Plagiarism the use of someone elses words or ideas in writing without proper attribution
is one of the easiest ways to ruin your academic or professional reputation. Just
ask Senator John Walsh, whose Masters degree from the United States War College was
rescinded after it was discovered that he copied large portions of his final thesis
without attribution. Or Benny Johnson, the BuzzFeed writer who was dismissed after
Twitter users pointed out dozens of examples in his articles of sentences or phrases
copied word for word from other sites.
As a law student, being scrupulous about avoiding plagiarism is particularly important, as a plagiarism violation could be used as evidence of poor character and fitness when you apply for admission to the bar. For lawyers already in practice, plagiarism can be grounds for professional discipline.Once you have committed to avoiding plagiarism in your writing, put your commitment into practice by remembering these five basic tips for how not to plagiarize: 1. Use direct quotes or dont quote at all 2. Paraphrase with care 3. Give credit where credit is due For example, assume you are writing a paper about the American legal system, and you come across a web site with the following passage: In the American legal system, litigants are generally responsible for paying their own attorneys fees, regardless of the outcome of the case. This means that people who cant afford to hire a lawyer may effectively be denied access to justice. In your paper, you write, People who dont have enough money to hire lawyers are effectively denied access to justice in America, since litigants are generally required to pay their own lawyers no matter which side wins the case. You have successfully paraphrased the original sentence, so no quotation marks are needed. But you still need to include a citation to the original source, to make it clear to the reader that this is not your own personal insight, but rather an observation made by someone else. 4. Beware of cutting and pasting If you must cut and paste, be scrupulous about putting any copied material in quotation marks and clearly indicating the source. Even better, put any text you have cut and pasted into a different color or font than your own original writing, so that you can easily see what is yours and what is someone elses. 5. Footnote as you go The purpose of these footnotes is not to provide perfectly formatted citation information you can wait to do that until later but rather to provide enough basic information to remind you of the sources you have used. At this stage, dont use terms like id. or ibid. for referring to previous citations; instead, insert the name of the sources in each footnote, so that you will remember where the material came from even if you later move your sentences around. |