Why is plagiarism a concern for students, instructors, and professionals?
To get help with avoiding plagiarism in your own work, see the help videos and handouts below, get help from a librarian, or make an appointment with the Kirkwood Writing Center.
This document is a quick guide to good practices that will keep your research project and all your resources organized, which will help you avoid unintended plagiairsm. It will also help you keep track of your citations and in-text citations.
Source: Reproduced with permission of Erin K. Elgin, Business Instructor on Iowa City Campus.
Kirkwood students are responsible for authenticating any assignment submitted to an instructor. If asked, you must be able to produce proof that the assignment you submit is actually your own work. Therefore, we recommend that you engage in a verifiable working process on assignments. Keep copies of all drafts of your work, make photocopies of research materials, write summaries of research materials, hang onto Writing Center receipts, keep logs or journals of your work on assignments and papers, and save drafts or versions of assignments under individual file names on your computer.
The inability to authenticate your work, should an instructor request it, is sufficient ground for failing the assignment. In addition to requiring students to authenticate their work, Kirkwood Community College instructors may employ various other means of ascertaining authenticity – such as engaging in Internet searches, creating quizzes based on student work, or requiring students to explain their work or process orally.
Procedure and penalties for confirmed cheating and plagiarism are:
First Offense: The instructor will have the authority to issue a failure on the paper, exam or assignment on which cheating or plagiarism was established. A record of the incident will be reported to the dean of students.
Second Offense: Upon confirmation of the student’s second offense by the dean of students, the instructor will have the authority to issue a failure for the assignment or for the course in which the second incident occurred.
Third Offense: Upon confirmation of the student’s third offense by the dean of students, the student will be subject to suspension from the college for one semester.
It is usually not acceptable to reuse papers you've already written for a different assignment or a different course. If you have specific questions about re-using something you've previously written for credit within another assignment, please ask your instructor for guidance.
The Sixth Edition of the American Psychological Association (APA) Publication Manual addresses this issue in the world of professional research and publishing, in what it calls "self-plagiarism". The following guidelines are adapted from the APA Manual, page 16:
Kirkwood Library Services has developed, along with individual faculty from across the college, a collection of plagiarism tutorials and quizzes that can be embedded directly into your Talon course and assigned to students. See our Faculty Services guide for more information.
Library Services subscribes to a set of research tutorials which include a modules on Academic Integrity and on Citing Sources. These tutorials and accompanying quizzes may be embedded in your Talon courses. See our Faculty Services guide for more information.
There are many resources for teachers to support student understanding of plagiarism: Avoiding Plagiarism
Kirkwood now subscribes to the Turnitin service, which can check student documents for possible plagiarism. More information on this service, and directions on how to use it in your Talon course, are available in Kirkwood's Talon User Guide.
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