Intentional plagiarism is when someone claims to own writing or a piece of work that they know has mainly been written by someone else or belongs to someone else. Examples of intentional plagiarism are buying a pre-written research paper from someone else, either electronically or by mail, or asking someone to write all or part of your paper for you. Changing just a few words from another person’s work, without citation, and passing it off as your work is also intentional plagiarism. Unintentional plagiarism, on the other hand, is not on purpose. It is when a writer does not follow the proper scholarly procedures of citing.
An example is when someone paraphrases without adding a citation and reference, or when a writer fails to quote an exact author’s word. Another of unintentional plagiarism is failure to capture, in your writing, the original author’s real thoughts, tone, and/or intentions. Intentional plagiarism is worse than unintentional plagiarism.
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To ensure that my papers meet the University’s standards of honesty,
I will properly cite and quote (using set scholarly procedures) information I got from other sources.
I will put the original person's exact words in quotes
Whenever I paraphrase and summarize work that has already been documented, I will cite and reference it.
Whenever I cannot paraphrase or summarize another author’s work, I will quote it and give credit to the source.
I will not buy pre-written papers and claim that they are mine.
Before submitting my papers, I will for plagiarism using a plagiarism scanner, and correct any sentences with plagiarism.
I will write my papers, and will not ask another student to write my papers for me.
I will be loyal to the original author’s thoughts, tone, and intentions when referring to their work
I will not use someone else’s idea and claim that I have come up with the idea.