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Grading
.Plagiarism.
Plagiarism is the act of stealing someone else's words or ideas, whether
intentionally or unintentionally. It is a capital offense to copy
portions of other texts or even to paraphrase someone else's ideas without
giving credit to the original author, to mislead your readers into thinking
those words or ideas are your own. It is therefore expected that
you will give reference to the original authors who may have inspired you
and that you will document all your sources. The penalty for plagiarism
will be decapitation: those who do not use their heads neither need nor
deserve to keep them.
Seriously, plagiarism is grounds for failure. At the discretion of
the instructor, you may fail the assignment or you may fail the course.
Examples
Intentional plagiarism exists when a student lists sources that he or she
has not used; when a student copies from a source but fails to cite it,
thereby misrepresenting the original source's ideas as his or her own;
when a student copies material from another student's work without giving
that other student credit; when a student buys or borrows a whole paper
or portions of a paper from another student or from the World Wide Web;
when a student copies another artist's music or work of art and tries to
submit it as his or her own.
Unintentional plagiarism, which is also punishable, may exist when a student
attempts to paraphrase or summarize a source but copies too much from the
source instead of re-writing the ideas in his or her own words; when a
student inadvertently fails to include a parenthetical reference to a source,
although the source is listed among the citations at the end of the paper;
when a student fails to put quotation marks around quoted material; when
a student relies too heavily on external sources, thus expressing few or
none of his or her own ideas.
These examples are not all inclusive of every possible form of plagiarism
and should not be considered as such. |