What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism is using the words and ideas of someone else and presenting them as your own. It may be unintentional, but having a scholarly conversation requires trust and honesty.
For example, you must cite when using:
Forms of Plagiarism
How to Avoid plagiarism
Did you know that using data you've found to make your own graph and then not citing the source is plagiarism? Unless you did the study or experiment to collect the data you are using, you need to give credit for the source of the data.
Data: Census information, government published data and statistics, surveys and polls, geospatial data (GIS) , economic indicators, bioinformatics, reports.
Images: artwork, illustrations, photographs, charts, tables, graphs, architectural drawings.
Spoken material: personal conversations, interviews, information obtained in lectures, poster sessions, or scholarly presentations of any kind.
Recorded material: television broadcasts, podcasts, streaming media or public speeches.
Computer programs: credit the source of any code you adapted from an open source site or other external sources using comments. Follow the terms of any license that applies to the code you are using. If no method for giving credit is specified, usually a URL is sufficient.
If you are giving a formal presentation, you need to give credit for the information used on your slides or in your speech.
Adapted from Academic Integrity at MIT: a Handbook for Students
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