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Cheating/Plagiarism Policy

Cheating is unacceptable behavior at Griffin Tech.  Cheating includes any attempt to defraud, deceive, or mislead the instructor in arriving at an honest grade assessment.  Plagiarism is a form of cheating that involves presenting as one's own - the ideas or work of another.  Students will be informed of the cheating policy through course syllabi or course requirements.  Violation on the cheating policy may result in a lowered grade on a portion of the course or a grade of "F" in the course.  A grade assigned a student because of an alleged cheating policy violation may be appealed by the student through the grievance process of the school.  A student found to have violated the cheating/plagiarism policy more than one time, in addition to having a grade or grades lowered, my be referred to the appropriate administrator for consideration of further action.  If in the opinion of the administrator the violations warrant, a disciplinary charge may be filed against the student with the Discipline Committee. - Griffin Technical College Catalog/Student Handbook 2004-2006 p. 177

What is Plagiarism?

Plagiarism covers many different actions from inadvertent missing citations to deliberate copying of someone else's work.

 
In "Helping Students Avoid Plagiarism" Stephen Wilhoit lists the following types of plagiarism:
§Buying a paper from a research service or term paper mill.
  • §Turning in another student's work without that student's knowledge.
  • §Turning in a paper a peer has written for the student.
  • §Copying a paper from a source text without proper acknowledgment.
  • §Copying materials from a source text, supplying proper documentation, but leaving out quotation marks.
  • §Paraphrasing materials from a source text without appropriate documentation.
  • §The Internet has made simple an additional type of plagiarism:
  • §Turning in a paper from a "free term paper" website.
§
How Do Students Plagiarize?
  • Articles and Books from the Library
  • Articles from Online – GALILEO and Web Term Paper Sites
  • Cut and Paste is the Preferred Method
  • Ignorance of Plagiarism

Discouraging Plagiarism

  • Encourage students to think on their own. Help them practice writing in their own words and not paraphrase. Look for concepts instead of just answers.
  • Give out assignments that require your students to investigate.
  • Have your students turn in thesis statements, outlines, working bibliographies, and research notes. Have students maintain a research log.
  • You can have your students include notes on what databases they searched, what reference materials they used, and even what questions they asked the librarians.
  • Assign papers to groups.  Students can check themselves and learn about teamwork at the same time.

Recognizing Plagiarism

  • Long sections of the paper that does not have references or quotations. May be copied from reference works or a web site.
  • Different citation styles within the same paper.
  • Strange formatting. Lines broken in half, tables in odd places or skewed, different heading styles.
  • Is the section you are reading off topic? It is easy to make mistakes cutting and pasting.
    Do the references seem to stop at a certain date? Does a table offer information for a much older date range?
  • Anachronisms. Does the paper refer to older events as current events?
  • Different levels of diction. A student will often cut and paste a journalist’s paragraph with a scholarly article.
  • Look for anachronisms of time. Does the work sound like it was written with a nineteenth-century thesaurus?
  • Is there a mixture of British and American punctuation or spelling?
  • Just plain clueless! Look for URL’s in the margins or other indications that the paper was purchased. Sometimes you will see things like “Davis, page 2” in the page heading when the paper is written by Smith. Also look for some obvious things like whiteout over previous author’s names.

If you suspect plagiarism...

  • §First use the major search engines.  Do a search on four to eight significant words in the paper.  You can also use a distinctive phrase in one of the full-text search engines such as Google. 
  • §Most students will use the works that come up on top in the search.
  • §The three most popular search engines for students are Yahoo!, Google, and Ask Jeeves.
  • §Search any of the full text databases available at the Library and GALILEO. 
  • §Check out the major term paper sites. 
  • §Look at the plagiarism detection sites. 
§
  • There are two types of term paper mills: swapping sites and term paper collections
  • The free research paper sites generally have very poorly written work. The papers usually come from other students who aren’t all that good to begin with. For some reason some of the papers from these sites are very old with citations no older than the seventies.
  • Commercial paper mills are often quite good and usually too good. If you are suspicious compare the work with an in-class writing assignment from the same student.
  • Commercial mills have stock papers and often try to charge extra for custom papers.
  • Visit some of these sites and you might just find the same paper that was submitted to you.
  • http://termpapers.com  and   http://www.coastal.edu/library/mill2.html  

Useful Links

 
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