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Autor principal: MacDonell, Colleen
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ709631
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author MacDonell, Colleen
author_facet MacDonell, Colleen
MacDonell, Colleen
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Problem of Plagiarism: Students Who Copy May Not Know They've Committed an Offense MacDonell, Colleen Plagiarism Citations (References) Ethical Instruction Grade 11 Grade 12 Foreign Countries With so many middle and high school students using subscription databases and the Web to complete assignments, there's a lot more cutting and pasting taking place than educators would like to see. And while it's understandable that teachers would be tempted to give failing grades to plagiarized work, it is unfair to students who may not even know they're committing an offense. The author suggests that media specialists d offer at least one class on plagiarism to each grade level to ensure that students understand its definition, why it's wrong, and how to avoid it. Can a one-time anti-plagiarism session be effective? Absolutely. It worked with the author's 11th- and 12th-grade students because they were engaged in a debate of the issue and then tested on their skills.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ709631
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2005
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Problem of Plagiarism: Students Who Copy May Not Know They've Committed an Offense
MacDonell, Colleen
Plagiarism
Citations (References)
Ethical Instruction
Grade 11
Grade 12
Foreign Countries
The Problem of Plagiarism: Students Who Copy May Not Know They've Committed an Offense MacDonell, Colleen Plagiarism Citations (References) Ethical Instruction Grade 11 Grade 12 Foreign Countries With so many middle and high school students using subscription databases and the Web to complete assignments, there's a lot more cutting and pasting taking place than educators would like to see. And while it's understandable that teachers would be tempted to give failing grades to plagiarized work, it is unfair to students who may not even know they're committing an offense. The author suggests that media specialists d offer at least one class on plagiarism to each grade level to ensure that students understand its definition, why it's wrong, and how to avoid it. Can a one-time anti-plagiarism session be effective? Absolutely. It worked with the author's 11th- and 12th-grade students because they were engaged in a debate of the issue and then tested on their skills.
title The Problem of Plagiarism: Students Who Copy May Not Know They've Committed an Offense
topic Plagiarism
Citations (References)
Ethical Instruction
Grade 11
Grade 12
Foreign Countries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ709631