Defining Academic Integrity: The Foundation of an Academic Institution

The Definition of Academic Integrity does not vary from institution to institution. What does seem to be inconsistent is how it is enforced.

Academic Integrity can be defined by honest academic work where (1) the ideas and the writing of others are properly cited; (2) students submit their own work for tests and assignments without unauthorized assistance; (3) students do not provide unauthorized assistance to others; and (4) students report their research or accomplishments accurately.  http://www.ethicsed.org/programs/integrity-works/ai_definitions.htm

 

2011 Promoting Integrity in all Academic Environments from Lisa Marie Johnson, Ph.D.

What is Plagiarism? How is it different than Academic Misconduct?

Plagiarism is a topic that seems to be exploding with the widespread availability of information on the internet and new tools that make detecting it even easier. I received an email yesterday from the folks at Plagtracker, a free plagiarism checker (http://www.plagtracker.com/). Plagtracker is a free alternative to TurnItIn – http://www.turnitin.com/,

Most academics agree that educating students about plagiarism is an important first step in preventing repeat occurrences. I found a guide online from the University of Oklahoma that I think is fantastic – Nine Things You Should Already Know About PLAGIARISM Plus . . .Six Excuses That Don’t Work And . . . Three Things You Don’t Need To Worry About.

I recommend this as required reading for all students, but some key points of note:

What is academic misconduct?

Academic misconduct is cheating. More precisely, it is any action that a student knows (or should know) will lead to the improper evaluation of academic work. If the professor does not detect it, academic misconduct defeats the purpose of academic work because you are pretending to know more or write better than you actually do.

What is plagiarism?

Plagiarism is a form of academic misconduct in which you represent someone else’s words or ideas as your own. The basic expectation in every class is that whatever you write will be your own words, generated from your own understanding. Therefore it is acceptable to incorporate someone else’s words in your paper only if you clearly indicate the words are someone else’s.

How to avoid plagiarism?

There are three things you need to do to avoid plagiarism: Think, Write, and Signal.

Think. Think about your paper topic and the research you have done. Make sure you have actually thought about everything in your paper well enough to explain it in your own words. Make sure you start the assignment soon enough to think and understand, not just research and type.

Write. Generate your own words to express your own understanding. If you cannot get started, or if you think your words are just too clumsy or inadequate, get help from your professor or a Writing Center. Other people’s words should always be a supplement, not a substitute, for your own writing.

Signal. Clearly signal whenever you are using someone else’s words, whether you are using them by direct quotation or paraphrase. Any direct quotation must be indicated by two things: “quotation marks” (or else “block quotation”) plus a “reference” (also called a “citation”) to the source. A reference alone is not sufficient to signal a direct quotation.

What are the most common kinds of plagiarism?

Whole-paper plagiarism. In this form of plagiarism, all or most of the student’s paper is lifted from another student or published source, for example the Internet, a book, or a print article. It is especially bad to buy a paper from any source that offers ready-made term papers.

Cut-and-paste plagiarism. In this form of plagiarism, parts of a paper ranging from phrases and sentences to entire paragraphs are taken from the Internet or somewhere else and incorporated into the student’s paper with no signal that they are not the student’s own expression.

Cut-and-paste plagiarism with references. In this form of plagiarism, words or ideas in a paper are included from another source, a reference to the source is included, but there is no quotation signal. Again, the problem is that a reference indicates only that the accompanying text is somehow derived from or related to the cited source. A reference alone does not show that the text is a direct quotation from that source. Thus a reference alone does not suspend the professor’s expectation that the words are your own words. A direct quotation with a reference but without quotation marks is plagiarism.

Excuses for plagiarizing that Don’t Work:

I didn’t mean to plagiarize!

The most common excuse to a charge of plagiarism. The test in an academic misconduct case is whether the student knew or should have known that his or her actions amounted to misconduct. Students are expected to know the basic rules of academic integrity.

I forgot to add the references!

Unless the plagiarism is truly minor, the student would still be in trouble even if such excuses are true. Cut-and-paste papers usually contain lots of directly-quoted material that substitutes for the student’s own writing, appears without quotation marks, and lacks any textual indication that the material is quoted. In such cases, the quoted text substitutes for the student’s own writing.

I’m presenting facts, not ideas.

Except for clearly-signaled quotations, every bit of any writing exercise needs to reflect the student’s own expression of the student’s own understanding. Sometimes it may seem that there is only one way to express some things — highly technical lab procedures, for instance. Don’t worry too much about this: once you have understood it, put the original source away and rely only on your own understanding when you write your own words. When you write from your own understanding, you will express yourself uniquely enough to avoid plagiarism.


Defining Academic Integrity

What is Academic Integrity? Let’s looks at a definition from the University of Oklahoma: (http://integrity.ou.edu/students_guide.html)

Academic integrity means honesty and responsibility in scholarship. Academic assignments exist to help students learn; grades exist to show how fully this goal is attained. Therefore all work and all grades should result from the student’s own understanding and effort.

What is academic misconduct?

  • CHEATING AND UNAUTHORIZED MATERIAL ON EXAMINATIONS AND OTHER ASSIGNMENTS
  • IMPROPER COLLABORATION
  • ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT IN ONLINE COURSES
  • SUBMITTING THE SAME ASSIGNMENT FOR DIFFERENT CLASSES
  • FABRICATION, FORGERY, ALTERATION OF DOCUMENTS, LYING, ETC., IN ORDER TO OBTAIN ACADEMIC ADVANTAGE
  • ASSISTING OTHERS IN ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT
  • ATTEMPTING TO COMMIT ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT
  • DESTRUCTION OF PROPERTY, HACKING, ETC.
  • INTIMIDATION AND INTERFERENCE WITH INTEGRITY PROCESSES
  • PLAGIARISM

There is basically no college-level assignment that can be satisfactorily completed by copying. All writing is that all  written assignments show the student’s own understanding in the student’s own words. That means all writing assignments, in class or out, are assumed to be composed entirely of words generated (not simply found) by the student, except where words written by someone else are specifically marked as such with proper citation. Including other people’s words in your paper is helpful when you do it honestly and correctly.

  • IT IS PLAGIARISM TO COPY WORDS AND PRESENT THEM AS YOUR OWN WRITING.
    • It is the worst form of plagiarism to copy part or all of a paper from the Internet, from a book, or from another source without indicating in any way that the words are someone else’s. To avoid this form of plagiarism, the paper must BOTH place the quoted material in quotation marks AND use an acceptable form of citation to indicate where the words come from.
  • IT IS PLAGIARISM TO COPY WORDS, EVEN IF YOU GIVE THE SOURCE, UNLESS YOU ALSO INDICATE THAT THE COPIED WORDS ARE A DIRECT QUOTATION.
    • Simply documenting the source in a footnote or bibliography isn’t good enough. You must also indicate that the words themselves are quoted from someone else. To avoid this form of plagiarism, put all quoted words in quotation marks or use equivalent punctuation.
  • IT IS PLAGIARISM TO COPY WORDS AND THEN CHANGE THEM A LITTLE, EVEN IF YOU GIVE THE SOURCE.
    • Putting someone else’s ideas into your own words so it’s not a direct quotation is called “paraphrasing.” Paraphrasing is fine when you cite the source and indicate the new expression is actually your own. When it’s not — when the expression remains substantially similar to the source as a whole or in one of its parts — it’s plagiarism. Even if not specifically prohibited by the instructor, “writing” a paper by copying words and then altering them violates OU’s basic assumption about writing and may easily result in a charge of academic misconduct. To count as “your own words,” your paper must be so significantly different from your sources that a reasonable reader would consider it a new piece of writing. If it’s not — if “your writing” is substantially similar to somebody else’s where individual variations would be expected, it’s plagiarism.
  • EVEN IF YOU EXPRESS THEM IN YOUR OWN WORDS, IT IS PLAGIARISM TO PRESENT SOMEONE ELSE’S IDEAS AS YOUR OWN.
    • It is plagiarism to present someone else’s original arguments, lines of reasoning, or factual discoveries as your own, even if you put the material in your own words. To avoid this form of plagiarism, cite the source.
  • THE RULES AGAINST PLAGIARISM APPLY TO ALL ASSIGNMENTS.
    • Take-home tests, comprehensive examinations, “review of the literature” sections of theses or dissertations, and all other assignments are subject to these rules. There is basically no college-level assignment that can be satisfactorily completed by copying.

Do Online Students Cheat More Often?

Do Online Students Cheat More Often?
Brought to you by: OnlineCollege.org


How to avoid plagiarism – Tips for students

Afraid of committing plagiarism? Watch this video and discover how to avoid it. Tips for students. Video originally uploaded by BainbridgeCollege.


Information Literacy Infographic

via – http://easybib.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/information-literacy_final.png


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