Studying in the US: How to Avoid Being Accused of Plagiarism
Posted by admin on November 14th, 2009 at 12:44am
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
15 April 2009 |
This is the VOA Special English Education Report.
Plagiarism is the act of representing another person’s words or ideas as your own. The offense may be as small as a sentence copied from a book. Or it may be as extensive as a whole paper copied — or bought — from somebody else.
![]() |
| Journalism students at the University of Maryland discuss ethics and plagiarism in a class in October 2003 |
Intellectual dishonesty is nothing new. The only difference now is that the Internet has made it much simpler to steal other people’s work. Yet the same technology that makes it easy to find information to copy also makes it easier to identify plagiarism.
Teachers can use online services that compare papers to thousands of others to search for copied work. The teacher gets a report on any passages that are similar enough to suspect plagiarism. These services are widely used. Turnitin.com, for example, says it is used in more than one hundred countries and examines more than one hundred thirty thousand papers a day.
Professional writers who plagiarize can be taken to civil court and ordered to pay damages. In schools, the punishment for cheating could be a failing grade on the paper or in the course. Some schools expel plagiarists for a term; others, for a full academic year. Some degrees have even been withdrawn after a school later found that a student had plagiarized.
Accidental plagiarism can sometimes result from cultural differences.
At Indiana University in Bloomington, sixty percent of students who use the Office of Writing Tutorial Services are non-native English speakers. The director, Joanne Vogt, says some have no idea that copying from published works is considered wrong. She says students from China, for example, may think they are insulting readers if they credit other sources. They believe that educated readers should already know where the information came from.
The more you give credit, the less you risk accusations of plagiarism. Any sentences taken directly from a source should appear inside quotation marks. And even if you put those sentences into your own words, you should still give credit to where you got the information.
And that’s the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. More about plagiarism next week. We will also discuss other rules for academic writing in the United States. Earlier reports in our Foreign Student Series are at voaspecialenglish.com — along with links to some writing resources at American universities. I’m Steve Ember.
How to download audio: Right click on Download audio file link/Save link as(or Save target as)/Choose where to save audio file to your computer
Tags: Education, Education report, plagiarism, VOA
Under Education report
- » Women Inmates Train to Start Businesses After Prison
- » Girls Lacrosse Team Raises Hopes at School
- » No National Standards: Strength or Weakness for Schools in US?
- » Should All US Students Learn the Same Thing?
- » Lecture or Interactive Teaching? New Study of an Old Issue

FB comments:





Leave a Comment for Studying in the US: How to Avoid Being Accused of Plagiarism
Trackback this post | Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed