Plagiarism and Paraphrasing
If you fail to properly credit ideas or materials taken from someone
else, it is considered plagiarism.
To avoid plagiarism
- include complete citations for all materials you use in your paper which
includes text and graphics from printed and online resources.
- do not copy, borrow, or hire someone to write a paper
- • do not cut and paste anything from a periodical article or the Internet without quoting and citing
- Please
note that according to the Rules of Conduct in UCF’s Golden Rule,
plagiarism is a form of cheating and considered a violation of student
academic behavior standards.
A direct quote (verbatim, word-for-word) should follow a specified
format.
For APA:
- short quotations (40 words or less) are in
double quotations. The author, year, and a specific page citation are
provided in the text.
- longer quotations, instead of using quotation
marks, indent the quoted material five spaces from both the left and the
right and maintain double spacing.
- parenthetical citation is the
same for short quotations and comes after the last punctuation mark in
the quotation.
Paraphrasing is a restatement of the original quotation.
- Even if you successfully paraphrase someone else’s work, you still must
give credit.
- The citation format for a paraphrased section is the same
as for a direct quotation, except specific page numbers are not
required.
There are some instances where a citation is not required.
- The
general rule is that common knowledge: such as Disney World is located
in Florida or Levi Strauss invented jeans, do not require a source.
- Proverbs or well known sayings (e.g., “The early bird catches the worm”)
also do not require a citation.
A number of sources are available to help you decide if you have
mastered the ability to paraphrase:
University of Central Florida, The University Writing Center,
Avoiding Plagiarism
http://www.uwc.ucf.edu/Writing%20Resources/Handouts/avoiding_plagiarism.htm
Purdue, Online Writing Lab, Paraphrase: Write It in Your Own Words
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_paraphr.html
Indiana University-Bloomington, School of Education, How to
Recognize Plagiarism;
http://www.indiana.edu/~istd/example1paraphrasing.html