In Our Own Words: Plagiarism Interventions @ The University of Texas Libraries Michele Ostrow,...
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Transcript of In Our Own Words: Plagiarism Interventions @ The University of Texas Libraries Michele Ostrow,...
In Our Own Words:Plagiarism Interventions @
The University of Texas Libraries
Michele Ostrow, Meghan Sitar, and Cindy Fisher Library Instruction Services
Goals for Today
1. Learn about the nature and extent of plagiarism.
2. Learn about approachesto programs for plagiarism prevention that can be modified and adapted for other libraries.
3. Learn about ways to support teachers/faculty to create “plagiarism proof” assignments
Dalton, K. (2009). Goal Posts. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/katiedee/3644929496/
Defining Our Problem and Our Environment
Grayson, D. (2006). Problems are Opportunities. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/donnagrayson/195244498/
Defining Our Problem and Our Environment
Obstacle #1Faculty expected students to enter college with an understanding of how and when to cite their sources
Coles, S. (2008). Interrobang. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/stewf/2886229996/
Defining Our Problem and Our Environment
Obstacle #2Students were expected to uphold the university honor code, which claims academic integrity (and thus plagiarism) as part of it.
Coles, S. (2008). Interrobang. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/stewf/2886229996/
Defining Our Problem and Our Environment
Obstacle #3No one on campus was providing training to help either of our constituents demystify academic integrity generally and plagiarism specifically.
Coles, S. (2008). Interrobang. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/stewf/2886229996/
A Little Bit of Background
J, M. (2008). History (80/366). Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/chealion/2349587639/
Resulting Programs and Initiatives
• Peer-led Freshman Interest Group (FIG) Plagiarism Training• Drop-in Library Workshops• Online Plagiarism and
Citation Tutorials
College, C. L. B. (2011). Hands shooting sparks. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/11303774@N08/5390215267/
Potential Partners
• Teaching faculty and graduate students• Undergraduates• One-on-one• Student organizations
• Campus departments• Student-focused help
centers
fountain, gem. (2007). holding hands. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/23236076@N06/2226398871/
Size Doesn’t Matter
Abraham, S. (2007) Size doesn’t matter. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/shimrit/1479655102/
Potential Stakeholders
• Who values your work?• Who has a stake in
student success?• How can you engage
them?
Ahlefeldt-Laurvig, F. (2010). Statistics about statistics about... Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/hikingartist/4769199272/
Possibilities for Outreach
• Professional development seminars• Teacher in-service
trainings• Student groups, such
as student government• New teacher or faculty
orientations
Thorn, J. (2005). reaching. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/joethorn/290760357/
Think about the situation at your own institution, including potential stakeholders and partners.
Then discuss your situation with your neighbor for additional insights.
Working with students
McNally, S. (n.d.). “Plagiarism: Getting in Trouble for Something You Didn’t Do.” - Threadless.com. Retrieved April 13, 2011, from http://www.threadless.com/product/2351/Plagiarism_Getting_in_Trouble_for_Something_You_Didn_t_Do
Training Peer Mentors for First-Year Interest Groups (FIGS)
Online TutorialDrop-in Workshops
Defining the problem
“One of the problems as written was ‘Captain Kirk was sitting on the bridge of the USS Enterprise…’”
Plagiarism of the Week featuring Patton Oswalt & Barack Obama. (2010). . Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4OqBMTMb3dE&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Self-plagiarism
Deja vu: Medline duplicate publication database. (n.d.). . Retrieved April 11, 2011, from http://dejavu.vbi.vt.edu/dejavu/
What is the multiple submission policy?
• Reusing your own papers without permission is considered scholastic dishonesty
• “You may not submit a substantially similar paper or project for credit in two (or more) courses unless expressly authorized to do so by your instructor(s).”
Section 11-802(b) of the Institutional Rules on Student Services and Activities, http://registrar.utexas.edu/catalogs/gi07-08/app/appc03.html
Why is it a problem?
Callahan, D. (2004). The Cheating Culture: Why More Americans Are Doing Wrong to Get Ahead (1st ed.). Orlando: Harcourt.
Image from
Amazon.com
2008/09 @ UT
421 Academic Cases Referred145 Cases of Plagiarism
http://deanofstudents.utexas.edu/sjs/downloads/discproc_academic.pdf
2008/09 @ UT
44.9% of academic violators had a GPA of 3.0 or higher
http://deanofstudents.utexas.edu/sjs/downloads/discproc_academic.pdf
2008/09 @ UTInternational students represented as ethnicity
U of Minnesota: 85% of cases involve international students
Holt, S. (2010, December 17). Responding to Non-Native Speakers of English. Teaching with Writing: University of Minnesota. Retrieved April 10, 2011, from
http://writing.umn.edu/tww/responding_grading/nonnative/nn_speakers.html
Storytelling: Young writers
Kulish, N. (2010, February 11). Author, 17, Says It’s “Mixing,” Not Plagiarism. The New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/12/world/europe/12germany.html
Image from
Jezebel.com
In 2010, 17 year-old author Helene Hegemann was accused of lifting an entire page from a lesser-known author’s work.
She claims it’s “mixing,” not plagiarism.
Storytelling: Professional writersIn February 2010, Gerald Posnerresigned from his position at TheDaily Beast after Slate identified several instances of plagiarism inhis work. Posner claimed that the“warp speed” of publishing on theweb and mistakes in identifyingthe words of others in hiselectronic notes led to“inadvertent” plagiarism.
.
Image from
Posner.com
Posner, Gerald. “My Resignation from The Daily Beast.” The Posner File 10 Feb 2010. Web. 15 Feb 2010.
Shafer, Jack. “Plagiarism at the Daily Beast: Gerald Posner concedes lifting from the Miami Herald.” Slate Magazine 5 Feb 2010. Web. 15 Feb 2010
In 2005, a former Ohio University graduate student uncovered 55 master’s theses from the engineering department that appeared to include plagiarism. In 2007, the University revoked the master’s degree of one of the accused. It was recommended that 12 other of the theses be rewritten.
Wasley, P. (2006, August 11). The Plagiarism Hunter. The Chronicle of Higher Education, A8.
Wasley, P. (2007, April 6). Ohio U. Revokes Degree for Plagiarism. The Chronicle of Higher Education, A15.
Storytelling: Academics
Storytelling: Popular images•2008: The Associated Press contacted HOPE poster artist Shepard Fairey, demanding payment for uncredited and unlicensed use of the AP photo used as the basis of the poster image and threatening a copyright infringement suit.•2009: Fairey filed a suit against the AP requesting a declarative judgment that he was protected under fair use guidelines.•The AP and Fairey settled in January 2011.
Italie, Hillel. “AP Accuses Obama Artist Shepard Fairey Of Copyright Infringement.” The Huffington Post 4 Feb 2009. Web. 15 Feb 2010.
Kennedy, Randy. “Shepard Fairey and The A.P. Settle Legal Dispute.” The New York Times 12 Jan. 2011. Web. 1 Mar. 2011.
Pogrebin, Robin. “Artist Is Facing Criminal Probe Over His Use of Obama Photo.” The New York Times 27 Jan 2010. NYTimes.com. Web. 15 Feb 2010.
AP Photo/Mannie Garcia/ Shepard Fairey
Storytelling: Sources for Discussion Starters•Wikipedia: List of Plagiarism
Controversies• Cheating Culture Blog: Plagiarism• Regret the Error Blog: Plagiarism• Design examples from You Thought We Wouldn’t Notice•Music examples from Gelf Magazine
Storytelling Activity: Discussion Starters• Review the handout of potential
discussion starters• Which stories would resonate with your
students or patrons? Why?• Do you have other stories we should add
to this list?• Turn to the person next to you and share
your thoughts.
Sharing Strategies & Expertise
Strategies: Tutorial
Strategies: Tutorial
Strategies: FIGs and Drop-ins
Harris, R. A. (2001). The Plagiarism Handbook: Strategies for Preventing, Detecting, and Dealing With Plagiarism (1st ed.). Pyrczak Publishing.
Image from
Amazon.com
Cite It? Game
Source for dry-erase table tents - $14.99 for 50
YES on one
side
NO on the other
Cite it?During a lecture in your RTF class, your professor mentions the results of a study she is about to publish about the impact of television on toddlers. You use the information in your paper for that class.
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
Cite it?During a lecture in your RTF class, your professor mentions the results of a study she is about to publish about the impact of television on toddlers. You use the information in your paper for that class. Cite it! Even though the professor knows whatyou are talking about because it is her study, you still need to cite it because it isn’t your work oryour idea.
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
Cite it?
You quote from an interview you conductedwith your grandmother.
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
Cite it?
You quote from an interview you conductedwith your grandmother.
Cite it! Whenever you quote someone else’swords, you must cite them, regardless of yourrelationship to that person.
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
Cite it?
You are writing a paper for your History class about World War II and mention that the US entered the war after Pearl Harbor was bombed.
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
Cite it?
You are writing a paper for your History class about World War II and mention that the US entered the war after Pearl Harbor was bombed.
Do not have to cite it. This is consideredcommon knowledge that can be found in manysources.
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
Cite it?
You do a survey of students on campus, askingabout their favorite Austin restaurants. Youreport on your findings in your paper.
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
Cite it?
You do a survey of students on campus, askingabout their favorite Austin restaurants. Youreport on your findings in your paper.
Do not have to cite it. When you do originalresearch, you do not cite yourself if the researchis conducted for the paper. (If you already published the research elsewhere, you wouldneed to provide a citation to that publication.)
Harris, Robert A. "Using Sources Quiz." The Plagiarism Handbook. Los Angeles: Pyrczak Publishing, 2001. 143-144.
You be the judge: Is this plagiarism?You receive your assignment for a class, and realize that you can write your paper on the same topic that you wrote on for another class last semester. Because of the requirements of the assignment, the focus of the paper will be different, but you can use many of the same sources you already read just two months ago.
You be the judge: Is this plagiarism?No, this is not plagiarism. Using the same sources to support or inform your arguments in the new paper does not constitute plagiarism. If you were to incorporate sections of your old paper into your new paper without citing the previous paper, you would be committing self-plagiarism by not acknowledging your own earlier work, regardless of whether or not that work was published.
Sources for Instructional Content
• FIG Plagiarism Activity from the UT Libraries• All About Plagiarism Tutorial from the
UT Libraries• Understanding Citations Tutorial from
the UT Libraries• Handouts from the UT Undergraduate
Writing Center
Sources for Instructional Content• ACRL Instruction Section’s Peer-Reviewed
Instructional Materials Online Database (PRIMO)• Plagiarism in the Digital Age: Voices from the Front
Lines: What’s Happening in High Schools Today? from Plagiarism.org (makers of TurnItIn)
• Harris, R. A. (2001). The Plagiarism Handbook: Strategies for Preventing, Detecting, and Dealing With Plagiarism (1st ed.). Pyrczak Publishing.
• Dow, M. (2008). Teaching Ethical Behavior in the Global World of Information and the New AASL Standards. School Library Media Activities Monthly, 25(4), 49-52.
Plagiarism Proofing: The Faculty/Instructor Connection
jobadge. (2010). #4IPC2010_wordle_tweets. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/24612276@N05/4732885512/
Who In Your Class Might Plagiarize?
miyagusku, renata. (2010). the intellectual thief. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/rmiya/4357139416/
Why Do Students Plagiarize?
Whittaker, L. (2009). It’s Arguable Whether I Had Any in the First Place. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/angelic0devil6/3997705041/
Definition of Plagiarism
Gao, B. ("call me D. (2009). Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/gaobo/3956142890/
UT-Austin’s Definition of Plagiarism
“Plagiarism includes, but is not limited to, the appropriation of, buying, receiving as a gift, or
obtaining by any means material that is attributable in whole or in part to another
source, including words, ideas, illustrations, structure, computer code, and other expression or media, and presenting that material as one’s own academic work being offered for credit.”
Section 11-802(d) of the Institutional Rules on Student Services and Activities, http://registrar.utexas.edu/catalogs/gi07-08/app/appc03.html
What constitutes plagiarism?
Bartel, T. (2011). Copy-Paste. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/avatar-1/5499235063/
What Instructors & Faculty Can Do
Rebel, D. (2004). PlaGiaRisM. Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/ad4evr/2128607/
What Instructors & Faculty Can Do
• Model good behavior• Include a statement/policy for your course,
with clear expectations and consequences• Talk about it in class• Don’t assume knowledge of how to research,
write or cite• Create good assignments
Original Assignment
Write a 5-7 page paper arguing either for or against gun control.
What you know:There is currently a hotly debated bill in the Texas
legislature about whether or not to allow students to carry concealed handguns on campus.
Ideas to Improve Assignment
• Localize: make it about Texas or your campus. You may want to ask them to take a certain perspective (student, campus administrator, Texas legislator).
• Sources: require a certain number and type of sources and specify citation style
• Rubric: include a rubric that explains what an A paper, B paper, C paper looks like
Ideas to Improve Assignment
Scaffold: •Have students explore all sides of the controversy and turn in an annotated bibliography using sources representing different sides of the issue •Have students turn in a brief proposal stating the argument they plan to make and the evidence they plan to use•Have students turn in an outline, draft and then final paper
Assignment Design
Paper Topics•Narrow, specific topics•Current events•Personal experience•Assign compare/contrast papers•Localize the topic
Assignment Design
Process:•Pre-approval of research topics•No last minute changes•Create a research plan•Scaffold the assignment•Research log/portfolio•Post-assignment reflection
Assignment Design
Sources:•Variety of types •Recent •Assign some sources•Citation style
Assignment Design
Additional tips:•Change assignments every year•Make sure the assignment is meaningful and students know why it matters•Explain your assessment procedures
Questions?Contact us at