« A peak at a squid-gy beak | Main | A chemist, a physicist, and a biologist walk into a bar »

Bookmark in Connotea

School’s plagiarism code plagiarized - April 01, 2008

UT code.bmpUniversity of Texas at San Antonio students wanted to draft an honor code that discouraged cheating and plagiarizing.

Unfortunately, the student committee’s results lifted sections of Brigham Young University’s honor code that the UofT students found on-line.

Even the definition of plagiarism was, well, plagiarized.

Akshay Thusu, the student in charge of the honor code project, said it was an oversight.

BYU credited Clemson University’s Center for Academic Integrity as a key source, but UT-San Antonio’s draft failed to do so. That will be corrected, Thusu said.

For example, the draft honor code at San Antonio defines:

Inadvertent Plagiarism. Inadvertent plagiarism involves the inappropriate, but nondeliberate, use of another’s words, ideas, or data without appropriate attribution, failure to follow established rules for documenting sources or from being insufficiently careful in research and writing.

Brigham Young’s honor code includes a similar definition:

Inadvertent Plagiarism: Inadvertent plagiarism involves the inappropriate, but nondeliberate, use of another’s words, ideas, or data without proper attribution. Inadvertent plagiarism usually results from an ignorant failure to follow established rules for documenting sources or from simply being insufficiently careful in research and writing.

As you may have noticed this entire article is plagiarized.
Sources:
Headline: UPI
1st Paragraph: AP
2nd Paragraph: Newsbusters
3rd Paragraph: SA Express-News
4th Paragraph: Kansas City Star
5th Paragraph: Austin American Statesman
6th and 7th: Chronicle of Higher Education

More
The honor code itself (PDF)
Honor code committee website

Post a comment

Comments will be reviewed by the blog editors before being published, mainly to ensure that spam and irrelevant material (such as product advertisements) are not published . Please keep your comment brief. Excessively long or offensively phrased entries will be edited.

We strongly encourage you to use your real, full name. E-mail addresses are required in case we need to discuss your comment with you directly. We won't publish your e-mail address unless you request it.

Please enter the numbers you see below - this helps us to avoid spam. If you are having trouble with this system, you can send your comment by e-mail to 'thegreatbeyond at nature.com'.

please enter code

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blogs.nature.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/4857