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Instruction
Commons Guides
Deterring & Detecting Plagiarism
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From the ISU Student
Information Handbook: XIII. Academic Dishonesty:
Academic
dishonesty occurs when a student uses or attempts to use
unauthorized information in the taking of an exam; or submits as
his or her own work themes, reports, drawings, laboratory notes,
or
other products prepared by another person; or knowingly assists
another student in such acts or plagiarism. Such behavior is
abhorrent to the university, and students found responsible for
academic dishonesty face expulsion, suspension, conduct probation,
or reprimand. Instances of academic dishonesty ultimately affect
all students and the entire university community by degrading the
value of diplomas when some are obtained dishonestly, and by
lowering the grades of students working honestly. Examples of
specific acts of academic dishonesty include but are not limited
to:
-
Obtaining unauthorized information.
Information is obtained dishonestly, for example, by copying
graded homework assignments from another student, by working
with another student on a take-home test or homework when not
specifically permitted to do so by the instructor, or by
looking at your notes or other written work during an
examination when not specifically permitted to do so.
- Tendering of
information. Students
may not give or sell their work to another person who plans to
submit it as his or her own. This includes giving their work
to another student to be copied, giving someone answers to
exam questions during the exam, taking an exam and discussing
its contents with students who will be taking the same exam,
or giving or selling a term paper to another student.
- Misrepresentation.
Students misrepresent
their work by handing in the work of someone else. The
following are examples: purchasing a paper from a term paper
service; reproducing another person’s paper (even with
modifications) and submitting it as their own; having another
student do their computer program or having someone else take
their exam.
- Bribery.
Offering
money or any item or service to a faculty member or any other
person to gain academic advantage for yourself or another is
dishonest.
- Plagiarism.
"Unacknowledged
use of the information, ideas, or phrasing of other writers is
an offense comparable with theft and fraud, and it is so
recognized by the copyright and patent laws. Literary offenses
of this kind are known as plagiarism." One is responsible
for plagiarism when: the exact words of another writer are
used without using quotation marks and indicating the source
of the words; the words of another are summarized or
paraphrased without giving the credit that is due; the ideas
from another writer are borrowed without properly documenting
their source.
Acknowledging
the sources of borrowed material is a simple, straightforward
procedure that will strengthen the paper and assure the integrity
of the writer. The English
104-105 Student Manual,
provides guidelines to aid students in documenting material
borrowed from other sources, as does almost every handbook on
writing style. Academic dishonesty is considered to be a violation
of the behavior expected of a student in an academic setting as
well as a student conduct violation. A student found responsible
for academic dishonesty or academic misconduct is therefore
subject to appropriate academic penalty; to be determined by the
instructor of the course, as well as sanctions under the
university Student Disciplinary Regulations.
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Last
updated:
Monday, March 22,
2004
12:36 PM |
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