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By Kevin Jennings (With The Assistance of Daffy Duck)

The document discusses plagiarism and proper citation. It defines plagiarism as using someone else's work and presenting it as your own without acknowledgement. It notes that plagiarism includes copying others' ideas, papers, or paying others to write papers. The document stresses the importance of citing sources, recommending that students over-cite to avoid plagiarism issues rather than under-cite.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
45 views7 pages

By Kevin Jennings (With The Assistance of Daffy Duck)

The document discusses plagiarism and proper citation. It defines plagiarism as using someone else's work and presenting it as your own without acknowledgement. It notes that plagiarism includes copying others' ideas, papers, or paying others to write papers. The document stresses the importance of citing sources, recommending that students over-cite to avoid plagiarism issues rather than under-cite.

Uploaded by

Doc Brevz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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By Kevin Jennings

(With the assistance of Daffy Duck)


 "the appropriation of another's work and the
unacknowledged incorporation of that work
in one's own written work offered for credit."
(Texas State Honor Code, Addressing Acts of
Dishonesty, Academic Offenses, C.)
 using someone else's ideas or writings and
presenting them as your own
 Using someone else's paper or paying someone
to write your paper
 Restating someone else's ideas or writings too
closely
 Not citing quotations
 Put a citation
 If you think you need a citation, put a citation.
 If you don’t think you need a citation, put a
citation.
 If you think it’s probably common knowledge,
cite it anyways.
 What is the worst that could happen?

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