Plagiarism Policies, adapted from the English Department's Composition Website
Plagiarism means using the exact words, opinions, or factual
information from another source without giving that source credit. Writers
give credit through the use of accepted documentation styles, such as parenthetical
citation, footnotes, or end notes; a simple listing of books, articles, and
websites is not sufficient. Plagiarism is the equivalent of intellectual robbery
and cannot be tolerated in an academic setting.
Student writers are often confused about what should be cited.
Some think that only direct quotations need to be credited. While direct quotations
do need citations, so do paraphrases and summaries of opinions or factual
information formerly unknown to the writers or which the writers did not discover
themselves. Exceptions to this include factual information which can be obtained
from a variety of sources, the writers' own insights or findings from their
own field research, and what has been called common knowledge. What constitutes
common knowledge can sometimes be precarious; what is common knowledge for
one audience may be so for another. In such situations, it is helpful to keep
the reader in mind and to think of citations as being "reader friendly."
In other words, writers provide a citation for any piece of information that
they think their readers might want to investigate further. Not only is this
attitude considerate of readers, it will almost certainly ensure that writers
will not be guilty of plagiarism.