Question 42 What are some of the common types of plagiarism? (Check all that apply.) originality patchwork paraphrasing accidental 1 pts Next >
Added by Kristin O.
Close
Step 1
Step 1: Plagiarism is the act of taking someone else's work and presenting it as your own. Show more…
Show all steps
Your feedback will help us improve your experience
Akash M and 74 other AP CS educators are ready to help you.
Ask a new question
Labs
Want to see this concept in action?
Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.
Key Concepts
Recommended Videos
The following are examples of plagiarism, if no attribution is given (select all that apply): - Pasting text and changing individual words - Rebuilding a published argument with new words/phrasing - Brainstorming initial ideas with a group - Stealing phrasing without citation
Akash M.
In the case below, the original source material is given along with a sample of student work. Determine the type of plagiarism by clicking the appropriate radio button. Original Source Material Student Version Major changes within organizations are usually initiated by those who are in power. Such decision-makers sponsor the change and then appoint someone else - perhaps the director of training - to be responsible for implementing and managing change. Whether the appointed change agent is in training development or not, there is often the implicit assumption that training will "solve the problem." And, indeed, training may solve part of the problem.... The result is that potentially effective innovations suffer misuse, or even no use, in the hands of uncommitted users. References: Dormant, D. (1986). The ABCD's of managing change. In M. Smith (Ed.), Introduction to performance technology (pp. 238-256). Washington, D.C.: The National Society for Performance and Instruction. When major changes are initiated in organizations, "... there is often the implicit assumption that training will 'solve the problem.' And, indeed, training may solve part of the problem" (Dormant, 1986, p. 238). References: Dormant, D. (1986). The ABCD's of managing change. In M. Smith (Ed.), Introduction to performance technology (pp. 238-256). Washington, D.C.: The National Society for Performance and Instruction. Which of the following is true for the Student Version above? Word-for-Word plagiarism Paraphrasing plagiarism This is not plagiarism
Janelle is writing a paper about the dangers that wind turbines pose to wildlife. She reads several articles online and then begins writing her paper, combining the material from these sources into an essay without using direct quotes, paraphrasing, or otherwise documenting her sources. What kind of plagiarism has Janelle committed? Circumstantial evidence Cherrypicking Collaboration Patchwriting Which of the following would NOT count as plagiarism? A summary of a source that includes an in-text citation Taking phrases from source without using quotation marks Sharing a title or section titles from a source without using quotation marks Paraphrasing without a signal phrase or in-text citation
Jerelyn N.
Recommended Textbooks
Computer Science and Information Technology
Introduction to Programming Using Python
Computer Science - An Overview
Transcript
18,000,000+
Students on Numerade
Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities
Watch the video solution with this free unlock.
EMAIL
PASSWORD