INSTRUCTIONS:

Read through the reading passage below about Plagiarism, and then do the Plagiarism Pre-test that follows.

Understanding and Avoiding Plagiarism: A Self-Directed Tutorial
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Have you ever handed over a recording of a favourite song and tried to convince your friend that it was you rather than Nelly Furtado singing? Perhaps this seems ridiculous, but amazingly some students try to fool their professors into believing that they created an assignment when in fact another person wrote the entire paper. This is an extreme example of plagiarism.
What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism is using the words or ideas of another person as if they were your own, and without giving proper credit to the sources you have used. So have you ever committed plagiarism? After completing this tutorial, some of you may be surprised to learn that the answer is yes. Students have been known to unintentionally commit plagiarism because they did not understand what it meant.
This tutorial is designed to educate you about plagiarism and provide you with important skills and knowledge to avoid committing plagiarism.
Learning Objectives
After completing this tutorial, you should be able to
·  Understand why avoiding plagiarism is important
·  Recognize plagiarism in its various forms
·  Develop skills for avoiding plagiarism These skills include
o  Citing Sources
o  Note-Taking
o  Quoting
o  Paraphrasing
· 
Plagiarism: Consequences
Through completing the above test you learned about several forms of plagiarism. Hopefully you already knew that buying a paper online or re-typing a friend’s paper are forms of plagiarism. However, other forms of plagiarism are more subtle. Did you know that you can commit plagiarism by:
·  using someone else’s idea (even if you express it your own words) and not citing the original source?
·  forgetting quotation marks?
·  taking a short passage from another source and not re-writing it in your own words?
Do Students Really Plagiarize?
Unfortunately, the answer is yes. Take a moment to read this Peak article on a well-known incident of plagiarism at SFU a few years ago which involved more than 40 students.
http://www.peak.sfu.ca/the-peak/2002-3/issue9/ne-cheat.html
The Consequences of Committing Plagiarism
Depending on the case, penalties for academic dishonesty at SFU are very severe and range from reprimand, to failure in a course, to suspension. See the “Resources” section at the end of this tutorial for links to the relevant SFU policies on plagiarism. /
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How Can Plagiarism Be Avoided?
The remainder of this tutorial is designed to give you skills and knowledge to help you avoid plagiarism

Plagiarism Pre-test

Can you recognize plagiarism? Test yourself by deciding whether each of the following examples is plagiarism or not.

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Question 1: It’s the night before your paper is due, and you haven’t done any work. You buy a paper from an online essay-mill. Is this plagiarism?

(a) Yes, it's plagiarism.
(b) No, it isn't.
(d) Don't know

Question 2: Your friend did the course last year, and he gives you his paper. You re-type the whole paper, changing words here and there and inserting a few of your own ideas. Is this plagiarism?

(a) Yes, it's plagiarism.
(b) No, it isn't.
(d) Don't know

Question 3: You need an image for your essay. You go online and find one. You don’t cite the source of your image, because images on the web aren’t protected by copyright. Is this plagiarism?

(a) Yes, it's plagiarism.
(b) No, it isn't.
(d) Don't know

Question 4: You copy a paragraph directly from an article you found. You cite the source, but you forget to put quotation marks. Is this plagiarism?

(a) Yes, it's plagiarism.
(b) No, it isn't.
(d) Don't know

Question 5: You find a neat idea in an article, so you use it in your paper. You don’t bother to cite the source of the idea because you’ve expressed it in your own words. Is this plagiarism?

(a) Yes, it's plagiarism.
(b) No, it isn't.
(d) Don't know

Question 6: You copy a short passage from an article you found. You change a couple of words, so that it’s different than the original – this way you don’t need quotation marks. You carefully cite the source. Is this plagiarism?

(a) Yes, it's plagiarism.
(b) No, it isn't.
(d) Don't know

Question 7: You pay a tutor for editing assistance, and he drastically re-writes your original paper. You hand in this new edited version to your professor. Is this plagiarism?

(a) Yes, it's plagiarism.
(b) No, it isn't.
(d) Don't know

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