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Anti-Plagiarism and Academic Integrity: Avoid Plagiarism

Welcome to the anti-plagiarism and Academic Integrity LibGuide, a comprehensive resource that is dedicated to promoting academic integrity and fostering originality in scholarly work.

Avoid Plagiarism

How to Avoid Plagiarism

Avoiding plagiarism is easy once you understand what it means. It is important to adopt good research habits, manage your time well, and take responsibility for your learning. These simple steps will assist you to create original work and maintain academic integrity. Other practices include the following:

  • Write from scratch: Begin your writing process without relying on existing texts, ensuring your work is entirely original and free from plagiarism
  • Use quotation marks: When directly quoting another source, enclose the exact words in quotation marks to attribute them properly and add a citation.
  • Paraphrase: Restate information from sources in your own words, maintaining the original meaning while avoiding direct copying.
  • Provide citations: Accurately cite all sources used in your work to give credit to the original authors
  • Manage your references: Organize and keep track of your sources using the approved referencing style to facilitate accurate citations and avoid unintentional plagiarism.
  • Use Turnitin: Use similarity detection software like Turnitin to scan your work for potential instances of plagiarism and make necessary revisions before submission.
  • Seek advise: Consult with lecturers, librarians, or writing centers for guidance on properly attributing sources and avoiding plagiarism in your writing

Paraphrasing

Paraphrasing tips:

 

Referencing 101

 

Referencing in a nutshell

In-text citations

Why do we reference?

1.   To show that you have consulted relevant sources

2.   Enable the reader to trace original sources

3.   Provide documentary support of your argument Indicate that you have not used someone else’s ideas and passing them off as your own

4.   Avoid plagiarism

An in-text citation serves as a brief acknowledgment that you incorporate whenever you quote or extract information from a source within academic writing. It directs the reader to the original source, allowing them to locate the origin of the information you've used.

 

Remember!! Make a corresponding entry in the reference list with more information about the source.

 

Examples of paraphrasing