Detailed LP Plagiarism

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Union College of Laguna

Sta. Cruz, Laguna

Detailed Lesson Plan in English for Grade 11


Plagiarism

Prepared and Demonstrated by:


Chara Ann O. De Castro
Student Teacher

Noted by:
John Carlos Alvarez, LPT
Cooperating Teacher

Carmelita Reyes Mirandilla, EdD


Student Teachers’ Coordinator

Rogelio S. Caluza, PhD, EdD


Dean, School of Arts and Sciences, Education Studies
Detailed Lesson Plan in English for Grade 11
I. Objectives
During the teaching learning process, the students are able to:
a. Define and identify the meaning of Plagiarism Commented [JCA1]: Define plagiarism and identify a
plagiarized text
b. Determine ethical significance of Plagiarism
c. Formulate original text to paraphrase Commented [JCA2]: Paraphrase texts as a method in avoiding
plagiariasm

II. Subject Matter


a. Topic: Plagiarism
b. Reference: Power point
c. Material: ICT materials, spaghetti noodle, clay, tarpapel, marker
d. Values Integration: Being veracious to other.

III. Procedure
Teacher’s Activity Student’s Activity
A. Preliminaries Activity

1. Prayer
Before we start our discussion, let us (The student will lead the prayer)
pray.

2. Greetings
Good morning class! Good morning ma’am!
Before taking your seats, kindly
arrange your chairs.
You may now sit.

3. Checking of attendance
(Class monitor) is everyone present (The class monitor will check the
today? attendance)

4. Review: “Name me”


Before we proceed to our discussion let
us have a short review, last time we
discuss about the types of qualitative
research.

Again what are the types of qualitative (Students answer may vary)
research?

I have here instagram photos all you


need to do is write and explain the
photo if what type of qualitative
research it is.

Is that clear? Yes it is.

(Students answer may vary)

B. Development of the lesson

1. Motivation
“Copy Cut”

Mechanics: The teacher will group the


class into two. There will be a picture
shown on the TV, in which the two
teams will try to copy the poses of the
people on the picture within 15
seconds. Whoever gets 2 points first
will be the winner.
Yes it is.
Is that clear?

(Students will copy the pictures)

Is it easy to copy those pictures? (Students answer may vary)

2. Activity
Learning Task: Build me up!

Now you are going to make an Eiffel


Tower using a spaghetti noodle and
clay.

Mechanics: The teacher will group the


class into three groups. You need to
build an Eiffel Tower within five
minutes.

The Criteria are:


30% Creativity
30% Cooperation
40% Presentation
What is your observation from that (Students answer may vary)
activity?

What is your strategy to make an Eiffel (Students answer may vary)


tower?

Do you think you really copy the Yes/No ma’am


tower?

From that activity what do you think is Copying ma’am.


our topic for today?

Copying maybe.

What do you call when you copy or Plagiarism ma’am.


steal someone’s work?

Yes very good! Our topic for today is


about Plagiarism.

3. Analysis/Discussion

Any idea what is Plagiarism? (Students answer may vary)

Very good!

Plagiarism is the act of stealing


someone else's work and attempting to
"pass it off" as your own. This can
apply to anything, from term papers to
photographs to songs, even ideas!

Do you think plagiarism is a bad thing? (Students answer may vary)


Why?

Yes it is a bad thing. Here are the


reasons why plagiarism is a bad thing.

1. Because it infringes academic


ethics and academic norms.
2. Because it is a form of theft and a
type of fraud.
3. Because plagiarists ultimately cheat
themselves.
4. Because plagiarists cheat their
fellow students.
5. Because plagiarism reflects
incompetence.

Now here are types of Plagiarism.

a. Copying - If you copy someone


else's work and put your name on it,
you have plagiarized.
Example: "Children are totally
insensitive to their parents' shyness;
it is the rare child who labels a
parent shy [...] This is
understandable, since parents are in
positions of control and authority in
their homes and may not reveal
their shy side to their children.
Also, since shyness is viewed as
undesirable by many children, it
may be threatening to think of
parents in these terms. At this
young age, the parent is still
idealized as all-knowing and all-
powerful - - not dumb, ugly, or
weak."
Zimbardo, Philip G. (1977).
Shyness: What it is, what to do
about it. Cambridge, Mass.: Perseus
Books.

If a writer copies, word for word,


the text from Dr. Zimbardo's book
and does not acknowledge in any
way that it was Dr. Zimbardo's
work, the writer has committed
plagiarism.

b. Patchwork - This occurs when the


plagiarizer borrows the "phrases
and clauses from the original source
and weaves them into his own
writing" without putting the phrases
in quotation marks or citing the
author.
Example: With regard to children,
they are totally insensitive to their
parents' shyness. Rare is the child
who labels a parent shy. It is easy to
understand this, since the parents
are in positions of control and
authority in their own homes and
may not necessarily show their shy
side to their children. Moreover,
since shyness is viewed as
unfavorable by most children, it
may be threatening for them to
think of their parents in that light.
During the formative years, the
parent is idealized as all-knowing
and all-powerful -- not dumb, ugly,
or weak.

c. Paraphrasing - This occurs when


the plagiarizer paraphrases or
summarizes another's work without
citing the source.
Example: Children are completely
insensitive to their parents' shyness
and rarely label their parents as
shy. Because the parents are the
authority and controlling figures in
the home, they may not feel shy and
therefore not show their shy side.
Moreover, during the formative
years, parents are seen as
omnipotent and omniscient and not
stupid, unattractive, or pathetic; it
may be frightening for children to
view their parents in terms of
shyness.

There are tricks to paraphrasing: the


four R’s

Reword - replace words and


phrases with synonyms whenever
you can.
Rearrange – rearrange words
within sentences to make new
sentences. You can even rearrange
the ideas presented within the
paragraph.
Realize that some words and
phrases cannot be changed – names,
dates, titles etc. cannot be replaced,
but you can present them
differently in your paraphrase.
Recheck – make sure that your
paraphrase conveys the same
meaning as the original text.

Another example of paraphrasing.

d. Unintentional - It occurs when the


writer incorrectly quotes and/or
incorrectly cites a source they are
using.

Now how to avoid plagiarism?


The best method for avoiding it is to
simply be honest; when you've used a
source in your paper, give credit where
it's due. Acknowledge the author of the
original work you've used.

Another way to it is to quote and/or cite


your sources properly.

Is it clear? Yes it is.

Values Integration:
When you are going to make a research
would you just copy what you see on
the internet or paraphrase it and give a
citation? And why?

4. Abstraction
“Be Original and Don’t Plagiarize” Commented [JCA3]: Tweet or Consequence
Under your arm chair there is a bird
and the one who gets the marker will be
the participant.

Mechanics: Observe the cases if it is


plagiarism or not and explain. Just say
“TWEET” if it is plagiarism and
“TWUUT” if not. If your answer is
correct there will be a prize and if
wrong there is a consequence.

Is that clear? Yes it is.


1.

2.

3.

4.

5.
5. Application
“Paraphrase me”
To apply now what you have learned.

Mechanics: The class will be grouped


into three.. Paraphrase the original text.
Remember the four R’s to
paraphrasing.

Criteria:
30% Cooperation
30% Right use of grammar
40% Presentation
IV. Assessment
Write Boom if it is plagiarism/cheating and Baam if not.
_____1. You are asked to summarize the plot of the chapter from Madame Bovary.
You copy the chapter description from online Spark Notes Web site and don’t cite
your source.
_____2. You take sentence from a professional journal and reorder the phrases,
keeping the meaning and most phrases intact. You do not cite your source.
_____3. You find a paper online that answers your assignment instructions exactly
and submit it as your work.
_____4. You and your friend decide to work together on a lab assignment. Because
you are in two different sections of the same course, you print out two copies of the
completed report, and each submit it as your own individual work.
_____5. Your roommate took the same math course last year that you are taking now.
To save yourself some time, you copy your roommates’ old homework assignments
and turn them in as your own.
_____6. You copy another’s author ideas to compare and contrast with your own
ideas. You indent the text, identify the author, and use quotation marks when stating
the author’s ideas. You also provide a citation of the work you copied in the
bibliography of your paper.
_____7. You copy and paste text from a Web site into your paper and doesn’t cite the
original author because everyone knows that material on the Web is free for anyone
to use.
_____8. For your Geology class you have been assigned to groups and given lab
assignments to complete as a group. Your group completes the lab and you each turn
in a copy of the same lab report with your individual name listed in the first
paragraph.
_____9. Your friend in Biology class has been sick for a week and is behind with her
work. You feel sorry for her and offer to help her with the assignment that is due
tomorrow. After reviewing your class note with her, you lend her report to copy.
_____10. It is the act of stealing someone else's work and attempting to "pass it off"
as your own.

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