

  • Use quotation marks
  • Give the page number of the original in the text reference
  • Give a full reference in the references section at the end of your work
  • Run your quotation into the text, so it reads smoothly

Example: George Orwell’s advice on grammar for writers is still relevant today, “Never use the passive, when you can use the active.” (Orwell 169) - MLA

Advice for longer quotes:

  • Use sparingly
  • Typically use longer quotes for extracts from a key text (ie. primary source)
  • Avoid extracts longer than 4 lines when possible
  • When using a block quote
    • Indent the passage
    • there is no need to use quotation marks
    • Provide an in-text citation
  • Provide a full reference in the references section at the end of your work

Example:

The Prime Minister introduced the government’s strategy to tackle obesity in these terms:

Our ambition is to be the first major nation to reverse the rising tide of obesity […] by ensuring that everyone is able to achieve and maintain a health weight. Our initial focus will be on children: by 202 we aim to reduce the proportion of overweight and obese children to 2000 levels. (Department of Health, 2008, p.2) - APA

To write academic work successfully you need to read round the subject and organize your ideas into a coherent argument. It is very important to reference your sources each time you include an idea or an argument from your reading, whether you have summarized the information, quoted it directly or paraphrased it. Effective quotation and use of source materials can show credibility and authority in writing your produce, as well as providing opposing views against which you can comment. Anything you cite should clearly support your conclusions.

A paraphrase should be a restatement of the meaning of the original text in your own words and not simply changing some words or sentences around. Expressing ideas in your own words will show your tutor how well you understand the original material.

This is necessary to capture your research in writing. Use it to show your understanding of an argument. You can use summary to show the key outcomes of a study or show a specific approach taken by a researcher.

Tips for summarizing:

  • Read and think – what is this telling me – (in the fewest possible words)?
  • Write it in your own words. Be brief!
  • Record key details of each source used: put an in text reference close to the summary and list full details in the references at the end of your work.

Generally in each paragraph of an article a point is developed. If you link three or four such points together you have an ‘argument’. Using summary with strong quotation forms the basis of good writing.

The only source material you can legitimately use without quotation. Common knowledge is information that could be generally known to an educated reader. Examples of this might be facts such as Paris is the capital city of France or widely known historical or scientific facts, such as the molecular structure of water is H2O. However, ideas or interpretations would not normally be considered common knowledge.

When in doubt, use the following test:

  • Did you have to look up the information? If so, cite the source.
  • Is the information widely available in many sources? For example, would a general encyclopedia entry about the subject include this piece of information? If so, it need not be cited. On the other hand, if you read a source that offers opinion or interpretation regarding something that is common knowledge, and decide to incorporate this perspective into your paper, you must cite the source.

Here are some examples to clarify how you apply this rule.

  1. Basic, indisputable facts are regarded as common knowledge. For instance:
  • Charles Darwin visited South American on the HMS Beagle, conducting surveys of the wildlife that he encountered.
  • Earth's solar system includes an asteroid belt that lies between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

Since these are factual statements, no citation is needed.

2. Fact-based descriptions of characters or events in works of literature are regarded as common knowledge. For instance:

  • As a child, David Copperfield was sent off to a boarding school after biting the hand of his stepfather, Mr. Murdstone.

Since this statement describes an event that undeniably occurred in the novel David Copperfield, no citation is necessary, even if this sentence was inspired by something you read in a book or journal article.

If you are in doubt as to whether something in your discipline is common knowledge or not it would be best to reference your source.

You can't just change a few words