Plagiarism
Plagiarism is presenting someone else’s original work as if it were your own. More specifically, plagiarism is to present as your own:
- a sequence of words quoted without quotation marks
- a paraphrased passage from another writer’s work
- ideas, sound recordings, computer data, or images composed or created by someone else.
Students are expected to build their own work on that of other people, just as professional artists, scholars, and writers do. Giving credit to the creator of the work you are incorporating into your own work is an act of integrity; plagiarism, on the other hand, is a form of fraud. Proper acknowledgment and correct citation constitute the difference.
Generative AI: Please note, with recent developments in technologies like ChatGPT, the existence of a well-written paragraph is no longer evidence of human effort. To read the Provost's notes on how to adapt writing assignments in the age of generative AI, click here.