Instruction: Examples for Advanced Level

Word-for-word and paraphrasing plagiarism from one source, and how to fix them.

Click to watch the video for each example below.

Example 1. When quoting directly from two different locations from the same source.

 

Example 2. When paraphrasing and directly quoting from the same source.

 

Important Note

Paraphrasing plagiarism can occur when the writing contains a mixture of the writer's own ideas and the ideas of others. The way to make clear whose ideas are whose is to tell the reader explicitly when there is a shift from one source to another. This should be done by properly citing the source in the first sentence of the paraphrase. It is unnecessary to cite remaining sentences of the paraphrase, as long as it is clear that the source remains the same.

Sneaky Plagiarism

A further tactic used by plagiarizers occurs when they summarize someone else's ideas and include a direction quotation of their words. A reader cannot tell which is which when the writer omits quotation marks around the quoted words and provides no locater in the citation. The paragraph appears to the reader as proper paraphrasing, when in fact it contains word-for-word plagiarism disguised within the paraphrasing.

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