Plagiarism Policy
Wilson Central High School will use the following as a means
for detecting and correcting plagiarism.
Students caught plagiarizing material by any means will receive a zero
for the assignment and possibly face disciplinary measures.
The following are clues that a paper contains plagiarized
material:
- Mixed
citation styles—for example, a student switches between MLA and APA
citation styles. Teachers need to
make sure they explain in the assignment which style is to be used.
- Lack
of references or quotations—this usually is an indication that
sections of the paper have been taken from general knowledge sources such
as encyclopedias or websites.
- Unusual
formatting—this may indicate a cut and paste job
- Off
topic—this is usually an indication the paper has been downloaded or
bought since it is either not on the assigned topic or it only minimally
addresses the assigned topic
- Signs
of datedness—either the student is using out-dated data or the paper
itself is old. Teachers should
require that most or all of the sources cited within the paper be dated
within the last 10 years.
- Anachronisms—If
the paper refers to long-past events as current, you can be certain the
paper has been recycled.
- Anomalies
of diction—indicates a cut and paste job from several sources. (The word choice/vocabulary throughout
the paper will change)
- Anomalies
of style—indicates a cut and paste job from several sources. (The writing style throughout the paper
will change)
- Smoking
guns—Obvious signs of plagiarism (bottom of the paper says “Thank you
for using TermPaperMania”)
The following constitutes plagiarism:
- Downloading,
buying, or copying another person’s paper. This includes those written by siblings and friends—this
also includes homework!!!!
- Copying
an article from a website or electronic database either in full or part
and turning it in as your paper.
- Cutting
and pasting to create a paper from several sources.
- Faking
a citation.
- Failing
to provide a citation.
- Failing
to match citations to entries on the works cited page.
- Rearranging
the author’s original words (this is NOT paraphrasing!!!)
- Using
the author’s original words but using a thesaurus to change words (again,
this is NOT paraphrasing!!!)
- Failing
to put quotation marks around directly quoted material.
- Placing
quotation marks around directly quoted material prematurely (continuing to
copy verbatim from the source after inserting quotation marks or a
citation.)