Plagiarism:
A Resource for
Faculty
"Download
your workload."--
Internet term paper mill schoolsucks.com
The Internet provides a
tempting array of opportunities for students to plagiarize
with unprecedented ease:
- simple no-cost
copying & pasting of content from a web browser into
a word processor
- ordering, for a fee
easily charged to a credit-card, a pre-fabricated term
paper
- "custom ordering" a
paper from an Internet term paper mill such as
"descartes-essays.com"
To empower faculty who
are teaching in a time of increasing "cyber-plagiarism" this
resource is intended to:
- increase faculty
understanding of why students plagiarize
- offer faculty
strategies and assistance to prevent
plagiarism
- offer faculty
strategies for detecting plagiarism
- alert faculty to
F&M resources, policies and procedures regarding
academic honesty
Definition
plagiarize:
transitive senses : to
steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's
own: use (another's production) without crediting the
source
intransitive senses : to
commit literary theft : present as new and original an idea
or product derived from an existing source
Source: Merriam-Webster
Dictionary Online
Why Students
Plagiarize
Students:
Recommended
reading:
Guide to Plagiarism and Cyber-Plagiarism (University of Alberta
Libraries)
Strategies
for Preventing Plagiarism
Talk About It
In The Classroom
A simple yet powerful
method of preventing plagiarism is to talk about it
openly with students.
Discuss with
students:
Recommended
reading:
Assign
Non-Plagiarizable Work
An effective means of
prevention is requiring work that cannot be completed by
plagiarizing. Librarians
are available to consult with you regarding assignment
design.
Suggestions for
Non-Plagiarizable Research Papers:
Recommended
reading:
Alternatives to the
Research Paper:
Enhance
Student's Information Literacy
The Library
Librarians educate
students to become fully
information
literate: able to recognize when
information is needed, and able to locate, evaluate, and
use effectively, ethically, and legally the needed
information
through the
Library Research
Instruction
program.
The Library provides
citation guides:
The Writing Center
The Writing
Center produces a
guide for students
Strategies
for Detecting Plagiarism
Some clues which may
indicate unoriginal work:
Visual
Cues:
- unusual formatting of
the paper (odd use of space, inconsistent layout,
etc.)
- variety of citation
styles present
- strange, extraneous
text at the top and/or bottom of the page
Content
Cues:
Recommended
reading:
"Detecting Plagiarized Papers" (Coastal Carolina University
Library)
Strategies When
You Suspect Plagiarism
A simple search of the
Internet may confirm suspicions. Search for a suspect phrase
or sentence in at least 3 Internet search engines, such
as:
- Google
Enclose the phrase in quotation marks.
- HotBot
Select search option: Look for: exact
phrase
- AltaVista
Enclose the phrase in quotation marks.
"Busting
the New Breed of
Plagiarist" by
Michael Bugeja offers more specialized search
strategies.
F&M
Policies & Procedures
F&M subscribes to
TurnItIn, an Internet-based plagiarism detection
service. Use of the service requires the electronic
submission of a suspect paper to the service, which then
searches an electronic collection of term papers for
matching content.
***Consult
with Dr. Steven O'Day,
Associate Dean of the College,
if you
are interested in using TurnItIn.***
(Office of the Dean: 291.3989)
"If an
instructor believes that a student has plagiarized material
and can locate the source, then the instructor will
normally bring the evidence promptly to the attention of the
Dean of the College or designee. If the
Dean of the College agrees with the instructor
that the student may have plagiarized, then the Dean of the College or designee may send the case
to the Committee on Student Conduct for prompt
hearing. Alternatively, with the agreement of the faculty member, the student may accept a penalty imposed by the Dean of the College or designee."
--excerpted
from The
F&M Catalog: Academic Policies and
Procedures: Academic Honesty
"If an instructor
believes that the student has misrepresented his or her
work, but the instructor cannot locate a source, the
instructor will normally consult with the department chair or the Dean of the College.
If the chair or Dean agrees that there are sufficient reasons to
believe a student may have misrepresented his or her work,
the faculty members involved should try to determine whether
or not misrepresentation has occurred. One means would be to
ask the student to explain the paper. A student's inability
to understand the work he or she submitted will normally
result in a significantly lowered grade for the course.
Moreover, the chair should inform the Dean of the College when the instructor concludes that a
misrepresentation has occurred."
--excerpted
from The
F&M Catalog: Academic Policies and
Procedures: Academic Honesty
The
F&M College Life Manual: Student Rights and
Regulations
For further
reading:
Articles:
"Anti-Plagiarism
Strategies for Research
Papers" by Robert
Harris. A comprehensive discussion of plagiarism with
fantastic
suggestions for
prevention--highly
recommended.
"Thinking
and Talking About
Plagiarism", a
"TechNote" for Writing Teachers by Nick Carbone of
Bedford/St. Martin's publishing. A marvelous reflection on
transforming the dialogue about plagiarism from the policing
nature of "Don't do it..." to one that "does not assume
students are criminals." Carbone suggests beginning the
discussion of plagiarism on one's syllabus, as it is one's
"contract" with the class...
"How
Cheating Helps Drive Better
Instruction" by
Greg Van Belle, Department of English, Edmonds Community
College. Van Belle suggests plagiarism can serve as "an
invitation to rethink our course content..."
"Plagiarism
in Colleges in USA" by
Ronald B. Standler, J.D., Ph.D. Discusses plagiarism from a
legal perspective.
"Student
Plagiarism in an Online
World" by Julie
J.C.H. Ryan, American Society for Engineering Education. An
account of the author's experiences with various forms of
plagiarism.
"Plagiarism,
Policing, Pedagogy"
and "Plagiarism:
What Should a Teacher Do?"
by Rebecca Moore Howard, Director of the Writing Program at
Syracuse University. Advocates better understanding of the
full range of student mis-use of information, and
misrepresentation of ideas.
Other Academic Library
Resources:
Electronic
Plagiarism Seminar (Le Moyne College Library)
Cheating
101: Paper Mills and You (Coastal Carolina University
Library)
Preventing
Academic Dishonesty (UC Berkeley Office of Educational
Development's "Tools for Teaching")
A
Faculty Guide to Cyber-Plagiarism (University of Alberta
Libraries)
Internet Term Paper
Mills:
Internet
Term Paper Mills
A collection of links to over 200 mills.
Internet
Subject Specific Term Paper
Mills A list of
term paper mills devoted to a single author or topic, e.g.
"beowulfessays.com" and "descartes-essays.com"
If you would like to
chat and/or consult with a librarian about plagiarism,
contact Lisa
Stillwell, Information Literacy Librarian, ext.
3844.
last updated: 8/08 jb,
ls
http://library.fandm.edu/plagiarism.html
|