Exercise: To Cite or not to Cite?
(adapted from http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_plagiar.html)
Instructions: Below are some situations in which writers need to decide whether or not they are running the risk of plagiarizing. In the Y/N column, indicate if you would need to document (yes), or if it is not necessary to provide quotations marks or a citation (no). If you do need to give the source credit in some way, explain how you would handle it. If not, explain why.
| Situation | Y/N | If yes, what do you do? If no, why? |
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1. You are writing new insights about your own experiences. |
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2. You are using an editorial from your school's newspaper with which you disagree. |
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3. You use some information from a source without ever quoting it directly. |
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4. You have no other way of expressing the exact meaning of a text without using the original source verbatim. |
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5. You mention that many people in your discipline belong to a certain organization. |
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6. You want to begin your paper with a story that one of your classmates told about her experiences in Bosnia. |
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7. The quote you want to use is too long, so you leave out a couple of phrases. |
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8. You really like the particular phrase somebody else made up, so you use it. |
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