Dr Laurence Nixon
Dawson College
While interviewing Laurence Nixon about his use of the Shared Drive at Dawson College, he mentioned the document we are reproducing below on plagiarism. Dr Nixon originally presented this information at an information session at the college. This is an example of the quality of information that circulates in the collegial system often without wider distribution. Profweb is pleased to be helping to remedy this situation.
A. Some general recommendations for the prevention of plagiarism
1. Educating students
We should not assume that students know what plagiarism is, nor that a brief discussion of it is sufficient.
An entire class could be spent on the topic, along with exercises in paraphrasing sources. On the one hand students have to be taught that individual words that they find in their sources do not have to be put in quotation marks; and on the other hand, they need to know that a borrowed sentence with one or two words replaced by synonyms is not acceptable. (This is a skill students will find useful the rest of their lives.)
2. Designing assignments that students will find interesting
It helps if students are provided with assignments that they will enjoy undertaking i.e., if it is something that interests them.
3. Alleviating deadline pressures for students
One of the reasons students are tempted to plagiarize is that they get into a time crunch. They fall behind in a few or all of their courses and the next thing they know it is almost the end of the semester and every teacher requires a major assignment at a date close to the end of term.
For example, we could tell the students that by February 10, they must submit an interview schedule; by February 23 the transcription of their interview with a local social activist; by March 9 their content analysis of the interview protocol; and by March 17 a one-page set of conclusions based on the content analysis.
4. Being accessible to students who need help in doing assignments
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Every teacher has office hours and provides students with his or her office phone number, and even with an e-mail address, but often the students who most need our help don't take advantage of these means. A strategy that I have found helpful is the following. As the due date for an assignment approaches, I ask if anyone in the class needs help. If there are such persons, I end the class ten or fifteen minutes early and spend the time with them, going over what it is they are having trouble completing. This strategy not only helps to avoid plagiarism, but it also reduces the number of students who never submit their assignments.
5. Getting ideas from colleagues on specific strategies that worked for them
My experience, during the relatively short time I have been at Dawson College, is that the faculty are extremely willing to share their teaching experience and materials with other teachers. New teachers especially should be made aware of the fact that they do not have to reinvent the wheel. Other teachers are usually only too happy to be of assistance. Having said that I would now like to describe thirteen strategies that I have found helpful in the past or that I am interested in using in the future.
Specific preventative strategies
1. Changing assignments from one semester to the next
The temptation to submit a previous student's work is clearly increased if an instructor uses the same assignment year after year. Inventing new assignments for a course that is regularly taught is a good preventative strategy and often the change only needs to be a minimal one.
2. Making clear the requirements of the assignment
One strategy for avoiding plagiarism is to make what is required very clear and precise. By doing this a lot of student (and faculty) frustration is avoided.
3. Requiring a specific topic or topics, especially unusual and narrowly focussed topics
Unusual topics with a clearly-defined narrow focus are good for avoiding plagiarism (Harris, 4).
4. Requiring specific sources, methods or theories
Some examples are the following:
5. Having the project relate to course content
In the description of the assignment an instructor can require the use of a source explained in class.
6. Requiring only recent secondary sources
On the outline for the assignment, it can be specified that the only sources that can be used are, let us say, those dated 2004 or later (Harris, 5).
7. Providing the students with a very specific outline for their paper
One way to prevent students from submitting a paper they obtained online, or from another student, is to provide an outline for the paper in which you identify the sections you want included and what you expect to have done in each section.
8. Using an assignment that is specifically related to the course textbook or to class discussion
Create an assignment that is specifically related to the course textbook or class activities (Bates & Fain).
9. Using local primary sources
It is very difficult to find papers on the internet which analyze things which are of primarily local interest. Some examples of paper topics using local primary sources are the following.
10. Having one or more sections of, e.g., the research report, written in class
Students can be asked to produce part of their assignment in class, and as a result they will have less to do on their own and will be more highly motivated to complete the assignment they have already begun (Leland, 2).
For almost any assignment, students could be asked to write some part of it in class and then submit it for correction to the teacher. Then when they turned in their completed paper, they could be required to attach the corrected part that was done in class.
A somewhat similar approach is to ask students to analyze a text, an image or a video in class by filling out a form or chart, which they then submit for correction. The corrected form or chart is then used as a basis for a written paper, which must be accompanied by the corrected form or chart, when submitted.
11. Requiring an oral presentation on some aspect of the research for the assignment
Oral presentations need not be longer than two or three minutes, but they could be required to contain an account of some part or aspect of the research or writing process (Harris, 5). Such orals could also provide occasions for the teacher to explain to the class as a whole some of the ways in which various obstacles can be overcome.
12. Having students write an in-class meta-learning essay on the day the paper is due
Let students know that on the day the paper is due they will be required to write an in-class reflection paper on how (and where) they found their sources; on the problems they encountered; and on the most important thing they learned about both the topic and the process of doing the assignment.
In addition to countering the tendency to plagiarize, a reflection paper of this kind can suggest to the instructor, ways in which the assignment can be improved for future use.
13. Requiring photocopies of sources
Ask students to provide photocopies of the pages in their sources that they refer to in footnotes or in parentheses. Note that if a student paraphrases an argument from an article he or she does not have to submit a photocopy of the entire article, just of the page on which the argument appears.
This strategy will discourage students from deliberately plagiarizing and also from providing fake citations. In addition, it will enable the instructor to see how successful the student has been in paraphrasing information or an argument from a source (Burwell et al; and Bates & Fain).
Acknowledgements
Most of what is written above is based on my own experience or on material obtained at teaching workshops in which I participated. However there are available online a number of articles on plagiarism, as well as lists of strategies to prevent plagiarism. Some of the ones I found helpful in organizing my reflections on the topic are the following: