What is plagiarism?

Plagiarism is the use of another person鈥檚 thoughts and ideas–whether taken from a paper, speech, article, film, music, image, inprint or online–intentionally or accidentally, whole or in part, and presenting it as your own work.

pla.giar.ism听/藞辫濒别瑟胜蓹藢谤瑟锄蓹尘/听苍辞耻苍.

the act of using another person’s words or ideas without giving credit to that person聽:聽the act of plagiarizing something

鈻燭he student has been accused of聽plagiarism.

(Merriam-Webster鈥檚 Learner鈥檚 Dictionary, 2012)

pla.gia.rize\藞pl膩-j蓹-藢r墨z聽also -j膿-蓹-\

transitive verb

:聽to steal and pass off(the ideas or words of another) as one’s own聽:聽use (another’s production) without crediting the source

intransitive verb

:聽to commit literary theft聽:present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source

(Merriam-Webster鈥檚 Dictionary, 2012)

The 天美视频 High School student handbook states, in part:

鈥溾he following will be considered plagiarism:

  • Presenting as one鈥檚 own the words, the work or the opinions of someone else without prior acknowledgement.
  • Borrowing the sequence of ideas, the arrangement of material,or the pattern of thought of someone else without proper acknowledgement.

鈥淚f a student cheats or plagiarizes, s/he may receive zero for the entire assignment and may not qualify for make up of the assignment subject to the teacher鈥檚 discretion. The School reserves the right to assign additional penalties based on the severity of the offense up to and including suspension or expulsion.鈥

Plagiarism FAQs

How do I know that I have plagiarized?

If you there is an idea, two sentences, or item in your paper or project that you didn鈥檛 create and have not cited (given another source credit for), you have plagiarized.

When your name is on a paper you turn in, you are stating that anything in that paper that you have not cited, is your idea/intellectual property. Failing to alert the reader to what is not your idea is lying.

Does this happen accidentally?

Sometimes. However, accidental plagiarism is still plagiarism.

How does it happen accidentally?

When you cite information incorrectly or forget to cite it at all it is plagiarism.

But what鈥檚 the big deal?

The big deal is: Plagiarism is cheating. When you plagiarize, another person鈥檚 work is being evaluated in your name. It is unfair to other students who have worked hard on their projects and presented their own ideas. It is theft of intellectual property, which is the same as downloading a movie or stealing an iPod. It is, in fact,聽illegal聽in the state of Massachusetts.

Ok. How do I avoid plagiarism?

  1. Give yourself plenty of time to work on your project. You need time to ask questions, clarify assignment requirements, do the research, rewrite, and understand the material with which you are working.
  2. Take thorough notes. Be careful with your analysis. Make sure you note which information you are getting from what source. The era of 鈥渃opy and paste鈥 makes it easy to take the information that you want to use in your paper or project, but it also makes it easy to forget from where it came.聽聽WRITE THE SOURCE DOWN!
    • (Tip from the pros: when you find information you want to use, paraphrase it–even if you want to use it as a quotation. Paraphrasing the idea forces you to summarize and interpret the idea in your own words. If you have trouble paraphrasing the author鈥檚 argument, you don鈥檛 understand it. Period. Stop and ask for help. Don鈥檛 cut and paste it to read over later in the hopes that two weeks from now, when you鈥檙e putting together the project, it will magically make sense to you.
  3. Cite your sources, correctly. Anytime you use someone else鈥檚 work (whether a direct quote, something you have paraphrased, a graph, facts, images, etc.) indicate this with a citation. Citations tell us what is your work and what belongs to someone else.

Do I have to cite EVERYTHING?

No. There are two types of things you do NOT need to cite.

  1. Your ideas, your thoughts, your graphs, your images, your films, your analysis, your summaries, your interpretations, are all yours to use as you please.
  2. You do not need to cite information that are considered common knowledge.

What is common knowledge?

There are two kinds of common knowledge.

  1. Facts: the fact is mentioned in five reliable reference sources and is well known in your culture.
    • Examples: George Washington was the first U.S. President/There are 50 states in the United States of America/Santiago is the capital of Chile/Bears hibernate in winter.
  1. Folklore and urban legends:
    • Examples: Rip Van Winkle/the story about the man who wakes up in a tub full of ice with a note on his chest telling him to call 911鈥攈is kidneys have been removed and are now for sale on the black market!

Still not sure if it鈥檚 鈥渃ommon knowledge?鈥 CITE IT!

WARNING!! Some believe that anything that appears on the internet is 鈥渃ommon knowledge.鈥 This is FALSE! You need to cite any information you find based on the guidelines here.

Citation FAQs

What DO I cite?

Someone else鈥檚 written, spoken, or documented work. Anything you have paraphrased or quoted.

Any information that is NOT common knowledge

When in doubt, CITE IT! Better safe than sorry.

What kind of citation style do we use?

We use MLA (Modern Language Association) style for our citations and NoodleTools as our works cited generator.聽聽There are instructions for these on the LHS Library website.

What do these citations look like in action?

Examples of correct and incorrect citation:

NOTE! For the sake of this guide, I have made up a source and quote to show you examples of what to and not to do for citations. DO NOT make up citations or sources for your own papers or projects.

The made-up book is:

Simpson, Homer J.聽All Things Simpsons Considered: The Role of Veggies in Television.聽Boston, MA: Little, Brown & Company, 2011. Print.

KEEP IN MIND that the following examples are the proper MLA formatting for a聽产辞辞办听source with a聽known author. Other source types(magazines, database, images, websites, etc.) may have different MLA formats.聽聽Check the individual source鈥檚 style before you cite.

The passage you are using a quote from reads:

鈥淚 have always loved food. Though my obsession with donuts and 鈥榝loor pie鈥 is well documented, I really, really, really like vegetables鈥nd pudding. I also like pizza, burgers, French fries, and fried dough–not fried d鈥檕h! Ha, ha. 鈥

This appears on page 37 of the book.

Citing a Direct Quotation

INCORRECT

Example 1:

The vegetable has become quite important in cartoon culture;some characters really like vegetables.

This is incorrect. Where is the quotation? Where is the citation? Where did you get this?

Example 2:

The vegetable has become quite important in cartoon culture,鈥淚 really like vegetables鈥 (Simpson).

This is incorrect for two reasons.聽聽1. The quote is not correct (it is missing two鈥渞eally鈥漵).聽聽聽2. There is no page number listed.

CORRECT

Example 3:

The vegetable has become quite important in cartoon culture,鈥淚 really, really, really like vegetables鈥 (Simpson 37).

This is correct. The quote is correct and the author and page number are indicated.

Example 4:

The vegetable has become quite important in cartoon culture.As Simpson wrote, 鈥淚 really, really, really like vegetables鈥 (37).

This is聽also聽correct. Why? You have indicated the author in the text itself so you don鈥檛 need to add it to the citation. All you need to add it the page number.

Citing Paraphrases

Again, here is the passage:

鈥淚 have always loved food. Though my obsession with donuts and 鈥榝loor pie鈥 is well documented, I really, really, really like vegetables鈥nd pudding. I also like pizza, burgers, French fries, and fried dough–not fried d鈥檕h! Ha, ha. 鈥

This appears on page 37 of the book.

INCORRECT

Example 1:

The eating of vegetables has become quite important in cartoon culture; a popular cartoon character has stated that he enjoys them.

This is incorrectly cited because:

  1. There is no indication where you got this information. Even if you had put the author and page number after this it is STILL incorrect because鈥
  2. In this example 鈥渞eally like vegetables鈥 isexactlywhat Simpson wrote. If you have three or more words that match the original phrase, you have just plagiarized, my friend鈥斺渞eally like vegetables鈥 are his words, not yours. Be sure to paraphrase/put it in your own words more thoroughly.

Example 2:

The eating of vegetables has become quite important in cartoon culture; a popular cartoon character has stated that he enjoys them(Simpson).

What is missing here? The page number is needed.

CORRECT:

Example 3:

The eating of vegetables has become quite important in cartoon culture; a popular cartoon character has stated that he enjoys them(Simpson 37).

This is correct. The author鈥檚 idea is properly paraphrased and the MLA citation tells us where you got the information.

Example 4:

The eating of vegetables has become quite important in cartoon culture; Homer Simpson, himself, enjoys them (37).

This is聽also聽correct. Why? As in the quotation example, the author is indicated the in the text itself, so his name is not needed in the citation. Only the page number is necessary.

Resources & Tools

Where can I find more information?

The following are great websites about plagiarism and citations. In fact, all were consulted for the creation of this guide. (Credit where credit is due!)

  • Owl at Perdue: An on-line writing guide with clear guidelines and examples of plagiarism and citation as well as a host of writing resources.聽聽This is an incredible useful and user-friendly site!
  • Plagiarism dot Org. Great general information.聽
  • University of Arizona, University Libraries.聽聽Good explanations of how to paraphrase and online tutorials.聽
  • Penn State, Libraries. Online citation knowledge quiz.聽
  • Rutgers University, University Libraries. 鈥淭he Cite is Right鈥 online tutorial and quiz with a game show format.聽
  • Newton North High School Library: Learning Commons, Avoiding Plagiarism. Helpful 鈥淐hoosing When to Give Credit鈥 chart.聽