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Sources Cited (but still plagiarized!)
| 1) “The Forgotten Footnote” |
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The writer mentions an author’s name for a source, but neglects to include
specific information on the location of the material referenced. This often masks other
forms of plagiarism by obscuring source locations.
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| 2) “The Misinformer” |
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The writer provides inaccurate information regarding the sources,
making it impossible to find them.
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| 3) “The Too-Perfect Paraphrase” |
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The writer properly cites a source, but neglects to put in quotation marks
text that has been copied word-for-word, or close to it. Although attributing the basic
ideas to the source, the writer is falsely claiming original presentation and interpretation
of the information.
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| 4) “The Resourceful Citer” |
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The writer properly cites all sources, paraphrasing and using quotations
appropriately. The catch? The paper contains almost no original work! It is sometimes
difficult to spot this form of plagiarism because it looks like any other well-researched
document.
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| 5) “The Perfect Crime” |
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Well, we all know it doesn’t exist. In this case, the writer properly
quotes and cites sources in some places, but goes on to paraphrase other arguments from
those sources without citation. This way, the writer tries to pass off the paraphrased
material as his or her own analysis of the cited material.
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