Stolen Legacy: Greek Philosophy is Stolen Egyptian Philosophy
Winter 2013. MEMORIAL university --Cheating --Impersonating --Plagiarism --Theft --Use or...
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Transcript of Winter 2013. MEMORIAL university --Cheating --Impersonating --Plagiarism --Theft --Use or...
MEMORIALuniversity
--Cheating--Impersonating--Plagiarism--Theft--Use or distribution of stolen materials--Submitting false information--Submitting work for one course that is being or has been submitted for another course--Failure to follow guidelines for ethics
5.11.4 Academic Offences
plagiarismuniversity calendar description
Plagiarism: Plagiarism is the act of presenting
the ideas or works of another as one's own. This
applies to all material such as theses, essays,
laboratory reports, work term reports, design
projects, seminar presentations, statistical data,
computer programs, and research results. The
properly acknowledged use of sources is an
accepted and important part of scholarship. Use
of such material without acknowledgment,
however, is contrary to accepted norms of
academic behaviour.
MEMORIALuniversity
Resubmission of work with a reduction in grade
Reduction of grade
Rescinding of scholarships
Probation
Suspension
Expulsion
Rescinding of degree
5.11.5.4 & 5.11.6.4
penalties
terminology
Source
Acknowledgement of Sources
Citation Documentation In-Text Citation Footnote Endnote Reference Works Cited Bibliography
Quotation
Paraphrase
Summary
Common Knowledge
the act of presenting the ideas or works of another as one's own
• Reproducing information that you read in an article, textbook, website, etc., but not acknowledging the source.
• Quoting but failing to properly punctuate and cite sources.
• Paraphrasing information and failing to cite sources.
• Cutting and pasting large excerpts, small excerpts, even unique phrases and words and not acknowledging the source.
• Submitting work that you purchased from another writer.
Best practices…
Click icon to add picture• Get as much direction as
possible for each assignment:• How long should it
be?• Is research involved?• How many sources?• What style of
documentation?
• Observe how scholars in your field use sources, and imitate their practices.
• When in doubt, cite.
• Use writing resources (like the Learning Centre) to have an expert review your writing with you.
Acknowledging Your Sources There is a well
established literature within theoretical economics of consumption as a means to signal status, first described by Veblen (1899) and formalized in work by Basu (1989), and more recently by Bagwell and Bernheim (1996).
In an essay on urban legends, Jan Harold Brunvand notes that "some individuals make a point of learning every recent rumor or tale . . . and in a short time a lively exchange of details occurs" (78).
Learning Centre, AS [email protected]
To meet with the writing assistant: Beverly