22 Plagiarism and Intellectual Output

Why is plagiarism such a big issue? 

Plagiarism is an academic integrity violation, because it is considered ethically wrong to take credit for someone else’s intellectual output. This applies even if the original author agrees that you can use their output or if you paid to use it. And as you saw, it also applies to reusing your own work without citing it.

 

Key Takeaway

You are committing an act of plagiarism anytime you

  • present something as your own intellectual output, and that it is new and original, when it is not

 

What is included in intellectual output?

Almost everything!  Written and spoken words, music and videos, movies, performances, artwork, photographs, graphs, tables, figures, diagrams, data, computer code, and any other intellectual or creative product. It also extends to summarizing and paraphrasing information that you have read elsewhere.

 

To avoid accidental plagiarism, you therefore always need to give credit to the person whose work or idea you are using, and you do so by accurately quoting, properly paraphrasing and correctly citing your sources of information.

 

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Academic Integrity at Mount Saint Vincent University Copyright © 2022 by Marisha Caswell; Lisa Crowell; Christine Drew; Clare Goulet; Sarah Jacques; Lindsey MacCallum; Kelsey MacGillivray; Meagan Pottie; Jennifer Rizwan; and Denyse Rodrigues is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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