1 / 17

Academic Integrity and Plagiarism

Academic Integrity and Plagiarism. Plagiarism. Plagiarize: “To take ideas or writings from another and pass them off as one’s own.” (Webster’s New World Dictionary, 2nd College Ed., Collins). Plagiarism.

Download Presentation

Academic Integrity and Plagiarism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Academic Integrity and Plagiarism T. D. Mantei

  2. Plagiarism Plagiarize: “To take ideas or writings from another and pass them off as one’s own.” (Webster’s New World Dictionary, 2nd College Ed., Collins) T. D. Mantei

  3. Plagiarism To plagiarize means to copy something that someone else wrote or said without telling where you found it. T. D. Mantei

  4. Plagiarism Plagiarism is not good professional behavior: Don’t do it! T. D. Mantei

  5. How do you know if you are plagiarizing? “You are plagiarizing if you copy from published sources without adequate documentation.” www.lib.duke.edu/libguide/plagiarism.html T. D. Mantei

  6. What are the penalties for plagiarism? Failing grade for a paper or a course Retraction of a journal paper Retraction of the graduate degree Expulsion from the University T. D. Mantei

  7. How do you avoid plagiarism? You must give credit whenever: You use another person's idea, opinion, or theory. www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html T. D. Mantei

  8. How do you avoid plagiarism? You must give credit whenever: You use any facts, statistics, graphs, drawings--any pieces of information--that are not common knowledge. www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html T. D. Mantei

  9. How do you avoid plagiarism? You must give credit whenever: You use quotations of another person's actual spoken or written words. www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html T. D. Mantei

  10. How do you avoid plagiarism? You must give credit whenever: You paraphrase another person's spoken or written words. (To paraphrase means to express another person's spoken or written words in your own words). www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html T. D. Mantei

  11. How do you give credit?Use references! These someone else’s words: “The proof of Theorem 1 does not require NP completeness.” Theorem 1 can be proved without proving NP completeness.13 13. F. Chen, Proceedings of …. It has been shown that the proof of Theorem 1 does not require NP completeness.13 13. F. Chen, Proceedings of …. Chen showed that the proof of Theorem 1 does not require NP completeness.13 13. F. Chen, Proceedings of …. T. D. Mantei

  12. How do you give credit?Use references! Someone else’s words: “This system remains linear at all frequencies.” It can be shown that this system remains linear at all frequencies.7 7. P. Das, IEEE Transactions on… Das7 showed that this system remains linear at all frequencies. 7. P. Das, IEEE Transactions on… T. D. Mantei

  13. How do you give credit?Use references! Suppose you want to use someone’s equations: ------------- ------------- (these are someone else’s equations) The following system of equations, from Sugai and Samukawa,18 provides the basis for our model. ------------- ------------- S. Sugai and T. Samukawa, J. Appl. Phys. 21, … T. D. Mantei

  14. Suppose you want to use someone’s exact words If you use someone else’s exact words, you must use quotation marks and then reference. Taken from a book: Plasma etching is the only commercially viable procedure for removing material from surfaces. “Plasma etching is the only commercially viable procedure for removing material from surfaces.”10 10. M. Lieberman, in Principles of Plasma Discharges… T. D. Mantei

  15. Or, use your own words (paraphrase) and then reference: It has been stated that only plasma etching is commercially viable for the removal of material from surfaces.10 10. M. Lieberman, in Principles of Plasma Discharges… T. D. Mantei

  16. When don’t you have to give credit? • When something is general knowledge (i.e., given in every textbook), then it is not necessary to reference. • Ex: Silicon is a Group IV semiconductor. • Light has both a wave and a particle nature. • Every modern computer has an operating system. • World War II ended in 1945. • Paris is the capital of France. • F = m x a • Etc. T. D. Mantei

  17. Useful Web Sites UC Libraries www.libraries.uc.edu/instruction/students/plagiarism.html AND www.libraries.uc.edu/libraries/ceas/instruction/ Virginia Tech / Penn State www.writing.engr.psu.edu/ Indiana Univ www.indiana.edu/~wts/pamphlets/plagiarism.shtml Duke Univ www.lib.duke.edu/libguide/citing T. D. Mantei

More Related