Nicholas Kollert
English 1510 148
Questioning a Construct
September 17, 2012
Questioning A Construct: Plagiarism
Intro
Plagiarism
as we know it today has been around since the very first times we as a
civilization had begun writing our thoughts down on paper. The word plagiarism
itself came from the Latin root word plagiarius, which literally means kidnapper,
seducer, or plunderer this definition of plagiarism came about in the early
fifteenth century. There are a few types of plagiarism out there today; the
different types include direct plagiarism, Mosaic plagiarism, absent citations,
or not knowing when to reference. Most of these types of plagiarisms are
showing up all over academic learning institutions and heavy punishments are
being handed out to violators. In most cases these forms of plagiarism could be
avoided easily if only the student knew the inappropriate and appropriate ways
to deal with the touchy subject of plagiarism.
Synthesize
Plagiarism today is becoming an enormous problem in high
schools and colleges all across the world. The stats have shown that there is
an increase of the percentage of students at these institutions that plagiarize
which can easily be avoided. Rebecca Moore Howard says, “Plagiarism is almost
like rape to where the original author is violated.” In this extreme example
Rebecca Moore Howard is trying to say that you can’t just steal other authors
work without giving proper credit, but Howard uses a much more derogatory tone
of how she describes plagiarism. In my other cases though “College professors
are more two minded about plagiarism in the sense that they punish students for
taking other authors works but at the same time say that no writing is ever
fully original” states an article from The
Chronicle. In both cases though they agree that
plagiarism could easily be evaded with proper techniques to avoid plagiarism.
Nick,
ReplyDelete"Rape" is indeed a strong word, though it has interesting implications alongside the origin of the word plagiarism. I'd suggest incorporating Porter into the discourse. So how are students being informed of what to do and not to do? Are citation formats, like MLA, helpful? Bring in some more authorities and figure out how to use them the way Howard and others desire. And where do you stand? And why?