• Issue of plagiarism in academic work - Azizi Ahmad, MLK, Barack Obama,

    From Ronny Koch@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 16 01:44:25 2024
    XPost: alt.politics.nationalism.black, memphis.general, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh XPost: sac.politics

    JANUARY 5 — Plagiarism happens for a number of reasons, one is
    because some students decide consciously to gain credit for the
    work of others. However, most incidents of plagiarism are the
    product not of deliberate cheating, but of underdeveloped
    academic skills.

    The term plagiarism, derived from the Latin word “plagiarius”
    meaning “kidnapper” or “plunderer.” It has has been defined as
    the practice of using other’s ideas and texts and claiming them
    as one’s own original authorship without acknowledging the
    source.

    Plagiarism may take various forms. The most serious form of
    plagiarisms “to obtain and submit as your own paper written by
    someone else.”

    Other forms of plagiarism include doing the copy-and-paste of
    texts without acknowledging the original authorship,
    paraphrasing the original ideas of others without referencing
    them or attributing the citation of a text to a false authorship.

    Students plagiarise other’s works and present them as their own
    because of the said cultural background of the students. Its
    most obvious reasons are the language and content problems faced
    by the students. In addition, these problems are compounded with
    other problems like lack of motivation, desire for a better
    product, aspiration for higher grades, etc.

    Most plagiarised work goes undetected. The invention of modern
    technology like internet has made plagiarism easier than ever
    before.

    Martin Luther King, Jr, leading figure of Black Rights Movement
    in the USA, was also charged with plagiarism in his Ph D
    dissertation, and still today there is a piece of information
    tagged at this research informing its readers that his
    dissertation consists of plagiarised work.

    Identifying plagiarism in academic papers is a very difficult
    task. Even technology-equipped software as the like of Copycatch
    or Turnitin is not feasible in all contexts, particularly in
    developing countries where the problems of accessibility of
    computers and internet facilities that are coupled with a large
    number of students.

    Students must bear in mind that their teachers are the experts
    in the field and know the sources more than their students do.
    Punishing the students of their plagiarised work sometimes can
    be counter-productive in the academic field.

    Teachers must teach plagiarism to their students not from a
    punitive approach, but rather by drawing their attention to good
    writing, and referencing and citation skills. They must bear in
    mind that there must lie a difference between an original work
    and a plagiarised work that is rejected in the student’s
    achievement.

    http://www.themalaymailonline.com/what-you-think/article/issue- of-plagiarism-in-academic-work-azizi-ahmad


    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)