Avoiding plagiarism
A number of authors have discussed the issue of plagiarism in academic writ-
ing. Pennycook (1996), for example,
argues that plagiarism, for
second-language students especially, is not a simply black-and-white affair
that can be prevented by threats, warnings and admonitions. In his view:
All language learning is to some extent a process of borrowing others’
words and we need to be flexible, not dogmatic,
about where we draw
boundaries between acceptable or unacceptable textual borrowings.
(Pennycook 1996: 227)
Some have argued that plagiarism is a culture-specific western concept.
Others, such as Liu (2005), have argued that plagiarism is just as unaccept-
able in countries such as China as it is in the west. China, for example, has
recently set up a website called New Threads (www.xys.org) which discusses,
among other things, the topic of academic misconduct. One of the topics dis-
cussed on this site is the issue of plagiarism. In Liu’s view,
one of the reasons
second-language students may plagiarize is their lack of language proficiency
and writing skills, not their lack of awareness of the unacceptability of this
practice. As Canagarajah (2002: 155) puts it, all texts are, indeed, ‘intertexts’
112
Writing the background chapters
Table 7.6 Techniques for paraphrasing
and summary writing
Technique
Examples of the technique
Examples in a sentence
Changing the word
Change studies
to research
Change Sleep scientists have
Change society
to civilization
found that traditional
Change mud
to deposits
remedies
for insomnia, such
as counting sheep, are
ineffective
to
Sleep researchers have found
that established cures for
insomnia, for instance
counting sheep, do not work.
Changing the
Change Egypt (noun)
to
Change A third group was
word class
Egyptian (adjective)
given
no special instructions
Change Mountainous regions
about going to sleep
to
(adjective + noun)
to in the
A third group was not
mountains (noun)
specially instructed about
going to sleep
Changing
the word
Change Ancient Egypt
Change There are many
order
collapsed
to the collapse of
practical applications to
Egyptian society began
research
into insomnia to
Research into insomnia has
many practical applications
Source: based on Bailey 2003
and behind all knowledge ‘lies not physical reality but other texts, followed
by other texts’ as well as others’ (often contestable) views rather than ‘imper-
sonal and absolute truths’ (Abasi
et al. 2006: 114). Students, thus, need to
learn how ‘to borrow other people’s texts and words’ so they will be able to
achieve their rhetorical and intellectual goals (Canagarajah 2002: 156) as well
as make it clear the work they
are presenting is their own, not someone else’s.
Good paraphrasing and summarizing strategies are a key way in which sec-
ond-language writers can learn to do this (see Abasi
et al. 2006 for further
discussion of this).
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