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Plagiarism Workshop: Plagiarism Workshop

This guides addresses plagiarism in a number of ways. Primarily it serves to educate in-coming students on what constitutes plagiarism and informs them of the policies and procedures for those students accused of acts of plagiarism.

Schedule A Plagiarism Workshop

Schedule a plagiarism workshop using the online request form

Workshop Information

The workshop is divided into several parts:

Observations: Students are asked questions related to how they feel (and how they think) about plagiarism within their peer group. In a classroom setting, a clicker system (student response system) is often used to compare student responses to reported studies. This guide uses polling to allow students to respond anonymously to questions.

Policy and Procedure: Kent State's definition for plagiarism is introduced and a description of the policy is presented. Students walk through the process step-by-step so that they have a firm understanding of what happens to students, what the university's (instructor's) responsibiities are, and what rights students have when accused of plagiarizing.

"Plagiarism School": This concept, which began on the Stark Campus in the spring of 2006, is presented. Modeled after "Traffic School" it serves to provide a means of mitigating sanctions against students accused of committing plagiarism, while also providing a way to reeducate and rehabilitate them.

Avoiding Plagiarism: Practical advice is given to students along with a brief discussion on techniques they can employ while conducting research to avoid some of the pitfalls of committing plagiarism. Reference to "Double-dipping" is also made because it is part of the policy and (although technically not plagiarism) the sanctions for doing it are the same as if the student plagiarized.

Case Studies: Several case studies are presented as a means for demonstrating the ways students often commit acts of plagiarism. If used in the classroom, these case studies open the door for discussing plagiarism and how these incidences might be treated according to the policy at Kent State. Students should be made aware that, while based on actual cases involving accusations of plagiarism, they are fictionalized and not a test of knowledge. Instead, polite disagreement is encouraged as a means for wider discourse on the topic.

 

Librarians

Melissa BauerOnline Learning Librarian
Assistant Professor, University Libraries
330-244-3320 | Campus 53320
mbauer10@kent.edu

Theodore Guedel
Reference and Instruction Librarian
Assistant Professor, University Libraries
330-244-3322 | Campus 53322
tguedel@kent.edu

In Class Presentation