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What is Plagiarism

Encyclopedia of Distance Learning, Second Edition
The reproduction or inclusion of another person’s creative work into one’s own work without properly attributing the included work to the original author.
Published in Chapter:
Detection and Deterrence of Plagiarism in Online Learning Environments
Alan McCord (Lawrence Technological University, USA)
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 12
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-198-8.ch087
Abstract
Student plagiarism inhibits student learning and damages institutional reputations. Online learning provides different opportunities for student plagiarism than in the traditional classroom, and many observers question whether online learning environments can demonstrate the same level of academic integrity found in traditional classrooms. One method of combating plagiarism is the use of plagiarism detection software, which are licensed for individual use or integrated into an institutional course management system (CMS). Understanding the nature of plagiarism and implementing a plagiarism education and detection program can improve the effectiveness of these tools and therefore improve the quality and reputation of online programs. This article focuses on how plagiarism may be reduced in online learning environments. The article begins with a definition of plagiarism and the characteristics of online learning environments that make them vulnerable to student plagiarism. A review of plagiarism detection technologies and the capabilities of popular detection tools are discussed. The article then addresses how plagiarism detection software can be systematically implemented in support of online learning programs: establishing academic integrity policies, improving the design of assignments and assessments, and establishing effective education programs. The article concludes by exploring future developments in online learning environments and plagiarism detection technologies.
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Use of Chatbots at the Intersection of Technology and Education: A Comprehensive Review
Presenting work or ideas from another source as your own, with or without consent of the original author, by incorporating it into your work without full acknowledgment.
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ChatGPT in Academic Writing and Publishing: An Overview of Ethical Issues
The practice of using others’ ideas and work and submitting it as if it were one’s own work.
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Academic Integrity of Global Digital Masked Bandits Lurking the Deep and Dark Web
Individuals who intentionally create and publish false information to gain an advantage or benefit.
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Students' Perceptions of Cheating and Plagiarism: A Case Study
The result of partially or totally copying and appropriating somebody’s words, ideas, creations etc. and presenting them as belonging to you.
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Ignorance or Intent?: A Case Study of Plagiarism in Higher Education among LIS Students in the Caribbean
The intentional or unintentional act of using another person’s academic or artistic work or ideas without giving due credit to the creator.
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What Are Students Saying About AI as an Academic Tool
Plagiarism is the act of using someone else's ideas, words, or work without proper acknowledgment or attribution, presenting them as one's own (Khan, 2016). In this chapter, this term is referred to students’ actions of copying or closely imitating content from AI-powered sources.
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A Clear Pathway: The Hazy Line between Collaboration and Collusion
A student incorporates another person’s or body’s work by unacknowledged quotation, paraphrase, imitation or other device in any work submitted for assessment in a way that suggests that it is the student’s original work.
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Plagiarism and Ethical Issues: A Literature Review on Academic Misconduct
The act of copying, voluntarily or not, other people’s work without proper citation. It is a form of intellectual dishonesty that involves the misleading of people on the origin and source of a work, idea or discovery published by someone else.
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Research Ethics Among Undergraduates of the Social Sciences
The online Merriam-Webster dictionary’s definition of plagiarism is as follows: “To steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one’s one: use (another’s production) without crediting the source”.
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International Students and Academic Misconduct: Personal, Cultural, and Situational Variables
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Management Education for Integrity: Raising Ethical Standards in Online Management Classes
Is using another individual(s) words or thoughts and representing them as your own.
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Education Can be Gained from Errors: Why Plagiarism Should Be Used as a Learning Opportunity for College Students
The term comes from a Latin root word for the kidnapping of ideas. This is an effective definition for plagiarism because some may not consider that ideas can be stolen. The crime of plagiarism occurs when someone, be it an academic or a learner, steals an idea or piece of information from a source and then uses it in his or her own work without citing the original author.
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Strategies and Technologies for Preventing Plagiarism in Modern Higher Education: War against Today's Plagiarists or Nurturing Tomorrow's Talents
An unethical practice of presenting someone else’s intellectual product (text, style, code, idea etc.) without appropriate acknowledgment of the original source and attributing it instead to the presenting person i.e. stealing authorship of an intellectual product.
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Fair Use, Copyright, and Academic Integrity in an Online Academic Environment
This is stealing another’s work and claiming it as one’s own.
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Plagiarism vs. Pedagogy: Implications of Project-Based Learning Research for Teachers in the 21st Century
Use of other person original idea and present it as one’s own (without citing the source).
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Combating Plagiarism: A Three-Pronged Approach to Reducing Prevalence in Higher Education
A set of practices that involve the unethical use of information from external sources. Such practices may include using text or ideas without proper attribution, or turning in the work of another person as one’s own.
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Blogging and Academic Writing Development
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International Students in Higher Education Classrooms: Diversity, Challenges, and Promising Practices for Educational Institutions
Is presenting someone else’s words or ideas as one’s own without proper attribution either intentionally or unintentionally.
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Assessment, Academic Integrity, and Community Online
Plagiarism is the use of material written by another, but presented as if it is one’s own. Plagiarism can occur with published or unpublished sources. Forms of plagiarism in online courses include students copying the work of another student posted to an online discussion board, purchasing a term paper written by another, or utilizing uncited material from published sources.
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Honest Communication in Online Learning
Taking someone else’s work and passing it off as your own.yyuu
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Plagiarism and the Classroom: The Faculty Role in Awareness and Education
The act of copying words, ideas, and works of another and claiming such as one’s own work, a form of cheating.
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Internet-Based Text-Matching Software and EFL Preservice Teachers' Awareness of Academic Integrity: A Case Study in the Turkish Context
Stating, or presenting someone else’s work or ideas as one’s own, with or without their consent and incorporate it into one’s work without acknowledging it fully. Plagiarism cases involve one of the following actions: submitting a paper to be graded or reviewed that one has not written on his/her own, copying answers or text from another classmate and submit it as his/her own, quoting or paraphrasing from another paper without crediting the original author, citing data without giving credit to the original source, proposing another author’s idea as if it were one’s own, inventing references or using incorrect references, submitting someone else’s presentation, work, with only minor alterations.
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Academic Integrity and International Students: Culture, Challenges, and Learning Habits
A student incorporates another person’s or body’s work by unacknowledged quotation, paraphrase, imitation or other device in any work submitted for assessment in a way that suggests that it is the student’s original work.
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Strategies on Addressing Contract Cheating: A Case Study from an Australian Regional University
Defining the term ‘plagiarism’ can be problematic as there are no clear definitions and clear rules. However, it is generally defined as the publication of another author’s thoughts, ideas, or expressions and the representation of them as one’s own original work. Plagiarism is considered academic dishonesty and a breach of journalistic ethics. Plagiarism is not a crime per se as it is not defined by law, but rather by institutions (including professional associations, educational institutions, and commercial entities, such as publishing companies). Thus, punishment for plagiarism is not set forth by the legal system. It is subject to sanctions like penalties, suspension, and even expulsion. However, plagiarism remains a serious ethical offense in academia and industry. Cases of plagiarism can constitute copyright infringement and, therefore, the two terms (plagiarism and copyright infringement) may overlap somewhat. However, they are not equivalent concepts, and many types of plagiarism do not fall under the category of copyright infringement.
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Large Language Models in Academic Publishing
The presentation of ideas from other people’s work without full acknowledgment.
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Technological Approaches to Maintaining Academic Integrity in Management Education
The unauthorized use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one’s own original work
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The Role of Library Digitization in Access and Preservation of Library Resources
The act of copying an intellectual work or part of an intellectual work with the intention of claiming ownership of it.
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Electronic Information Resources: Boon for Academic and Research Development
Usage of ideas, means, methods, sayings, explorations, inventions, discoveries taken from others’ work(s) without incorporating a proper citation of the used content in one’s work.
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Plagiarism: The Role of Librarian and Teachers in Combating It
The act of using others thought or intellect and claiming to be the owner of it.
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Virtual Research Integrity
The use of information, literature, research findings, or scholarly products without the appropriate citations or credit provided for the source of the information ( Council of Writing Program Administrators, 2003 ).
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Ethics of Hybrid Learning in Higher Education
Using other people’s ideas, opinions, language, words, products etc., without crediting their sources.
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ChatGPT in Content Creation: Techniques, Applications, and Ethical Implications
The act of using someone else's work or ideas without giving proper acknowledgment. In the context of AI-generated content, concerns may arise if the generated content inadvertently resembles source texts.
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Cyberethics Across the Curriculum
Plagiarism is the unauthorized use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one’s own original work.
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The Effects of the “Publish or Perish Syndrome” on Research and Innovation in Nigerian Universities: Insights From Recent Research and Case Studies
Derived from the Latin word plagiarus (which means a kidnapper, a stealer, or the abductor of a child or a slave) and the Greek word plagion (which means kidnapper), plagiarism is used to refer to the act of intentionally or unintentionally appropriating another person’s ideas, language, processes, results, or statements without obtaining permission or without giving due credit.
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Copyright with an International Perspective for Academics
Plagiarism is the use of the ideas from an existing source directly and without attribution. A number of different types of plagiarism are recognized, not all of which are considered inappropriate in all disciplines. Plagiarism by copying is the commonest and occurs when the words from one source are used without modification or attribution. Rephrasing an expressed idea without citation is plagiarism by paraphrasing. Other forms include self-plagiarism, patchwork plagiarism, plagiarism of structure or citation, and ghostwriting or fraud. Some, but not all, forms of plagiarism are also violations of copyright.
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Critical Thinking, Socratic Seminars, and the College Classroom
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Plagiarism, Ghostwriting, Boilerplate, and Open Content
To claim some piece of writing that is not considered common knowledge to be one’s own with the intent to deceive the recipient otherwise.
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Cheating: Digital Learning Activities and Challenges
Unintentionally or intentionally using someone’s else ideas without giving proper credit.
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Doctoral Student Perceptions of Plagiarism: Beyond Cultural and Linguistic Diversities
Presenting someone else’s words or ideas as one’s own without proper attribution either intentionally or unintentionally.
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The Internet and Tertiary Education
Using the words or ideas of others and presenting them as your own without acknowledgment.
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Training Faculty to Motivate Adult Learners Through Best Practices in Online Pedagogy
Presenting someone else’s work as one’s own without proper attribution to the original author.
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Conducting Programmatic Research in Agriculture Teacher Education
The misrepresentation of someone else’s work or ideas as your own.
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Academic Misconduct and the Internet
The attempt by an author to present the ideas, text, or other materials of another individual as one’s own, original work.
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