STATEMENT ON PLAGIARISM
Academic
honesty and good scholarship are at the core of a
university education and will serve you well throughout
your career. Plagiarism is a form of cheating, defeats
the purpose of your studies and devalues your degree. As
such, it is a very serious academic offense that may
result in a failing grade for the course and possibly
suspension from the university. Plagiarism happens when
you use the ideas or words of others and present them as
your own without citing the original sources or when you
submit another person’s work as your own.
When you use quotations, the source
must be cited. The form and style of citation that is
acceptable varies according to the class, and you should
consult your professor if you have any questions. Direct
quotations always have quotation marks. If the quotation
is longer than four typed lines it should be indented
and single spaced. Use quotations sparingly and always
cite the source. When you take notes on readings always
use quotation marks when you copy directly from the
source. This will help prevent an inadvertent case of
plagiarism when you are referring to your notes.
In writing assignments you will be
discussing works, ideas and issues in your own words to
demonstrate your understanding. You should write in such
a way that gives authors credit for their ideas.
Therefore, you should cite when you summarize or
paraphrase an author’s work. Similarly, when using
specific facts or figures you should always cite your
sources, including books, articles, statistics, book
reviews, government documents, oral presentations,
unpublished written works and internet sources. Consult
with your professor on acceptable citation formats. If
your professor allows internet sources, you must cite
the web address, author and date of the source. Since
the internet makes it easier to plagiarize (as well as
to check-up on suspected plagiarism), professors may
require students to submit a printed copy of the
internet page(s) you use or the notes you took for
research. In addition, professors may ask for the call
numbers of books or articles you have included in your
bibliography. You therefore should hold onto all
research material and notes until your graded paper is
returned to you.
Where a professor decides to follow
academic disciplinary actions, including but not limited
to grade reduction in the course, he/she is obliged to
report the action taken in writing to the student, to
the department head and to the Vice President for
Academic Affairs. The Vice President will notify the
student as to what action has been taken and will
maintain a file for each student disciplined. If a
student wishes to appeal or dispute disciplinary action,
he/she can do so through the university’s academic
grievance structure. Should the student be successful,
all evidence of disciplinary action will be expunged.
For more information regarding University policy on
plagiarism see UNI’s 2004-2006 Program and Course Book.