It shouldn't come as a surprise, but turning in a paper that you did not write yourself is academic dishonesty. This includes papers found or bought online, papers someone else (a friend, a spouse, your pet) wrote for you, or a section of a book or article that you copied wholesale and passed off as your own.
Plain and simple. Don't cheat.
Let's say you find a really good article online and copy a paragraph or two (or five), figuring no one will notice or care. Unfortunately, someone does care ― your professor, employer, etc.
Keep in mind that this is easy to do unintentionally: as you're pulling together material for your essay, it's easy to just copy and paste a few good sentences here and there without thinking about it. But even accidental plagiarism is cheating. Every word that you write in your paper is expected to be your own. If it's not, it should be enclosed in quotation marks (" "), with a reference indicating your source.
Click here to learn more about direct quotations.
Okay, so this is a little better than the previous example ― at least you've made some attempts to put the material into your own words, also known as
Click here to learn what paraphrasing is all about.
Say you find a really good article that makes an excellent point about your topic. You write a section of your paper (or just a sentence, or the whole thing) based on that article's argument, making sure that you put everything in your own words and don't use the exact wording of the original author. Is that okay? It's all your own work, so no need to mention that author in your paper, right?
Alas, no.
You see, the author of that article went to a lot of trouble to come up with those brilliant ideas. You can't just pass them off as your own.
Now, if that article's argument is only used in a sentence or paragraph of your paper ― a support for your own original argument, nothing more ― then you're in good shape. You've already done the work of paraphrasing, now just cite the author to let the reader know where those ideas came from and you're all set. However, if your whole paper is based completely off someone else's idea, if you're just restating an argument already made elsewhere... then you're plagiarizing big time.
Click here to learn how to cite properly.
By now you know that copying someone else's paper is wrong, but what if you have a little help writing your own? You wrote the paper, but then your friend (or ChatGPT) helped you revise it, correcting some of the bad grammar and touching up the concluding argument.
When the help changes from reading over a paper to actually helping you write it, it's academic dishonesty. The Academic Honesty Policy is pretty clear about this:
It is, for example, acceptable for a reader to suggest that a paragraph is unclear or needs more detail; it is unacceptable to offer specific rewording or details for inclusion. It is unacceptable to permit a typist or secretary to make changes or corrections in written material as part of the process of typing.
Of course, as the policy points, out there are a few exceptions to this rule. The key is understanding the difference between having your friend rewrite your paper for you and getting assistance from University staff who are here to help you and know when and where to stop.
Check with your professor to make sure what help is allowed.
Sure, "Green" is in these days, but Reduce/Re-Use/Recycle isn't the best mantra for your term paper. Let's say you wrote a paper for another course last semester that would be a perfect fit for your next assignment. Can you reuse it? The answer is: probably not.
Professors expect your work to be fresh. Reusing the paper would be like passing off a used car as brand new. You may not mind a used car, but you wouldn't like it if you bought that car thinking that it had never been driven. A few professors may be okay with a repurposed paper, but most won't.
Check with your professor
Keep in mind that
The paper's due in the morning and you haven't done your research. No harm in making a few fake citations to pad your sources, or creating a few numbers that seem to back up your claim, right? Wrong.
Fabricating sources or evidence is academic dishonesty. Your professor will probably know the truth instantly, and it's really easy to check to see if a source is valid or not.
It all comes back to the "Do your own work" concept, except here the key emphasis is on the "Do work" part.
Keep all of these rules in mind when you're creating:
Plagiarism can apply to anything in any form that you produce for classes, or even outside of Augsburg.