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Plagiarism is a serious breach of academic integrity. The University at Albany does not look lightly upon it, nor do I. If you plagiarize a paper, you will receive a failing grade for it and will not be allowed to re-write. Moreover, according to university policy, it must be reported to the dean's office. Below is a detailed description of what constitutes plagiarism: if you have questions about this, do not hesistate to ask!

PLAGIARISM
[From Student's Book of College English by David Skwire and Frances Chitwood (New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc.: 1981), pp. 356-358.]

Plagiarism is the use of facts, opinions, and language taken from another writer without acknowledgement. In its most sordid form, plagiarism is outright theft or cheating: a person has another person write the paper or simply steals a magazine article or section of a book and pretends to have produced a piece of original writing. Far more common is plagiarism in dribs and drabs: a sentence here and there, a paragraph here and there. Unfortunately, small- time theft is still theft, and small-time plagiarism is still plagiarism.


ORIGINAL PASSAGE

In 1925 Dreiser produced his masterpiece, the massively impressive An American Tragedy. By this time--thanks largely to the tireless propagandizing on his behalf by the influential maverick critic H.L. Mencken and by others concerned with a realistic approach to the problems of American life--Dreiser's fame had become secure. He was seen as the most powerful and effective destroyer of the genteel tradition that had dominated popular American fiction in the post-Civil War period, spreading its soft blanket of provincial, sentimental romance over the often ugly realities of life in modern, industrialized, urban America. Certainly there was nothing genteel about Dreiser, either as a man or novelist. He was the supreme poet of the squalid, a man who felt the terror, the pity, and the beauty underlying the American dream. With an eye at once ruthless and compassionate, he saw the tragedy inherent in the American Success ethic; the soft underbelly, as it were, of the Horatio Alger rags-to-riches myth so appealing to the optimistic American imagination [Richard Freedman, The Novel (New York: Newsweek Books, 1975), pp. 104-105].

STUDENT VERSION

COMMENTS

There was nothing genteel about Dreiser, either as a man or novelist. He was the supreme poet of the squalid, a man who felt the terror, the pity, and the beauty underlying the American dream.

Obvious plagiarism: word-for-word repetition without acknowledgement.

There was nothing genteel about Dreiser, either as a man or novelist. He was the supreme poet of the squalid, a man who felt the terror, the pity, and the beauty underlying the American dream.
____________

Bibliography

Freedman, Richard. The Novel. New York: Newsweek Books, 1975.

Still plagiarism. The citation alone does not help. The language is the original author's and only quotation marks around the whole passage plus a citation and attribution would be correct.

"There was nothing genteel about Dreiser, either as a man or novelist. He was the supreme poet of the squalid, a man who felt the terror, the pity, and the beauty underlying the American dream."
____________

Bibliography

Freedman, Richard. The Novel. New York: Newsweek Books, 1975.

Still plagiarism. The citation and quotation marks alone do not help. Attribution is also necessary.

According to Freedman, "There was nothing genteel about Dreiser, either as a man or novelist. He was the supreme poet of the squalid, a man who felt the terror, the pity, and the beauty underlying the American dream."
____________

Bibliography

Freedman, Richard. The Novel. New York: Newsweek Books, 1975.

Correct. All three necessary conditions are met: attribution, quotation marks around the direct quotation, and a bibliographic citiation..

Nothing was genteel about Dreiser as a man or as a novelist. He was the poet of the squalid and felt that terror, pity, and beauty lurked under the American dream.

Plagiarism. A few words have been changed or omitted, but by no stretch of the imagination is the student writer using his own language. Furthermore, there is no attribution nor a citation.

According to Freedman, "Nothing was genteel about Dreiser as a man or as a novelist. He was the poet of the squalid and felt that terror, pity, and beauty lurked under the American dream."
__________

Bibliography

Freedman, Richard. The Novel. New York: Newsweek Books, 1975.

Not quite plagiarism, but incorrect and inaccurate. Quotation marks indicate exact repetition of what was originally written. The student writer, however, has changed some of the original and is not entitled to use quotation marks.

According to Freedman, nothing was genteel about Dreiser as a man or as a novelist. He was "the poet of the squalid" and felt that terror, pity, and beauty lurked under the American dream.
__________

Bibliography

Freedman, Richard. The Novel. New York: Newsweek Books, 1975.

Correct. Quotation marks indicate Freedman's exact words of a significant partial quote. The student also uses attribution and has a citation. The paraphrase does not distort Freedman's original meaning.

"Certainly there was nothing genteel about Dreiser," Freedman writes, "either as a man or novelist. He was the supreme poet of the squalid, a man who felt the terror, the pity, and the beauty underlying the American dream."
___________

Bibliography

Freedman, Richard. The Novel. New York: Newsweek Books, 1975.

Correct. The quotation marks acknowledge the words of the original writer. The citation is also needed, of course, to give the reader specific information about the source of the quote. The attribution is as essential as the citation and the quotation marks.

By 1925 Dreiser's reputation was firmly established, according to Freedman. The reading public viewed Dreiser as one of the main contributors to the downfall of the "genteel tradition" in American literature. Dreiser, "the supreme poet of the squalid," looked beneath the bright surface of American life and values and described the frightening and tragic elements, the "ugly realities," so often overlooked by other writers.
__________

Bibliography

Freedman, Richard. The Novel. New York: Newsweek Books, 1975.

Correct. The student writer uses his own words to summarize most of the original passage. The citation and attribution shows that the ideas expressed come from the original writer, not from the student. The few phrases kept from the original passage are carefully enclosed in quotation marks.

 

Gordon College’s Policy on Academic Dishonesty

(From the Gordon College Academic Catalog.)

 

Gordon College recognizes honesty and integrity as being necessary to the academic function of Gordon College.  The following regulations are promulgated in the interest of protecting the equity and validity of Gordon College’s grades and degrees and to assist students in developing standards and attitudes appropriate to intellectual life.

 

1.  No student shall receive or attempt to receive assistance not authorized in the preparation of any laboratory reports, examinations, essays, themes, term papers, computer software, or similar requirements to be submitted for credit as part of a course or in fulfillment of a College requirement.

2.  No student shall knowingly give, or attempt to give, unauthorized assistance to another in the preparation of any laboratory reports, examinations, essays, themes, term papers, computer software, or similar requirements to be submitted for credit as part of a course or in fulfillment of a College requirement.

3.  Plagiarism is prohibited. It is assumed that the written work submitted for evaluation and credit is the student's own unless appropriately acknowledged. Such acknowledgment should occur whenever one directly quotes another person's actual words, appropriates another's ideas, opinions, or theories even when they are paraphrased, and whenever one borrows facts, statistics, or other illustrative materials unless the information is common knowledge.

4.  No student shall sell, give, lend, or otherwise furnish to any unauthorized person any material which can be shown to contain the questions or answers to any examination scheduled to be given at some subsequent date or time in any course of study offered by the College, excluding questions and answers from tests previously administered.

5.  No student shall take or attempt to take, steal, or otherwise procure in an unauthorized manner any material pertaining to the conduct of a class, including tests, examinations, grade change forms, grade rolls, roll books, laboratory equipment, library materials, etc.

6.  No student shall falsify any fact presented in any laboratory reports, research, examinations, essays, themes, term papers, or similar requirements to be submitted for credit as part of a course or in fulfillment of a College requirement.

 

Any act of academic dishonesty by a student may result in a grade of F or zero for the relevant assignment. An act of academic dishonesty may also result in one or more of the following consequences:

 

1.  a failing grade for the course;

2.  charges filed against a student for violation of the Student Code of Conduct; and/or

3.  other measures as deemed appropriate by the instructor.

 

 

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