how to avoid plagiarism ochs english dept joseph trimmer, a guide to mla documentation
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How To Avoid Plagiarism OCHS ENGLISH DEPT
Joseph Trimmer, A GUIDE TO MLA DOCUMENTATION
What is plagiarism?
• Theft• Using someone else’s words or
ideas without giving proper credit (or no credit)• Intentional or unintentional • Serious offense (HS & college)
How to AVOID doing it… (1)
Document a source whenever you:- Use a direct quotation- Summarize or paraphrase a passage - Copy a table, chart, or other diagram- Construct a table from data provided by others- Present specific examples, figures, or facts that
you’ve taken from a specific source used to explain or support your judgments
How to AVOID doing it… (2)
• Take notes CAREFULLY, making sure you identify quotations in your note cards or electronic files (be sure to note source!)• Formulate and develop your own
ideas, using your sources to support rather than replace your own work
The Contradictions of American Academic WritingShow you have done your research---But--- Write something new and original
Appeal to experts and authorities---But--- Improve upon, or disagree with experts and authorities
Improve your English by mimicking what you hear and read---But--- Use your own words, your own voice
Give credit where credit is due---But--- Make your own significant contribution
ACTIONS that may be seen as PLAGIARISM
• Buying, stealing, or borrowing a paper • Hiring someone to write your paper• Building on someone else’s ideas without
citation • Using the source’s words too closely when
paraphrasing • Copying from another source without
paraphrasing (on purpose or accidentally)
Need to Document • When you are using or referring to somebody else’s
words or ideas from a magazine, book, newspaper, song, TV program, movie, Web page, computer program, letter, advertisement, or any other medium
• When you use information gained through interviewing another person
• When you copy the exact words or a "unique phrase" from somewhere
• When you reprint any diagrams, illustrations, charts, and pictures
• When you use ideas that others have given you in conversations or over email
No Need to Document • When you are writing your own experiences,
your own observations, your own insights, your own thoughts, your own conclusions about a subject
• When you are using "common knowledge" — folklore, common sense observations, shared information within your field of study or cultural group
• When you are compiling generally accepted facts• When you are writing up your own experimental
results
Deciding if Something is "Common Knowledge"
Material is probably common knowledge if . . • You find the same information
undocumented in SEVERAL other sources• You think it is information that your readers
will already know• You think a person could easily find the
information with general reference sources
DocumentingConaway, James. The Smithsonian.
New York: Knopf Publishing, 1995. Print.
DuPree, David. "Top Crop of Free Agents Ripe for Picking." USA Today. 9 July 9 1996: 3C. Print.
"I Spy a '98 Corvette." CQ Researcher. 15 July 1996. www.spycorvette.com.
Patterson, William and Betty White. "Learning by Numbers." 10 July 2002. Web. 21 January 2008. http://www.teachnlearn.org/num_learn/htm.
(Conaway #)
(DuPree #)
(“I Spy a ‘98 Corvette”)
(Patterson and White)
Many students may wonder how the lecture originated. At first,
no professors lectured at all, but instead used more primitive ways of
encouraging learning. Renaissance Spaniards, ever eager to enlighten
their students, found devices such as the rack, hot iron, and thumbscrews
to be effective motivation for their pupils (Torquemada 72). It worked so
well that 95% of the population accepted instruction (Wheeler 319).
These early techniques of settling debates and instilling
knowledge were indeed effective, but required a large volume of space in
each classroom. Professor John De Sade reveals that "early compromises
such as teaching composition in dungeons proved inefficient.“ He also
notes that the janitor's guild complained about the time it took to clean
up the mess after each lesson.
Professor J. Dahlmer at the Institute for Advanced Psychological Study suggests
more modern techniques are necessary:
Many students complain that lectures bore them. Who
wants to learn about enthymemes, syllogisms, and
persuasive argumentation? Let the administration plant
land-mines and trapdoors in the halls. . . . Teachers
could install electrical shock devices to randomly "zap"
students at their desks. This innovation would not only
keep students awake and alert, but it would also
entertain the students' classmates for hours on end. (18)
This suggestion has gained popularity with other persons of substance. The celebrity
Charles Manson said in an interview with reporters, "I know that some backward
humanists oppose this idea in general, but I find the suggestion delightful. Why stop
there? Let's incorporate guillotines as well" ("Charles in Charge"). Certainly, such
items are becoming cheaper as the latest Gulf War winds down.
• According to Mark Twain in Roughing It ,the rider for the pony express was usually a little bit of a man, brimful of spirit and endurance. Guilty
• According to Mark Twain in Roughing It, “the rider for the pony express was usually a little bit of a man, brimful of spirit and endurance”(52). OK!
• The pony express rider's horse wore a little wafer of a racing-saddle and no visible blanket (Twain 53). Guilty
• The pony express rider's horse “wore a little wafer of a racing-saddle and no visible blanket”(Twain 53). OK!
• The rider traveled two-hundred and fifty miles a day, ten miles per horse. Guilty
• The rider traveled two-hundred and fifty miles a day, ten miles per horse (Twain 53). OK!