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Cite
Is
Right!
OR…
Avoiding Plagiarism,
Pleasing Profs, &
Living an Academically Honest Life
What is plagiarism?
Plagiarism is using the words, ideas,
research results, formulae, images,
or data from another person
without giving credit to the originator
of those words, ideas,
research results,
formulae, images
or data
Many students feel that
by using footnotes, endnotes, or
citations
their papers will not be as good
as papers that make fewer references
to other works.
The complete reference for this source would then be found at the
end of the paper in the “Works Cited” page:
author-date method of
in-text citation
APA citation basics
“Defining and Avoiding Plagiarism: The WPA Statement on Best Practices.” Online posting. 22 October
2007 <http://wpacouncil.org/positions/plagiarism.html>.
Moulton, Janice and George Robinson. “Plagiarism” Encyclopedia of Ethics, 2nd ed. New York: Routledge,
2002.
Rigotti, Nancy A., Jae Eun Lee, and Henry Wechsler. “U.S. College Students’ Use of Tobacco Products.”
Journal of the American Medical Association 284 (2000): 699-705.
Stepchyshyn, Vera and Robert S.Nelson. Library Plagiarism Policies: CLIP Note #37. Chicago: American
Library Assocation, 2007.
Smith, J.O. "Fourier Theorems for the DFT" in Mathematics of the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) with
Audio Applications, 2nd ed. 2007. 31 October 2007
<http://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/mdft/Fourier_Theorems_DFT.html>.