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Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism
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Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Mar 28, 2015

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Catherine Lunt
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Page 1: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Using the Work of Others:Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism

Page 2: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Agenda

Using the Work of Others:Summarizing

Paraphrasing

Direct quotations

Combination of above

Recognizing plagiarism

Types of plagiarism

Checklist for avoiding plagiarism

Page 3: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Summarizing

Summarizing is distilling a passage or text to its main points, in your own words.

A summary should state the main ideas in a passage using as few words as possible.

Use summary to digest the core of what a writer is saying, without examples or evidence.

Page 4: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

SummarizingGladwell, Malcolm, “Big and Bad: How the S.U.V. Ran over

Automotive Safety,” The New Yorker 12 January 2004: 31.

The S.U.V. boom represents, then, a shift in how we conceive of safety— from active to passive. It’s what happens when a larger number of drivers conclude, consciously or otherwise, that the extra thirty feet that the TrailBlazer takes to come to a stop don’t really matter, that the tractor-trailer will hit them anyway, and that they are better off treating accidents as inevitable rather than avoidable.

The popularity of SUVs indicates a change in how we approach keeping ourselves safe. Being safe is no longer a proactive activity, but instead a defensive response to the unavoidable.

Page 5: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Paraphrasingo Paraphrasing is a close restatement of the

author’s “original presentation,” in your own words.

o Paraphrase is most useful when you want to follow an author’s thinking or reasoning without directly quoting.

o Read passage several times to understand it.o Restate in your own words and sentence

structure. Select what is pertinent and restate.

o Don’t distort original meaning of text!

Page 6: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

ParaphrasingIn Europe and Japan, people think of a safe

car as a nimble car.

Paraphrase In other parts of the world, safety and

maneuverability are synonymous.

In the history of the automotive industry, few things have been quite as unexpected as the rise of the S.U.V.

Paraphrase The S.U.V.’s ascent is one of the more

surprising events in the car industry's nearly 130 years.

Page 7: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Direct QuotationUse direct quotation only when the exact words of the original are important.

In papers analyzing primary sources such as literary works, you will use it extensively.

Tests (when original satisfies one of following)

Language is unusually vivid, bold or inventiveQuotation cannot be paraphrased without distortion of meaning or loss of meaning.Words themselves are at issue in your interpretationQuotation is a graph, diagram, or table.

Page 8: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

CombinationLearned helplessness is now thought to play a role in such

phenomena as depression and the failure of battered women to leave their husbands, but one could easily apply it more widely. We live in an age, after all, that is strangely fixated on the idea of helplessness: we’re fascinated by hurricanes and terrorist acts and epidemics like SARS—situations in which we feel powerless to affect our own destiny.

Combination

Gladwell reminds us that the concept of learned helplessness is used to help answer difficult questions, such as why people don't leave abusive relationships. However, he also suggests it can be used in a broader context: "We live in an age, after all, that is strangely fixated on the idea of helplessness: we’re fascinated by hurricanes and terrorist acts and epidemics like SARS—situations in which we feel powerless to affect our own destiny."

Page 9: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Recognizing Plagiarism Exercise

Compare each attempt to quote or paraphrase the passage.

Which, if any are plagiarized, inaccurate, or both, and which are acceptable?

Why?

Page 10: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Types of Plagiarism: Deliberate PlagiarismCopying a phrase, sentence, or longer passage from a source and passing it off as your own

Summarizing or paraphrasing someone else's ideas without acknowledging your debt

Handing in a paper you bought, had a friend write, or copied from another student

Page 11: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Types of Plagiarism: Accidental PlagiarismForgetting to place quotation marks around another's words

Omitting a source citation for another's idea because you are unaware

Carelessly copying a source which you mean to paraphrase

Page 12: Using the Work of Others: Getting Ideas into Your Papers while Avoiding Plagiarism.

Avoiding Plagiarism Checklist

What type of source are you using: your own independent material, common knowledge, or someone else’s independent material? You must acknowledge someone else’s material.

If you are quoting someone else’s material, is the quotation exact? Are graphs, statistics, and other borrowed material identical to source? Omissions with ellipsis and additions with brackets?

Have you used your own words and sentence structure when paraphrasing or summarizing? Have you represented the author’s meaning without distortion?

Is each use of someone else’s material acknowledged in your text? Are your citations complete and accurate?

Does your works cited list include all sources listed in your paper?