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Avoiding Plagiarism
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Students can avoid plagiarism by
maintaining good research habits and paying attention to the basic rules of
writing and documentation.
In general, remember that you must
credit the source whenever you
- use another person's idea,
opinion or theory
- paraphrase the words of another
person (spoken or written)
- quote another person
- use facts, statistics, graphs,
drawing, video, audio or other creative expression
The Research
Stage
Plagiarism often begins in the
notetaking stage of the research process. Before you set out to research your
subject, you should have a clear question in mind so that the notes you take
will be relevant. If you are going to a library and can not take the materials
home, you should be especially careful to take down the exact details of the
information and your source. One way to do this is to use one index card for
each idea or quotation you gather.
However you take down the information, you
should
- Keep careful and complete
information on your source by accurately noting the author, title, publisher,
editor, date of publication, place of publication, and any additional
information including the page numbers where notes or quotes were taken
(www.yahoo.com doesn't cut it!)
- Keep track and distinguish your
ideas from the ideas of others
- Recognize the distinction
between words that are your own and words that are not your own; carefully
note what is your idea, someone else's idea or someone's direct quote
- Ensure that quoted material is
exactly as in the original source-- be precise
The Writing
Stage
Once your research is done, keep in
mind the following points:
- Organize your work in an
original way rather than following the pattern used by one of your
sources
- Use your own words and ideas to
frame and control your work
- Support those ideas by either
quoting or paraphrasing the work of your sources
- Give credit for copied, adapted
or paraphrased material using in-text citations and the MLA format
- When paraphrasing, state the
idea in your own words. Don't just make superficial changes to the
source.
- Distinguish between what is
common knowledge and what is not common knowledge and needs to be documented
(for example, it is common knowledge that Ottawa is the capital of
Canada)
- When in doubt, cite your
source
The Editing
Stage
- Read your work carefully. Is it
clear what your ideas are and what the ideas of your sources are? Ask yourself
if there is enough of your own work in the project. Do you understand every
concept? Is the vocabulary your own?
Continue on for more
on Avoiding Plagiarism........