Fraud
Intentional "borrowing, purchasing, or otherwise obtaining work
composed by someone else and submitted"2 under another's
name. |
Patchwriting
Not always thought of as academic dishonesty, patchwriting is "half-copy[ing]
the author's sentences . . .by plug-ging your synonyms into the author's
sentence structure."3 It can occur whether or not
the original author is cited. |
Failure to Cite
Summarizing, paraphrasing or using author's exact language without
properly citing the source using footnotes, endnotes or parenthetical
notes.
|
Failure to Quote
Using original author's exact language without using quotation marks
or block quotation. Often results from students' inexperience with
the material or discourse community
|
1 Model taken from Rebecca Moore Howard,
"Plagiarism, Authorships, and the Academic Death Penalty,"
College English 57 (Nov. 1995), 788-806.
2 Ibid., 799.
3 Diana Hacker, The Bedford Handbook, (New York: Bedford/St.
Martin's, 1998), 572. |
|
Visualization by Renoir Gaither
Shapiro Undergraduate Library
University of Michigan
|