Week 11: Plagiarism and Citation
Part
1:
Grade “G”. There is both parenthetical
citation and a works cited entry. The writer refers to the source author by
name also and paraphrases the original source accurately. Some of the formatting
is confusing for me. I feel like the writer’s argument is headed in the right
direction and It is clear that this additional point is theirs, but it is not sufficiently
synthesized in such a way as to be completely clear.
Passages from Student Papers:
1.
___ Kids don’t have any heroes to look up to in
contemporary society, so we need to look to the past to find examples of
leaders who approached perfection. We need to remember our Founding Fathers as
men of unblemished good character and important accomplishments. For example,
Joseph J. Ellis calls Thomas Jefferson a “fervent believer in human freedom,” a
“sincere advocate of agrarian simplicity,” a man of “principled ideals,” and the
author of “the most famous statement of equality in American history” (46).
WORKS CITED
Ellis, Joseph J. “Jefferson’s
Cop-out.” Civilization 3: (December/January, 1996-97): p 46-53.
I would grade this as “F”. The
writer uses direct quotes and cites his source but the original source is taken
out of context. The writer uses the quotations to further his or her argument,
but this is not what the original author is trying to say at all.
2.
___ Joseph J. Ellis argues that Jefferson
inhabited throughout his life a series of contradictions between his beliefs,
which were liberal and far ahead of their time, and his own behavior and
position in society, which forced him into a much more conservative position
(46). But Jefferson was not the only one who had to face the disjunction
between a belief in freedom and the reality of being an owner of slaves. George
Washington, for example, never expressed abolitionist sentiments, but he freed
his slaves in his will.
WORKS CITED Ellis, Joseph J. “Jefferson’s Cop-out.” Civilization 3:
(December/January, 1996-97): p 46-53.
I would rate this as “D”. It
presents some of the original authors ideas alongside some of the writer’s own
added ideas in such a way that it is unclear whose ideas are whose.
3.
___ Now that DNA tests have established that
Thomas Jefferson almost certainly was the father of at least on child by his
slave Sally Hemmings, we can add yet another layer to the paradox Jefferson lived.
He was an aristocrat who believed in equality, a slave owner who advocated
abolition, a man wo loved the simple rural life but was also a sophisticated
connoisseur of European architecture. Now we find out that he was also a man
who denounced black women as inherently unattractive in his Notes on the State
of Virginia, yet he was sleeping with one himself.
WORKS CITED Ellis, Joseph J. “Jefferson’s Cop-out.” Civilization 3:
(December/January, 1996-97): p 46. Jefferson, Thomas. Notes on the State of
Virginia.
I would grade this as a “C”. There
is a bibliography entry but no parenthetical citation that acknowledges that a
source is paraphrased. It seems to also include sources that exist but were not
consulted, or that were used but left out.
4.
___ If we look at history more closely, it
becomes harder and harder to find anybody who is an unblemished hero. One
famous American, Thomas Jefferson, was many things, but mostly he was a
creature of paradox: a wealthy Virginian who wrote a famous statement of
equality, a sincere advocate of simplicity who worshiped the art and
architecture of Paris; above all, a strong believer in human freedom who lived
his entire life as a slave owner. Jefferson himself acknowledged the massive
gap between his principled ideals and his personal reality. We may not like to
think so, but our whole American society is caught in that same central
dilemma: between the promise of liberty and the fact of racial discrimination.
I think this deserves an “A”. The
writer has used verbatim from the source and does not acknowledge the original
source with parenthetical citation or a works cited entry. This might be considered
to be intended to deceiving the audience that this is the author’s original
work.
5.
___ Joseph J. Ellis portrays Thomas Jefferson as
a man who embodied, in his life and in his beliefs, “the central dilemma of
American history: (46). For Ellis, the “most poignant” aspect of Jefferson as a
creature of paradox: (46) was that he believed deeply in freedom, yet he
couldn’t quite bring himself to free is slaves. Ellis calls attention to other
important tensions as well: although Jefferson believed n living a simple rural
life, he spent years living a cosmopolitan life in Paris, and served two terms
in the White House at the center of American power; although he believed in
equity he considered himself an aristocrat. Ellis’s portrait makes this central
figure in American history more complex, and he suggests that American history
as a whole is hard to get a grasp on, because it, too, is riddled with
paradoxes. Ellis’s argument about American historical paradoxes is even more
valid today than it was in Jefferson’s time. We live in a country of freedom
and oppression, of ideals and cynicism, of opportunity and hopelessness. Which
America you live in depends on who you are. Jefferson is particularly
interesting because, as Ellis demonstrates, he managed to have one foot in two
of these Americas at the same time, and it almost tore him apart. Whether the
problems of post-9/11 America will now tear this society apart remains an open
question, but an examination of Jefferson can help to point us to an answer.
WORKS CITED Ellis, Joseph J. “Jefferson’s Cop-out.” Civilization 3:
(December/January, 1996-97): p 46-53.
Part 2:
Reflection on “self-plagiarism”
After reading this
article it seems to me that most self-plagiarism is likely unintentional and that
it might not be easy to see the harm in doing so. It also seems that this is a
relatively new issue and that it might be misunderstood by many authors.
Part of me at first
did not quite understand how you could avoid self-plagiarism in your introduction
and methods section if you are one of the only authors who has previously
published on this topic. When looking at research articles, especially on more
obscure topics in psychology and anthropology, I often see authors referring to
their own previously published work in the review of relevant literature in their
introduction section. However, the authors typically acknowledge that this
information is from a different publication and simply cite the most relevant information
from previous research in order to frame the current research that they are presenting.
The major issue seems to be when the authors pass off previously published
information as new information or cut and splice information from previous work
into another article without proper citation.
Personally, I have
not recycled much work in my college career. I tend to like to take on topics that
are different from other things I have previously studied in order to broaden
my horizons. But admittedly, once you are familiar with a topic, and this would
be especially true for scholars who have spent their entire lives studying the
same topic, it is easy to not even notice that you are paraphrasing yourself
since it seems like it might be difficult to remember exactly where the knowledge
originally came from in your own work.
I can certainly see
why this is an issue when it comes to publishing and copyrights. We learned
about how to determine how influential/relevant an article is based on the
number of times it was cited previously in this class. Self-plagiarism might
take away from the relevance/importance/influence of the original article and
not give credit to the work of co-authors.
I can imagine that
this could be a very muddy issue and something that would also we wise to
discuss with a librarian while working on publishing new papers that utilize one’s
previous work in some degree.
Hi Brandi, thank you for your clear and detailed comments on the sample paragraphs. I agree with most of them, but I actually think it's quite clear whose ideas are whose in #2. The first sentence is summarizing Ellis in the student's own words, and the next two sentences are the student's comments which add a second example related to the first. I gave this passage an H.
ReplyDeleteYou have some very insightful thoughts on self-plagiarism and how it differs from self-citation which, as you've observed, is very common in academic publications.--Sam