Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Teaching Plagiarism and Proper Citation


In schools today one of the most important skills students will learn is how to properly research using citations and to avoid plagiarism. Almost every high school senior in the country has some sort of "senior thesis" paper that demonstrates they can utilize these skills effectively before leaving for their secondary pathway. In most colleges, the student handbook contains the 'rules for plagiarism' with specific consequences that includes a college judicial hearing that could have devastating consequences.   Colleges have also started utilizing plagiarism detection resources such as Turnitin.com and MyDropBox.com which have students electronically submit their work to be scanned for any digital footprint linked to the Internet, newspapers and encyclopedia archives as well as any peer submitted work.

The main problem I have found with students and plagiarism is that students were never properly taught how to research and document sources and create proper citations. Most students plagiarize unintentionally because they were never properly taught how to paraphrase and summarize, directly quote using their sources or create a works cited page. As an educator I want my students to be prepared with essential 21st century research and citation skills.

In teaching students about proper citation and plagiarism I have found the following resources to be helpful:  

1. Cornell Universities resource on ‘recognizing and avoidingplagiarism’ has an overview and includes three main sections: principles, logistics, and exercises. Olin & Uris Libraries also provides “5 Criteria of EvaluatingWeb Pages” which provides a simplified view for student to evaluate a website based on 5 criteria to ensure the site authenticity and validity. The five criteria are Accuracy, Authority, Objectivity, Currency and Coverage.

2. Monash University has an online tutorial on academic integrity that includes a short quiz. This is a great resource for ELL and middle school students that is simple yet effective.

3. Plaigiarism.org, sponsored by iParadigms LLC, is a resource that has information on plagiarism, types of plagiarism, tools, helpful sites, student’s materials as well as facts and statistics on plagiarism.

4. Indiana University School of Education provides a short quiz as well as how to recognize plagiarism, real world cases, practice tests and even a recognizing plagiarism certification test

5. The University of Mississippi Library has a ‘Plagiarism Tutorial’ that provides a pre-test, information, resources, post-test, and quizzes for students to indicate whether the sources are acceptable or plagiarized.  The tutorial is an adaption from Robert A. Harris's book The Plagiarism Handbook : Strategies for Preventing, Detecting, and Dealing with Plagiarism, Los Angeles, CA : Pyrczak Publishing, 2001.

6.  This interactive module from the 21st Century Information Fluency Project has students try to make the distinction between paraphrasing and plagiarism. This is a great tool to have students test their understanding of paraphrasing and plagiarism.

7.  The University of Minnesota ‘Teaching with Writing’ has multiple resources and ways to approach teaching students about proper citation and avoiding plagiarism. It also provides handouts and online tutorials for preventing plagiarism.

8. NoodleTools and NoodleBib is a tool that students can use for note-taking, outlining, citation, etc. NoodleTools recently became integrated with Google Docs so when students are finished they can do more than just export their works cited to Google Docs – they can create a new document linked to their NoodleTools account. 

9. Citation Machine is another tool that helps students put sources into proper works cited format. This helps students properly credit their information and respect intellectual property.


For teachers who want to utilize Plagiarism detectors within their classroom, I have found ‘plagium’  or Dupli Checker are both helpful tools to ensure students are putting resources into their own words.