WHAT IS PLAGIARISM? (RESOURCES FOR STUDENTS AND TEACHERS)

Using other people's words, ideas, information, or creative works ( art, music, photography, etc. ) is permitted, but only if you approve the original author and give credit where credit is due is. Otherwise you are plagiarizing their work.

Unfortunately, many people do not understand the seriousness of copying someone else's work.

That's why today we will take a closer look at what is plagiarism , what are the different types of plagiarism, and what we will face when committing plagiarism.

What is Plagiarism?

Plagiarism is using someone else's words or ideas to try and pass them off as your own. According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, plagiarism is stealing (the ideas or words of another person), disguising them as your own, using them without trusting the source (the work of another person).

What are the most common types of plagiarism?

<img src="Plagiarism.webp" alt="What is Plagiarism">

The ten most common types of plagiarism are: 

  • Plagiarism clone
  • CTRL+C plagiarism
  • Plagiarism remix,
  • Plagiarism find and replace
  • Plagiarism recycling
  • Hybrid plagiarism
  • 404 error plagiarism
  • Aggregator plagiarism
  • Mashup plagiarism
  • Plagiarism re-tweet .

How to avoid plagiarism?

The use of external evidence is important in academic writing, but those sources must be properly cited and paraphrased. If the words (verbatim or paraphrase) or ideas in your work are not your own, you should properly cite the source and provide references. As a final check, we recommend using a tool such as Turnitin to check your work for possible plagiarism.

Is plagiarism illegal? Is it a crime?

Plagiarism is a crime even for criminals. However, in an academic context, it's a very serious offense that can get you into a lot of hot water when the situation calls for it.

It's not right to steal the work of others who work hard to create original work that people can enjoy. When referencing the words, ideas, thoughts, or arguments of others, cite the source and give credit where credit is due.

Plagiarism summary general format (and infographic)

Here's a quick overview of the most common types of plagiarism:

1. Clone Plagiarism

Copying an exact passage ( or the entire work ) and disguising it as your own. No citations.

2. CTRL+C Plagiarism

A copy of an exact passage ( or an entire job ) with minor changes to the content to create smooth transitions, making it look like the content wasn't copied. No citations.

3. Plagiarism Remix

A combination of paraphrase and copy sentences without citations. Minor changes have been made to the content to create a smooth transition.

4. Find and replace plagiarism

Copy exact passages ( or the entire work ) and change keywords throughout the work without changing the main part of the content. No citations.

5. Recycled plagiarism

Also known as self-plagiarism. Including reusing your own work or not citing yourself in subsequent works that reference the original. No citations.

6. Hybrid plagiarism

A combination of fully cited sources and copies of passages without citations.

7. 404 Error Plagiarism

Citing inaccurate or nonexistent sources to support your claims.

8. Aggregator Plagiarism

However, properly citing all sources of work and excluding original thoughts, ideas, or arguments.

9. Mashup plagiarism

Copy passages from multiple sources and mix them within a new work. No citations.

10. Altering Plagiarism

Properly citing all sources of the work, but relying too heavily on the wording and structure of the original work.

Online plagiarism Detection Tool

The internet is full of useful tools that can detect if essays, documents, and papers have been plagiarized. Here are some of the best:

Plagium is a basic but powerful free plagiarism detection tool that allows you to upload 5,000 characters of text, compare the text with other uploaded files and perform a quick scan or deep search. 

Grammar is an easy-to-use premium plagiarism checker that can detect plagiarism from billions of web pages on the internet and match it against the ProQuest academic database. 

Dupli Checker is a free and easy-to-use plagiarism checker tool. You can copy and paste text or upload files from your computer to check for plagiarism. Dupli Checker allows users to do 50 free checks every day. 

Plagiarisma is also a free, easy-to-use online tool that comes as Firefox. Google Chrome browser extension . You can copy and paste text or upload files from your computer to check for plagiarism.

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