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Avoid Plagiarism: Write it Right Workshop

Learn what plagiarism is - and is not - by recognizing examples and finding alternatives to copying word for word from research sources.

Why is it important to NOT plagiarize?

According to Weidenborner and Caruso, authors of Writing Research Papers: A Guide to the Process, plagiarism is a serious offense and is considered so by instructors/professors, as well as by readers and writers in general.

Generally speaking, when reading your essays or research papers, instructors want to know what information is coming from someone else, and what information is coming from your own original thoughts and judgments.  Having proper citations shows your instructor that you are trustworthy and have personal integrity (145).

Weidenborner, Stephen, and Domenick Caruso. Writing Research Papers: A Guide to the Process. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2001. Print.

How to know if YOU are plagiarizing

According to Rozakis in The Complete Idiot's Guide to Research Methods, you are plagiarizing if...

  • you use "someone else's words without giving adequate credit"
  • you use "someone else's ideas without acknowleding the source"
  • you "paraphrase someone else's argument as your own"
  • you "present an entire paper or a major part of it developed as another writer did"
  • you arrange "your ideas exactly as someone else did - even though you acknowledged the source (s) (218)"

Rozakis, Laurie, Ph.D. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Research Methods. New York: Alpha Books, 2004. Print.