Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Citation: Mohammed Nurul Islam, Nisar Ahmad Koka, Mohammed Osman Abdul Wahab and Mohsin
Raza Khan (2022) Plagiarism: All About How to Avoid, British Journal of English Linguistics, Vol.
10, Issue 1, pp.1-11
INTRODUCTION
"Plagiarism, specifically, is a term used to describe a practice that involves knowingly taking and
using another person’s work and claiming it, directly or indirectly, as your own." (Neville, 2007,
p. 28). Plagiarism derives from the Latin term plagiarius, which means kidnapper (Menager-
Beeley & Paulos, 2006). Plagiarism is a field of research corruption described as writing new ideas
or words created by somebody or from one's own earlier research, and aiming to publish such work
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without properly referencing the original writer and paper. Plagiarism is a crime and an ethical
offence. So, plagiarism is stealing someone’s intellectual property. The massive numbers of
discourse characteristics used stance plagiaristic goes as an unlawful deed. For instance, theft,
kidnap and stealing were often used to depict plagiarism (Akbar, 2018). Plagiarism occurs as a
result of one of the two possible motivations: an absence of ethics or an ignorance of citation
conventions among researchers/students. It is easy for authors to prevent plagiarism by simply not
copying any written texts, writing an original document in one's own language, and referencing
the source if paraphrasing. This method may avoid the concurrent or improper duplication of the
content used in any way (prevention and identification of plagiarism). Regrettably, many writers
tend to neglect or overlook these fundamental laws, because occurrences of plagiarism are
becoming all too popular in the research realm. Since publishing and disseminating ideas are vital
to the research effort, and the rules governing the writing and publishing of data are inviolable, we
all must believe and adhere to prevalent plagiarism guidelines. Scientific research adheres to such
investigative principles which are invariant in terms of geography, social tradition or personal
opinion (Ober, et.al., 2013). A benevolent view is that writers who are guilty of plagiarism are
unaware of what constitutes plagiarism.
There are mainly four kinds of plagiarism as seen in figure 1 above. All of them are serious
academic integrity offences. They are: unintentional, accidental, intentional/deliberate and self-
plagiarism. Plagiarising students face repercussions.
Pereira et al (2010) have proposed a plagiarism detection method composed by five main phases:
language normalization, retrieval of candidate documents, classifier training, plagiarism analysis,
and post-processing (cited in Ranjan, 2013, p. 36).
Plagiarism is a complicated topic and comprehension of its complex issue is a precondition for
successfully reacting to it (Pecorari, 2013). Therefore, the following simple five rules are effective
to avoid plagiarism based on Ober (2013).
(1) Do not copy: It is not good writing to imitate verbatim words from any other paper or book
(even if it is your own previously published work). Relatively short quotes are permissible if found
inside quotation marks and the source is cited instantly after the quote. This would go without
saying that it is gross plagiarism to copy without quotation marks and lack of sufficient references,
but sadly this is happening.
(2) Write in your own words: Write out all your ideas to help you out without using someone else
words or even the writing style of another. In general, that means you should avoid paraphrasing
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the maximum possible. Paraphrasing or rewriting someone else's text in your own words is only
acceptable if it occurs minimally in the text (e.g., a paragraph) and at the end of the paraphrased
passage, the source is cited. The easiest way to avoid plagiarism concerns here is not to make
paraphrases. Using your own "speech" initial to pass the thoughts on. Should not mix the primary
and borrowed text without referencing the borrowed text.
(3) Cite when in doubt: If you are citing yourself excessively for that, it could indicate that you do
not write enough in your language. It is a message you should be following consider writing your
paper over again. Popular words and phrases should never be quoted or placed into quotation
marks, but any description of widely known terms must be correctly cited.
(4) Do not reuse photos, statistics, tables or text from one of your own previously published articles
without reference. In general, it is safer not to republish a statistic, you have previously written.
However, if you need to, please cite the original paper in the table or figure caption to make sure.
If you have not kept copyrights, note in the text that it was from your earlier publication and seek
permission. Do not recycle from one piece of paper to another. For every piece of paper, compose
new text. When you fail to do such things, you will commit self-plagiarism which is intentional
plagiarism, but sometimes unintentional.
(5) Ask permission: If you wish to use a figure, table or any data that has not been used published
earlier and produced or compiled by someone who is not a co-author of your article, you have to
ask their authorisation, and assign it to them. The same applies if you use their data to compose
your own figure or table. With any published image, table or illustration, you plan to republish,
request copyright permission.
The following guideline from the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association
(2001), “…Each time you paraphrase another author (i.e., summarise a passage or rearrange the
order of a sentence and change some of the words), you need to credit the source in the text.” (p.
349). It is indeed quite simple to avoid plagiarism. The best way to avoid it is to just be honest.
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students are uncertain whether a precise aspect is regarded as ‘common knowledge’ in their
domain. Students can consider it ‘common knowledge’ if they find the information in more than
one general reference material. Note that ‘common knowledge’ is limited to facts and does not
include opinions or arguments that you could disagree with or argue against (Carroll, 2002, p. 53).
Quote only when necessary - the quoted part should only be supplemented with your
work.
Copy the sentence(s) exactly the same as the original.
Use quotation marks (“……”) at the beginning and end of the quote (for a long quote,
use an indented block set off from the main text).
Identify every source of the quote; write its author, title of article/journal/book, volume
number, year and place of publication, publisher, page number, website address etc.
(2) Paraphrasing
Paraphrasing is the process of changing an author's words into your own words.
What to do:
Use your own words,
Your paraphrased text can be shorter or larger than the source, and
The source of the paraphrase must be cited in the text and reference list.
The following linking words and phrases can be used for better paraphrasing:
1. Examples of words that can be used to introduce another ‘voice’
say emphasise explain propose disagree
write find believe conclude states
think point continue agree compare
argue suggest declare insist note
establish adds observe maintain
(Adapted from Spatt, B. (1999). Writing from sources. Boston: Bedford /St. Martin’s.)
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2. Examples of connecting words in a sentence
and because
or but
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11. Examples of words/phrases showing alternative ideas
besides only in any case
however still all the time
nevertheless yet at the same time
[Adapted from Jordan, R. R. (2003). Academic Writing Course: Study Skills. Pearson education.]
In-text citation
Citations, termed in-text citations (quotation), are included because once you make updates from
another person’s work to your own assignment. You construct an in-text citation by adding word-
for-word from another origin into your assignment, or by gathering data from some other origin
and placing it in your own sentences and writing style (paraphrased quote), you make an in-text
citation. All such citations are brief and applied right after the loaned details in the key part of that
process. In-text citations identify the source of a quotation or a personal communication used in
research.
An APA in-text citation contains just three things: the author(s)’s last name(s), the years the source
was written, and sometimes the location or page of the publication. So, format like this.... (1)
author’s last name, (2) publication date, and (3) page number p. or pp.
Source: www.apastyle.org/aboutstyle.html
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References
Users can find references at the end of their survey project, ordinarily at the last page. The
information available for in-text citations found in the project’s body is included on this reference
details page. Those references are referenced by the author’s last name alphabetically. References
incorporate more detail, for example, the author (s)’s full name, the year the source was written,
and the URL or page goes. So, format like this...
(Reference List/Bibliography)
CONCLUSION
Institutions and managers should provide instruction and supervision guidance on assisting
beginner and non-native English authors to gain trust and strengthen the way they write. To some
degree, all language acquisition is a process of borrowing the words of others and we have to be
versatile and not dogmatic on where we draw lines between acceptable and unacceptable textual
borrowings inappropriate. Plagiarism is, therefore, a challenging and complicated issue. Because
of the recent initiatives to increase the research production, which lag far behind the advanced
countries, it is vital building an excellent filter to ascertain that the increase should be not merely
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inflation in bars but a significant contribution for academics and society in general. In the research,
a study spirit with the necessary ethical principles should be inculcated. The teachers are the
fundamental entity for inculcating those principles. They should set a standard by their own
behaviour.
Acknowledgement: The authors extend their appreciation to the Deanship of Scientific Research
at King Khalid University for funding & support for this work under Research grant award number
RGP. 1/ 370/42.
References
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Language Teaching and Literature, 5(1), 31-38.
American Psychological Association (2020). Publication Manual of the American Psychological
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Jordan, R. R. (2003). Academic Writing Course: Study Skills. Pearson education.
Lampert, L. (2014). Combating student plagiarism: An academic librarian’s guide. Elsevier.
Neville, C. (2010). The Complete Guide to Referencing and Avoid Plagiarism. New York;
Maidenhead: Open University Press.
Ober, H., Simon, S. I., & Elson, D. (2013). Five simple rules to avoid plagiarism. Annals of
biomedical engineering, 41(1), 1-2.
Pennycook, A. (1996). Borrowing others' words: Text, ownership, memory, and
plagiarism. TESOL quarterly, 30(2), 201-230.
Pecorari, D. (2013). Teaching to avoid plagiarism: How to promote good source use. McGraw-
Hill Education (UK).
Ranjan, P. (2013). Plagiarism and Research Ethics in the Age of ICT: Some Policy
Concerns. Educational Technology in Teaching and Learning: Prospects and Challenges,
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Shah, I. P. (2018).Plagiarism... How to Prevent it. Aayushi International Interdisciplinary
Research Journal, 5(1).
Sharma, R. (2010). A STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE TO STUDENTS: HOW TO AVOID
PLAGIARISM. Journal of Education Research, 4(2).
Spatt, B. (2010). Writing from sources. Macmillan.
Van Note Chism, N., & Weerakoon, S. (2012). APA, Meet Google: Graduate students' approaches
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https://www.citationmachine.net/apa/cite-a-book
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