Plagiarism Examples from Former Students

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @abstract5249
    @abstract5249 ปีที่แล้ว +3647

    Professor: "This was 17 years ago."
    And this video was posted 9 years ago, meaning the student wrote that paper 26 years ago in 1997.

    • @1370802
      @1370802 ปีที่แล้ว +74

      I was one year old

    • @diorsse
      @diorsse ปีที่แล้ว +210

      @@1370802 i was -10 years old lol

    • @FireFoxie1345
      @FireFoxie1345 ปีที่แล้ว +82

      I wasn’t alive yet

    • @AGMtagious
      @AGMtagious ปีที่แล้ว +31

      i was - 7 years old

    • @bombintheseeinq
      @bombintheseeinq ปีที่แล้ว +19

      i was -13…

  • @jaydizzly
    @jaydizzly ปีที่แล้ว +4741

    One time in college I plagiarized off of myself accidentally. I was writing a paper when I found I could reuse a couple paragraphs from another paper that I'd written and submitted to the university. I was given a zero on the paper because once you submit a work to the university, you no longer have ownership over it as your rightful intellectual property. I had to go to the professor and explain that I used my own words from a previous paper. She allowed me to redo the paper, but she told me I was not allowed to cite myself as a source. its a very weird and annoying rule -- kind of a funny story though.

    • @aprilnya
      @aprilnya ปีที่แล้ว +1927

      > you no longer have ownership over it as your rightful intellectual property
      thats dumb

    • @ipodtouchiscoollol
      @ipodtouchiscoollol ปีที่แล้ว +506

      thats bs idk where are you from or what kind of contract or agreements you had to sign to enroll in your university but normally the ownership of your thesis as intellectual property will always be yours as long as you are indeed the sole creator.

    • @itellyouforfree7238
      @itellyouforfree7238 ปีที่แล้ว +771

      I know self-plagiarism is a thing, but in general is one of the weirdest and dumbest ideas ever

    • @Ultra_64
      @Ultra_64 ปีที่แล้ว +118

      Omfg I sorta did this in college once. I wrote a long ass essay for a communications class. About a year later I had a different communications class and procrastinated on a shorter, less formal/important assignment and luckily the 2 assignments were similar enough where I could copy the same points from my other paper. I just summarized my previous paper to avoid having it be the exact same and submitted that with no issues

    • @SgtSupaman
      @SgtSupaman ปีที่แล้ว +210

      I agree that self-plagiarism is stupid (especially since you aren't allowed to cite yourself in this case), but it isn't necessarily a result of you losing ownership of your words. Using the exact same words in a different work still counts as copying, even if you wrote the original work that is being copied. It would be like if Shakespeare used an exact same paragraph in Hamlet that had been used in Romeo and Juliet. He still owns Romeo and Juliet, but it would be clear copying of his own previous work, thus having no value in the new work. Getting around this simply requires rephrasing the ideas or indicating he is quoting it to support something new (such as drawing a parallel).

  • @BloggerMusicMan
    @BloggerMusicMan ปีที่แล้ว +7846

    This is a really good professor. Doesn't excuse the behaviour, gives her students consequences, but isn't overly contemptuous and calmly explains what not to do with examples.

    • @anonymous-cq7wj
      @anonymous-cq7wj ปีที่แล้ว +207

      And gives students chances to get help for potential plagiarism issues before they have to turn in assignments

    • @p33kin89
      @p33kin89 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Isn't overly contemptuous? She is awful. She Failed an A student for copying a single paragraph in an undergrad class. She is a viscous snake is what she is.

    • @ianhess6615
      @ianhess6615 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Soo agree. Wish my professors in college offered this.

    • @iwatchtoomuchhaikyuu5307
      @iwatchtoomuchhaikyuu5307 ปีที่แล้ว

      1000000% agree, infact in CS as long as you cite sources of code, its almost welcomed that you copy code, because odds are most code is already optimized. Unless of course the prof states otherwise @taylorrowe2002

    • @cooseev
      @cooseev ปีที่แล้ว +36

      @taylorrowe2002The stakes for keeping proper grammar and documenting citations are a lot higher for engineers than for anyone in the humanities

  • @DepthUnchecked
    @DepthUnchecked ปีที่แล้ว +2331

    I like how we’re all voluntarily watching a college lecture that a bunch of kids had to go to

    • @1370802
      @1370802 ปีที่แล้ว +171

      The college students are also there voluntarily. That’s the difference between college and high school.

    • @jaydenpatterson2490
      @jaydenpatterson2490 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@1370802Some classes are required for certain majors and others are required for all majors. I assure you, there are some classes where the students don’t really want to be there. Just because you want a degree doesn’t mean that you can’t feel forced to take a class.

    • @karmicobsession1636
      @karmicobsession1636 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @@jaydenpatterson2490you always have the choice to not show up. Ur paying to be there.

    • @jaydenpatterson2490
      @jaydenpatterson2490 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      @@karmicobsession1636 doesn’t mean everyone likes every class that they have to take

    • @kulnoorx
      @kulnoorx ปีที่แล้ว +45

      The students are "forced" to attend as their grade depends on it, while,alternatively , we are voluntarily watching this lecture as there are no incentives or consequences to watching this in our free time

  • @frogandspanner
    @frogandspanner 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7492

    Copying work is plagiarism, citing it is scholarship.

    • @yourname1869
      @yourname1869 ปีที่แล้ว +933

      When citing papers, you’re typically doing so in order to acknowledge results from previous findings / arguments and then steer a paper in a different direction taking into consideration those previous findings.
      Plagiarism would be taking their work and then using it as if it is your own

    • @frogandspanner
      @frogandspanner ปีที่แล้ว +474

      @@yourname1869 My comment was intended to demonstrate that essential difference in an amusing way.

    • @Beniah107
      @Beniah107 ปีที่แล้ว +150

      @@frogandspannerthose who have the capacity for independent thought got your message immediately. Then there are the others…

    • @Triadicarp
      @Triadicarp ปีที่แล้ว +97

      ​@petercrane2691 please don't be the exact reason why everyone has an issue with academics. You are not better than everyone else. Maybe a lot of people don't understand because..... I don't know.... it's in fucking text and not spoken.
      You know what, you're right. People should be ashamed of themselves for not reading a joke from 8 words of a TH-cam comment.

    • @pezpeculiar9557
      @pezpeculiar9557 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      even then, it needs to be used to support a new point, not just out on its own

  • @jeopardy60611
    @jeopardy60611 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4567

    I never got nailed for plagiarism in my college writing classes, but I appreciate how the professor here allows the students to consult with her before turning in the paper to avoid plagiarism.

    • @nicbentulan
      @nicbentulan ปีที่แล้ว +20

      What do you mean - all profs have consultation hours for students?

    • @gilernt
      @gilernt ปีที่แล้ว +26

      @@nicbentulan I mean, all profs have office hours for that or whatever else

    • @patches4170
      @patches4170 ปีที่แล้ว +99

      ​@@nicbentulan Unless they don't. Or they technically do, but are never available.

    • @BanjoNoob2
      @BanjoNoob2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@patches4170 Yeah I feel like none of these other posters ever met my college advisor or the graduate chair of my department... Office hours? Good fucking luck.

    • @qsharaf3933
      @qsharaf3933 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@nicbentulanyeah but they don’t usually mention that students can ask about plagiarism, most students wouldn’t go to their prof if they’re scared that they’re plagiarizing, but explicitly stating that she will help can make a big difference in the amount of students that will reach out

  • @youreyesarebleeding1368
    @youreyesarebleeding1368 ปีที่แล้ว +7374

    Software Engineers: _laughing nervously_
    We basically plagiarize each other for a living

    • @thahrimdon
      @thahrimdon ปีที่แล้ว +335

      Truer words have never been spoken

    • @rome7702
      @rome7702 ปีที่แล้ว +129

      "Engineer" is fucking hilarious to me

    • @lbaxel9122
      @lbaxel9122 ปีที่แล้ว +413

      @@rome7702 why?

    • @mikeyn6340
      @mikeyn6340 ปีที่แล้ว +318

      @@rome7702 I too am curious why that is "hilarious"

    • @Distress.
      @Distress. ปีที่แล้ว +97

      ​@@lbaxel9122I assume it's because it's kinda of an oxymoron. Normal engineering is a hardware thing.

  • @Eric4bz
    @Eric4bz ปีที่แล้ว +2164

    We had a professor once who did this but rather than plagiarism, did it to highlight the importance of proof reading.
    My favorite example was "Christopher Columbus circumcised the earth with a 100ft clipper."

    • @nosidenoside2458
      @nosidenoside2458 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      Wot

    • @myy1008
      @myy1008 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      read it again@@nosidenoside2458

    • @HostileAtHeart
      @HostileAtHeart ปีที่แล้ว +80

      Wait, as in the student wanted to say Columbus circled the world with his ship?

    • @rjhprofessionalemail7520
      @rjhprofessionalemail7520 ปีที่แล้ว +229

      @@HostileAtHeart I imagine they meant to write "circumnavigated".

    • @darkithnamgedrf9495
      @darkithnamgedrf9495 ปีที่แล้ว +154

      There is so much wrong with that sentence lmao. Columbus most certainly did not circumnavigate the earth

  • @Noodlyk18
    @Noodlyk18 ปีที่แล้ว +322

    I wonder why this is getting recommended randomly 9 years later, in any case, great video and great professor

    • @TheSpacecraftX
      @TheSpacecraftX ปีที่แล้ว +3

      It’s the start of the academic year. At least in the UK. Just had a flood of freshers to my city. This is probably being shown in class.

    • @hmdsidd
      @hmdsidd ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It got recommended to me as well, I'm 32 lmao

    • @jeremywj
      @jeremywj หลายเดือนก่อน

      TH-cam AI determined you have plagiarism in your heart.

  • @LasradoRohan
    @LasradoRohan 23 วันที่ผ่านมา +21

    I VOLUNTARILY clicked on this video, and I'm already zoned out and texting on my phone. I felt like I was back in college. Thank you for that.

  • @fahrenheit2101
    @fahrenheit2101 ปีที่แล้ว +1932

    Plagiarism gets weird sometimes - everybody's constantly trying to say the same things in slightly different ways. Eventually we'll run out of ways to say things, and accidental plagiarism will become increasingly common

    • @thomasweir2834
      @thomasweir2834 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      This is the problem. You get a word count of 2000 words. It's not a new field, say a first year undergraduate history paper on the Reformation, or the Civil War, you’re given a couple of text books and a list of websites to research. You’ve got a couple of weeks to turn it in. You're not going to go and do original research, so you, and the tens of thousands of other students over the decades, not to mention the tens of thousands of other academics, are ALL using the same sources.
      You do your due diligence, you’re a good student, you get the subject and you have an idea, you enjoy learning. The problem is that even though you've done the reading done your research, you've had some ideas, it's almost guaranteed that hundreds of others have had the same thoughts, and they've written about them.
      So you play it safe, you cite, and then you cite some more, and you play it really, really, safe; you don't want to be accused of plagiarism. So at the end of your essay you've got 2000 words, with almost every sentence, point, paragraph, with a citation after it. And it’s horrible. You've just got common use connectives and paraphrases inbetween endless citations. Because the subject has been wringed out of all its originality. You feel your playing a word game, a type of scrabble, not writing a paper to show you understand it. I know there's wriggle room for ‘common knowledge’, but after a few months it just feels like your a human AI, you're desperate to actually get out of writing endless essays playing the citation word game, it gets boring real quick.

    • @desireandfire
      @desireandfire ปีที่แล้ว +119

      That's why you can just quote something

    • @itellyouforfree7238
      @itellyouforfree7238 ปีที่แล้ว +305

      it's most definitely not an accident when two full paragraphs coincide word for word

    • @fahrenheit2101
      @fahrenheit2101 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@itellyouforfree7238 indeed. I never claimed it was, though

    • @caseyrole8551
      @caseyrole8551 ปีที่แล้ว +73

      ​@itellyouforfree7238 but when every thing that can be said has been said, anything that will be said will be plagerism, accidental or not

  • @thequickrundown721
    @thequickrundown721 ปีที่แล้ว +314

    Theres something about introductory college lectures that gives a unique sense of optimism and opportunities.

    • @cat-.-
      @cat-.- ปีที่แล้ว +78

      And it all comes crushing down when you take advanced level courses with a lecturer that essentially just reads the textbook in class

    • @smallknuckles5708
      @smallknuckles5708 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      My experiance is the exact opposite but i digress

    • @TheArnoldification
      @TheArnoldification หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@cat-.- "I leave this problem as an exercise for you to solve" jumpscare

  • @larrytucker9309
    @larrytucker9309 ปีที่แล้ว +497

    I never made a big effort to spot plagiarism but when my student left a link in their paper it was hard not to notice!

    • @geraId9775
      @geraId9775 ปีที่แล้ว +48

      😭

    • @fahadalghamdi9316
      @fahadalghamdi9316 ปีที่แล้ว +45

      At that point, they should get zero as a matter of principle! I mean..COME ON!!

    • @larrytucker9309
      @larrytucker9309 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@fahadalghamdi9316 They did, plus a reduction of one letter grade for the semester. Probably shouldn’t be surprised, but now they work in D.C.!

    • @Baebon6259
      @Baebon6259 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      in their defense, they "cited" their sources ;)

    • @Redwan777
      @Redwan777 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Wait doesn't that technically count as citing source?

  • @zodkip3147
    @zodkip3147 ปีที่แล้ว +396

    I once got yelled at for plagiarism and was given a 50% on the assignment and you may be wondering why not a 0... well I don't know, probably because she couldn't find the source I was plagiarizing from and just expected me to feel guilty and accept the 50% but I wrote the paper to begin with and didn't plagiarize anything. I confronted the teacher and she was the unable to admit she's wrong to a student type of teacher so she held her ground and said it was too well written, and I must've used something to fix it for me. I said I wrote it in a word document and she said, "SEE That is not allowed! It was supposed to be written in the text box with no other resources to help." Keep in mind this was a 'research paper'. We were allowed to use the internet. I went to my counselor and she laughed because she knew me and said that this would only happen to me then contacted the teacher and said to overwrite the grade.

    • @vraxo8953
      @vraxo8953 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      Wow ur teacher was somethin else
      Glad the grade got overrided

    • @shadowpicaro
      @shadowpicaro ปีที่แล้ว +6

      its hard to believe awful teachers exist

    • @zodkip3147
      @zodkip3147 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      @@shadowpicaro yeah. It was for a course that wasn't directly connected with my school (German 2) so the teacher never met me in person and I found it amusing to be honest. I knew it wouldn't matter in the end and it was such a memorable story. *It wasn't the only time it's happened though*
      I did once receive a 75% on a paper that was 2.5 pages when the length requirement said "must be a full 2 pages" I complained and she said it was too long. I took it up with the University because this teacher was a TA or something and worked the summer classes

    • @TOBY-jy7bz
      @TOBY-jy7bz ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Wait you had a counselor? Back in my day(jk, literally 2 years ago, piece of shit system still vigent) we just had to sit there and eat their whole sermon even when they were wrong

    • @amatamaaa
      @amatamaaa ปีที่แล้ว +3

      That happened to me in 6th grade. She gave me a 50% for plagiarism because I used an em dash. A lot of teachers are just scum

  • @thomabow8949
    @thomabow8949 ปีที่แล้ว +479

    Throughout my undergraduate I wrote largely expansive, technical papers on different engineering projects or topics, to disease solution frameworks and market analysis, to infectious disease. The way I avoided plagiarism, as there is endless volumes of information about such subjects, is to identify the key sources for a topic, aggregate them and sort them by topic. Then, you can create sections in whatever you take notes on for each topic (as it is relevant to your paper of course), and go through each paper and copy and paste the portions that have relevancy to your work. Paste the URL by each quote. Highlight in red the key information discovered in each copied section, and rinse and repeat. Underneath the quote, summarize in as few words as possible the general idea of each quote.
    As you write your paper, you can reference these notes, and syncretize from your own knowledge or multiple different copied sections the relevant material, and be able to accurately, on the spot, cite multiple sources for your argument and directly compare whether or not you are "copying" what the authors are saying or using their discoveries as evidence for your work.

    • @obi-wankenobi1750
      @obi-wankenobi1750 ปีที่แล้ว +47

      Word salad

    • @thomabow8949
      @thomabow8949 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      illiterate@@obi-wankenobi1750

    • @ShadowSlayer1441
      @ShadowSlayer1441 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I always run my final paper through multiple plagrism checkers to ensure that I don't miss anything I unintentionally copied.

    • @SKCodesForFun
      @SKCodesForFun ปีที่แล้ว +4

      This is fantastic advice from a seasoned academic :) !!

    • @z3ro216
      @z3ro216 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Amazing advice, going to save this in notes.

  • @thetherrannative
    @thetherrannative ปีที่แล้ว +246

    I had a case where a source I was using was written in a voice and wording exactly identical to the way I write. I _almost_ used the exact same sentence as was in the source, purely through coincidence. Thankfully I caught it and was able to reword my own sentence since this was an assignment where we were not supposed to use direct quotes, but it was a nerve-wracking experience to think that I might get called for plagiarism when I just write in an academic voice by default when I'm doing school papers.

    • @jordangames2560
      @jordangames2560 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@stancastan try using less adverbs like very. Other than just being bad my teacher said it looks like ai writing when it’s done too much.

    • @ratrodgrady
      @ratrodgrady ปีที่แล้ว +68

      ​@@stancastan Same, I wrote a psychology page the other day and I put it in an AI detector. It said 99% AI generated content, even though the entire paper was written by me with no AI assistance. I think it's just as foolish for educators to rely on currently faulty AI detectors as it is to use AI to write your papers as a student.

    • @ratrodgrady
      @ratrodgrady ปีที่แล้ว

      @@abcdqwerty3562 Well that's good. I haven't come across any teachers or professors using them but my opinion stands, if any are using them, they're very much ignoring the reality.

    • @powerofk
      @powerofk 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      According to those detectors, the Bible was written by AI. The detectors are wrong more often than they’re right. @@stancastan

    • @aguyonasiteontheinternet
      @aguyonasiteontheinternet 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@stancastan Wow, a group of people notorious for being technologically incompetent… turn out to be technologically incompetent time and time again! Who would’ve known?

  • @courier6960
    @courier6960 ปีที่แล้ว +889

    One time in college I got cited for plagiarism because I accidentally didn’t put quotes around something that was taken from an article we are all given and told to make a summary of, and even though that it was clearly accidental and I put an in-text citation and reference next to it, the professor gave me a zero, took it to the student disciplinary council, and thus forced me to both complete a stupid plagiarism training I didn’t need and thus left a stain on my permanent record. The original quote was half a sentence on a total absolutely minor and meaningless assignment for a class I was doing well in…
    Absolutely ridiculous that he not only had to make a big condescending stink over it when I eventually had to meet him over it, but couldn’t even keep it in house and waste everyone’s time over it.
    Not only that, but the fact that most universities and teachers don’t have different punishments for accidental minor plagiarism versus intentional wide-reaching plagiarism is just dumb

    • @coatofarms4439
      @coatofarms4439 ปีที่แล้ว +89

      And people think teachers deserve a raise. I’ve only ever seen one teacher in my life that didn't deserve to be paying me to sit through their incompetent ego trip.

    • @lih3391
      @lih3391 ปีที่แล้ว +51

      Yeah, the emphasis should be on writing good papers, not punishing small careless errors. This is the common sense that a lot of teachers seem to lack. One is much easier to grade though, and the teachers aren't being paid very much for this.

    • @the1whoplayz
      @the1whoplayz ปีที่แล้ว +234

      @@coatofarms4439 They fucking do. I do not care how many shitty teachers you have, I know many more who are outstanding at what they do. If you're saying that someone who sits with children (yes even high schoolers count as children) for 8 hours a day, do work BEFORE and AFTER school is over (whether it be prep, grading, etc...), and a bunch of other stuff only deserves $20k (less than a PROGRAMMER), then you're crazy. As a programmer, I see what my mother has to go through as a teacher, and the fact that I get paid way more than her still astounds me (I work as a programmer and the amount of work I do barely amounts to anything compared to what teachers have to do)

    • @alolandonaldtrump8368
      @alolandonaldtrump8368 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      maybe you should have paid more attention. don't blame others for your careless mistake.

    • @jogennotsuki
      @jogennotsuki ปีที่แล้ว +16

      You see, there is no way for the professor to verify whether this was or was not intentional, and it also doesn't matter. Teaching you the hard way was 100% the correct and pedagogically justified approach.

  • @programaths
    @programaths 3 ปีที่แล้ว +837

    When doing research, it becomes hard to avoid plagiarism. Especially if you end up reading a lot of someone in particular, you may catch his style and ending up writing almost word for word what he wrote. So there is a dumb strategy: read different people, summarize then let it out of your memory and work from your summaries. But that's some dedication ^^
    The other unintentional trick is to do your research in another language. English is not my official first language, but I have a good command of it. So, I end up reading in English and writing in French. Also, I do summaries over multiple authors, so the conclusions and hereabouts are not one of one author, but of the group.

    • @meganmullis5386
      @meganmullis5386 2 ปีที่แล้ว +50

      @The Philosophy Guy Like she said, if you use a big quote from another author and cite it correctly, it might be considered overquoting, you might get docked for it, but it's not illegal, and you're not going to get expelled for it.

    • @wowoking2
      @wowoking2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      im reading a ray bradbury book right now and I am not gonna stop myself from using his stlye of writing lol, especially his use of imagery, its really strong and effective

    • @honkhonk8009
      @honkhonk8009 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Yep. Sometimes I would remember something someone wrote, and accidently write it up word for word.

    • @scott1564
      @scott1564 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      It isn't difficult at all: if you are summarizing, as you say, a point made by another author, you simply source it. Problem solved. I will concede that in many undergraduate classes the idea of providing sources may not be taught as well as it should be. And, having been to law school, sourcing points (or authority, as we'd call it) is second nature to me, so I do speak with a little more education on this subject. But the idea that avoiding plagiarism is difficult is nonsense. Where things get dicey are historical "facts." By that I mean, what constitutes a fact? If a historian writes a book that shows that Abe Lincoln did XYZ on a certain date, something unknown to us beforehand, is that a historical fact now, like his Gettysburg Address or assassination? Or is it something that needs to be sourced since it is little known? That is something I don't have the answer to, but you're always better off sourcing material. For undergraduate work, providing a source should never be an issue with any paper you turn in.

    • @programaths
      @programaths ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@scott1564 happens that sometimes, you've a great ides to develop a thesis, because 10 years ago, you read something. The thing is that you've no awareness of that. So, you write it and then get told that it's plagiarism, because you're having the same devlopment than X.
      So, you need to read others to know that you're too close to be different. Hence, it's not original work.
      Normally, you've to read different people, summarize their ideas (with sourcing), position yourself then add your own ideas, unless you can show with no uncertainty that you align with each of them. In that case, you use internal references. It's still heavy work.

  • @NuncNuncNuncNunc
    @NuncNuncNuncNunc ปีที่แล้ว +156

    I could smell the note copying from a mile away. It happens at graduate and professional level. The first sentence, the definition, is now a common expression. If used without the rest of Blumberg, I don't think it would be plagiarism. In that case, I think it is a matter of context whether or not an introductory phrase like "The CDC defines..."

  • @LaEve
    @LaEve ปีที่แล้ว +67

    She's amazing for offering help for students that are doubting themselves.

  • @markoseries
    @markoseries ปีที่แล้ว +56

    This is why I used to run my group member's work through plagiarism checkers. I actually caught them a few times and told them to redo it.

    • @thomabow8949
      @thomabow8949 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      I had a senior level, semester long presentation for Virology. It was the terminal class in the entire department of Microbiology, and I was not a Microbiology major. My classmate, who genuinely seemed to have literacy problems, copied and pasted incorrect information from over a dozen of sources for each of his slides, did not modify the references, the diction, the formatting errors from pasting onto powerpoint, nothing. Just straight up copied and pasted. Did not cite anything either, despite there being in-text citation in some of the paragraphs
      I told him to redo it, and he did not touch the document at all until we presented
      The thing is, all of the precursor classes to that are -extremely- writing intensive. I don't know how he wasn't caught

  • @omarmohammd5276
    @omarmohammd5276 ปีที่แล้ว +96

    even if i do write in my own words, for some reason i still get worried about plagiarimn and getting a zero on a project that i worked so hard for

    • @RED-WEAPON
      @RED-WEAPON ปีที่แล้ว +34

      That's because handing out zeros for plagiarism is bad policy.
      It's like shooting a patient in the head because they have a small tumor on their pinky toe.

    • @Owensontchi17
      @Owensontchi17 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@RED-WEAPON???

    • @RED-WEAPON
      @RED-WEAPON หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Owensontchi17 "Should've just allowed him to redo the paper. Or, that specific section.
      An: "F" is not warranted. This professor is the only reason he had to waste so much time.
      You could give him an: "F" if he literally didn't turn anything in. At worst, you could deduct points from his score equal to if those 2 paragraphs didn't exist.
      I'd just let him either rewrite original works there, properly cite it, or redo the entire paper. All of which are 16X better than: "F, retake the entire class & ruin your GPA".

    • @Duffyyy94
      @Duffyyy94 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are not going to accidently write/word something the exact same way for like 40 words in a row like these students did. If you don't try to cheat, then you have nothing to worry about.

    • @RED-WEAPON
      @RED-WEAPON หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Duffyyy94 I don't think these students were trying to cheat. No F grade can be given for "40 words" missing quotations.

  • @Iog
    @Iog ปีที่แล้ว +293

    I really do think we're at a stage in history where it is far harder to reinvent the wheel. You can only use or rearrange words in such a unique way to not "plagiarize", especially for definitions.

    • @Hyroguai
      @Hyroguai ปีที่แล้ว +70

      I honestly think the idea of plagiarism is skewed, in the sense that plagiarism shouldn't be that big of a deal. I can understand why it does is terrible, but I also think the teaching system takes it too seriously. I've heard of cases of people failing their entire education, of not life, because they took an easy way or forgot to quote an author and some people decided it was bad enough to condemn them to a heavy punishment. Kinda feels like school making their own justice, which should be illegal. It's also becoming increasingly difficult not to copy what someone did, as even of it wasn't necessarily published *someone* must have already formulated it that way. The best example of that is music, as almost every song is documented, and people are starting to buy the rights to string of notes rather than songs because it's used so often.

    • @coatofarms4439
      @coatofarms4439 ปีที่แล้ว +54

      If the material you “plagerized” is factual then who gives a damn. The goal of information should be to spread knowledge not try to please the ego of arrogant writers who just so happened to write it first. College professors should be fired so they can learn how the real world works.

    • @zerixor8134
      @zerixor8134 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      True. One time in high school i got cited for plagiarism on an essay i had written. The thing is that i had never read any of the texts that i had supposedly plagiarized. My essay just happened to have a few sentences that were similar by coincidence.

    • @Iog
      @Iog ปีที่แล้ว +15

      ​@@Hyroguai Exactly. Back in my schools and university there were rules like, don't cite X%, and I believe it was capped at 20% or 15% relatively... regardless of the subject. And for code I believe it was slightly higher, BUT THATS CODE! They're like, expecting me to create new logics out of thin air sometimes LMAO. Or write up my own syntax, like bro...
      And now they have something like TurnItIn, or whatever it's called; I putted in a paper I wrote, it cited stuff from sources I never even looked up, let alone read about... it's crazy. And the sources I did cite, rarely picked up on it, maybe a few but generally no. And the teacher was like, "I'll let it slide this time" Like bro. This case was for a biology course, a widely "researched" field with many writings on pretty foundational topics. Rewritten about over and over again... and it's not like the founders of new frontiers in biology decided to come up with alternative terms to prevent plagiarism, like seriously...
      I do wonder how plagiarism works in other languages far less binary than English. I guess those symbolic languages being Japanese, Chinese, or Korean.

    • @collan580
      @collan580 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@Iog In general less spoken languages are easier because you will have less scientific paper in that language.
      But yeah plagiarism is stupid in a lot of cases, you think about more of avoiding plagiarism than to actually create new things based on already existing stuff.
      As a software developer plagiarism is my life, i will take bits of code that I can use in my own way. Even though those bits are not mine but the things I build from them is and that what is truly matters.

  • @ArcherJLady
    @ArcherJLady ปีที่แล้ว +107

    My university uses a plagiarism checker that checks against ALL sources the uni has access to, and one time it said that I had plagiarized something. After checking the source it said I plagiarized I discovered that I had plagiarized from...
    myself.
    The plagiarism checker also checked your paper against all assignments anyone had ever turned in, and it said I plagiarized, off of my own previous assignment, from the same class.
    Edit for clarity: It was a mundane background sentence akin to, "The sky is blue," and I ain't citing or rewording that, nor am I citing my coment that preceded this edit.

    • @freshrockpapa-e7799
      @freshrockpapa-e7799 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Unironically you're still supposed to cite yourself if you just quote your own work.

    • @Asdfgh-xr6qw
      @Asdfgh-xr6qw ปีที่แล้ว

      @@freshrockpapa-e7799”As I said in my rough draft...”

    • @msmmcamp6549
      @msmmcamp6549 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      This is true. On my current syllabi for all my college courses, they cite plagiarism against yourself as being no different than plagiarism from somewhere else. Packs the same punishment (borderline expulsion) too

    • @DueySR
      @DueySR ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Copying your own work is still plagiarism. You either have to cite it or rework it.

    • @ArcherJLady
      @ArcherJLady ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@DueySR I wasn't even copying, and it was a mundane background sentance akin to "The sky is blue," and I ain't citing or rewording that, nor am I citing the edit that preceded this comment.

  • @SaschaJanetschek
    @SaschaJanetschek ปีที่แล้ว +11

    The algorithm liked that video so much, he dug up that video again after 9 years, only to tell this generation of students not to plagiarize.

  • @fennecbesixdouze1794
    @fennecbesixdouze1794 ปีที่แล้ว +64

    The first example with the parks system paper is a great case in point: all the student had to do was present that excerpt as a lengthy quotation. Had he done that the paper would not just have avoided plagiarism, it would have also have simply been a much better paper.

    • @TheXLAXLimpLungs
      @TheXLAXLimpLungs ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Which is stupid and shouldn't even be a thing

    • @itellyouforfree7238
      @itellyouforfree7238 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      that doesn't make sense at all. the paper would not be a new article, just a collage of already written stuff

    • @index3876
      @index3876 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      it would have been intellectually honest but no it would not have materially improved the paper. plagiarism identifies a kind of academic dishonesty, it has nothing to do with quality per se

    • @clara-df5km
      @clara-df5km ปีที่แล้ว

      it wouldn't have been better like the student was right to think that was a quick and easy way to make an A grade introduction, it was j morally wrong and he should have spent some time coming up w something on his own of an equal quality... but not j inserting a quotation

    • @niXity9000
      @niXity9000 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      ​@@itellyouforfree7238 Undergrad papers do not necessarily need to present new ideas, just to show you correctly understand the subject. So yes you can just link up a bunch of quotations, so long as the way you organise them makes sense.
      Graduate work requires original thought and you do need to show that someone else did not come up with the idea earlier.

  • @leszekandhisrandomstuff.9228
    @leszekandhisrandomstuff.9228 ปีที่แล้ว +64

    I never plagiarized academically, but I do remember an instance where things made me nervous. I was debunking a book and in the process I was looking up a lot of other work on the topic, I wrote my own debunking from scratch and posted it on a forum. I put a lot of effort into it and it was a hit with the crowd there.
    Someone wanted to put it into a PDF for use and I declined permission. The issue is that I didn't know (and still don't) how much of what I wrote would have been too close too the source. My memory isn't photographic but it is good enough that I wouldn't want to have that work scrutinized.
    If it had been the night before it was due at an academic setting, I would have had to submit it and hoped for the best. After all I did write the whole thing myself with no copy and pasting. I can totally see that being a trap where nothing was intended but there is no time to go back and vet everything and after all the reading I had done it had sort of blurred together.
    I didn't have a due date and I had the instinct at least to be worried and so nothing happened, but I still think about it from time to time. The unanswered question.

    • @satoruriolu6132
      @satoruriolu6132 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Despite my anxiety, its better to leave some questions unanswered than have to deal with the truth, be it positive or not. There is a paper I had to write for college that I still get chills thinking about it, had read so many books and despite how I wrote it, it always kept striking on the back of my head how close it is to some of the work I studied for it.
      I ended giving up and just accepting a certain note reduction by a lot of quoting and adding sources but I still think someday someone will come up in my dreams and put me in dream jail for possible plagirizing

  • @PBurns-ng3gw
    @PBurns-ng3gw หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Got accused of plagiarism by a TA because I'd previously read a Wikipedia article on the same topic and inadvertently ended up repeating a two-word phrase that was in the article. When I met with the professor, she rolled her eyes and agreed to dock my grade to a C rather than reporting me to the disciplinary board. It turned out the same TA had accused almost half the class of plagiarism while grading the same paper.

  • @coolbeans5911
    @coolbeans5911 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    i can't believe that obscure breadtuber plagiarized this video

  • @JeffreyLByrd
    @JeffreyLByrd ปีที่แล้ว +198

    The story/example involving the AIDS paper just shows how ridiculous the obsession with plagiarism is. If a student just turns in work that us simply copying someone else’s work then they rightly deserve a poor grade, but if they show legitimate thought and effort, failing them over quotation marks or a missed citation is asinine.

    • @TheOutZZ
      @TheOutZZ ปีที่แล้ว +39

      This. I'm really, really concerned about the upcoming year when I'm going to be writing my diploma thesis and if some program is going to accuse me of even *subconciously* copying something, it's insane.

    • @1370802
      @1370802 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      But what would you do if your work was published and the person you unintentionally plagiarized from caught that? You’d be sued and rightly so. College is a preparation for real world professionals.

    • @algot34
      @algot34 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I agree. In Sweden, if a teacher has remarks on your paper, if it's slight plagiarism for example, they will tell you to edit it and resubmit it. And then it'll be approved.

    • @ozzyp97
      @ozzyp97 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@1370802 Over a single definition from a source you did actually cite, when it's almost certainly an honest mistake? I think the vast majority of scientists have better things to do.

    • @CatgirlExplise6039
      @CatgirlExplise6039 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      @@1370802 There are 8 billion people on earth. How many words in the english language alone, do you think are spoken every day?
      The sentence that you just said, almost certainly, has been said, in multiple languages. multiple times before.
      This paragraph i type right now, has most likely, been typed, at least ONCE before, even if it went undocumented.

  • @Ckom-Tunes
    @Ckom-Tunes ปีที่แล้ว +303

    I had a student plagiarize in a paper on the topic of plagiarism!
    That takes balls!
    Edit: BTW, she’s an excellent professor.

    • @lirich0
      @lirich0 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      now that's meta writing

    • @Jellyjam14blas
      @Jellyjam14blas ปีที่แล้ว +10

      XD 'Ironic' plagiarism

    • @awaredeshmukh3202
      @awaredeshmukh3202 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Like that recent debacle with a psychologist faking data in a study about honesty 🙃

    • @Ckom-Tunes
      @Ckom-Tunes ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@awaredeshmukh3202
      Irony, a cruel mistress…

  • @kelvinwang2485
    @kelvinwang2485 6 ปีที่แล้ว +81

    tip: write jot notes, not in paragraphs. that way, it's less likely that you'll plagiarize.

    • @aw4417
      @aw4417 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      stoneface
      Why? Isn’t plagiarism supposed to be intentional?

    • @ghostface1066
      @ghostface1066 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@aw4417 @A W it depends... often yes, intent is part of the 'charge' of plagiarism, but there are different considerations for different circumstances so in some instances intent will be taken into consideration and in others it won't matter

  • @franceskinskij
    @franceskinskij ปีที่แล้ว +160

    I'm a musician and basically the art of composing is basically stealing from eachother and making other's stuff yours, as Stravinskij said: "Real artists don't borrow, they steal". Sure, that definitely does not mean you can take a Mozart sonata and "make it yours" but you can base the composition off the style and play around with it or quote passages from composers. I see people saying "it's hard to be original, I can't quote because I'm afraid of copyright". My advice is it doesn't matter. You can take the subject from a Bach fugue and write a new one, you can take any theme from any composer and write variations, the most you can do is specify whose the theme is

    • @asdfssdfghgdfy5940
      @asdfssdfghgdfy5940 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@amandak.4246it was quite regular from classical artists to borrow from each other at the time though.

    • @asdfssdfghgdfy5940
      @asdfssdfghgdfy5940 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Something I tried is stealing the bass from songs. Basically I reduced it down and added figures above the bass, basically turning it into a partimenti exercise. It worked particularly well with Corelli. Definitely suited to Baroque era stuff more though.

    • @RTU130
      @RTU130 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hmmmm

    • @TheOutZZ
      @TheOutZZ ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@amandak.4246 Yes, but that also goes the other way around. Copyright of contemporary music is getting way, WAY too strict and starts having the same problem of prohibiting every tiny bit of plagiarism - it misses the point of protecting intellectual property and dissolves into over-pedanticism and killing creativity (resp. obscuring the important information if we are talking about the sciences).

    • @Ixarus6713
      @Ixarus6713 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, chords and basslines are pinched all the time. I'd encourage it there. 😁

  • @stoneweitkemper7901
    @stoneweitkemper7901 3 ปีที่แล้ว +465

    in my opinion, unintentional plagiarism isn't plagiarism. In my view, plagiarism is intentional stealing of someones work

    • @fillername236
      @fillername236 3 ปีที่แล้ว +77

      But, whether intentional or unintentional, they both result in the same thing: the student either gets away with it, or the student gets caught.

    • @DedricSilva
      @DedricSilva 3 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      @@fillername236 It happened with me back in 2016. Mine was unintetional and i almost got kicked out of college for it. But they left me off the hook and told me not to do it again.

    • @stoneweitkemper7901
      @stoneweitkemper7901 3 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      @@DedricSilva yeah like if it was unintentional, how are you going to prevent it? you didn't cause it in the first place

    • @biggreen9845
      @biggreen9845 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      I used to work as a TA when I was in grad school, responsible for reading papers for the professor in a freshman course. Unintentional plagiarism is easy to spot, I.e student meaning to paraphrase but it is too close to the source material student quoting the author and giving the appropriate in-text citation but forgot to put quotes. Just some examples. I’ve come across intentional plagiarism. I’ve always had the student’s back that I felt, unintentionally plagiarized in my notes due to oversight or lack of writing experience in paraphrasing. However, for the students that intentionally plagiarized, no.

    • @Tim85-y2q
      @Tim85-y2q 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Morally speaking, you might have a point, but in practicality you're going to face the same consequences either way, so it would be doing students no favors to hold them to a lesser standard than they are going to face later in life.

  • @UnShredded
    @UnShredded ปีที่แล้ว +11

    It went from this to a cat and mouse chase between generative AIs and detective AIs.

  • @zoneoperator
    @zoneoperator ปีที่แล้ว +11

    "Cite your source."
    "It came to me in a dream."

    • @tw3f4tes52
      @tw3f4tes52 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Just read a paper that listed his dead friend as a coauthor because he appeared to him in his dream and supposedly gave him some sort of insight that lead to the findings of the paper.

    • @alyme_r
      @alyme_r หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Ramanujan

  • @qrzone8167
    @qrzone8167 ปีที่แล้ว +91

    Thankfully didn't have to take a single gen ed prerequisite for college. In high school we had a plagiarism detector that you could simply use as a tool to ensure what you submitted wasn't plagiarised, so it was physically impossible to submit blatantly plagiarized work, but more importantly the way it was presented as a tool rather than "oh you plagiarized, kys, have a zero on the assignment." The things that would set off this plagiarism detector was ridiculous as well. You might think you're writing an original sentence only to to be told that you most definitely are not.

    • @Gankist
      @Gankist ปีที่แล้ว +1

      well is it even considered plagiarism at that point?

  • @fostermcnamara9207
    @fostermcnamara9207 2 ปีที่แล้ว +52

    2021 and this is still a great lecture! Thank you!

    • @twd949
      @twd949 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's a lecture about copy pasta... What did you expect? Copy with pasta was a thing 1000's years ago aswell...

    • @mutum1
      @mutum1 ปีที่แล้ว

      why would the current year effect the quality of video ? its the same thing

  • @vincentwendt2235
    @vincentwendt2235 ปีที่แล้ว +90

    I wonder if this professor ever had a student that plagiarized their own work. I've sometimes heard it referred to as "self-plagiarism".

    • @andrew2377
      @andrew2377 ปีที่แล้ว +57

      Yeah I saw that in the syllabus of one of my courses this semester. I don't see how it makes sense though, my work is my work and it's mine. Period.

    • @theconnotationofmemedealer3795
      @theconnotationofmemedealer3795 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@andrew2377 Wrong! Your work is your is yours only in the context that you originally wrote it in. When you re-use your words, you need to cite yourself if you are even allowed to do this practice in the first place!

    • @andrew2377
      @andrew2377 ปีที่แล้ว +53

      @@theconnotationofmemedealer3795 I need to cite myself? But it's me.. that's just silly. Do I not own the rights to my own words? Explain this in a legal sense.

    • @andrew2377
      @andrew2377 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      @@theconnotationofmemedealer3795 What I'm saying is, the idea of "plagiarizing yourself" is just professors trying to make it harder on the students..... My words are my words.. they are mine. I am my own conscious. I am me. My mind shouldn't have to magically change because I need to make sure not to "copy myself". What a complete joke.

    • @FractalZero
      @FractalZero ปีที่แล้ว

      @@andrew2377 in academia, uncited postulations/analyses are taken to be new contributions to the field - if you just start copy and pasting your 10 year old ideas into new papers without citation you're just muddying the waters and creating more work for other people who have to track down its origin. it also reflects poorly on your ability to be rigorous, and could even cause others to view your historical and future work with suspicion ("if they copy+pasted their own work, what's to say they didn't plagiarise others?"). in school, if you have perfectly phrased (unlikely) something previously then it should be cited such that it's clear to the reader that you've already done legwork, that you're confident in your conclusion, and that you're about to go on to reiterate it. if imperfectly phrased, this is an opportunity to reassess your original idea and strengthen it and word it more clearly. in any and all cases, simply re-using your work silently is lazy and you only deprive yourself of the chance to improve your analytical skills

  • @johnb6723
    @johnb6723 3 ปีที่แล้ว +31

    Some people need to use a thesaurus more.

  • @tif
    @tif ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I never thought I would voluntarily attend an optional class but here I am

  • @seinfan9
    @seinfan9 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Even the guy who cited all the sources for each sentence got dinged for plagiarizing simply because he didn't use quotations and it "didn't sound good" when he put it together. What a waste of time.

    • @floofzykitty5072
      @floofzykitty5072 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      That's like saying someone's English paper should "still pass" because they only forgot to use any punctuation

  • @notleviathan855
    @notleviathan855 ปีที่แล้ว +68

    I once had a professor get on my ass for plagiarism. Because they 'had a student say that same exact phrase on last paper.' Turns out that same exact student was me, I basically re-used a point word for word on a past paper for this paper. The assignment was to research a topic that was mainstream, and then come back to it three months later to see what changed. My topic didn't really change at all that much. He was like 'you need to quote yourself, or I'll have to flunk you for plagiarizing yourself.' I was like 'dude, you can but we'll be taking this to someone higherup. It's ridiculous you're being so stingy about it.' He decided that it wasn't worth arguing with me over it, nor was it worth his time to talk to like my parents/his boss. He ended up knocking my grade from an A to a B because that was 'fair.'
    Still hate that guy, and I made a left him a well worded review on that professors website.

    • @jameson1239
      @jameson1239 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Your supposed to cite yourself in that circumstance

    • @King-ox1ef
      @King-ox1ef ปีที่แล้ว +24

      He was literally right though lmao

    • @notleviathan855
      @notleviathan855 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@King-ox1ef I never said he was wrong, but I wasn't gonna change that shit.

    • @jameson1239
      @jameson1239 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      @@notleviathan855 then why get mad when he takes grades off for doing something incorrectly when you won’t fix it

    • @notleviathan855
      @notleviathan855 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      @@jameson1239 Because it's incredibly stupid that an A paper gets dropped to a B over not quoting myself. He also, was a shit professor overall. His lectures covered nothing in the books we were assigned, he gave us homework material that frankly wasn't even remotely close to what we were studying. He also, was just an asshole.
      There was another student, who generally got C,D grades on most everything. During an important test this student actually got a 94% The professor was so sure this kid cheated, that not only did he write a letter to the dean, but also the counselor, and the students parents. Turns out, that the kid didn't cheat, he just understood the material. The professor didn't offer any sort of apology, and refused to put the students original 94%, instead marking the assignment late, and giving the kid an 80% as a result.

  • @kikolokopo_toys
    @kikolokopo_toys ปีที่แล้ว +12

    In 10th/11th grades we had a teacher that literally used powerpoints from ex-students. Sometimes she changed the names, other times she didn't bother. She always said something bad about the presentations with the student's name's on it and we know it was all stollen because she only read what was there

    • @windowsforvista
      @windowsforvista ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That's different. It's not her school assignment to make assignments. Though it seems like she's not great anyway.

  • @MarimbaBuddy
    @MarimbaBuddy ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I remember covering this topic pretty well in some of my college writing classes. I don't recall if we were shown examples like this (we might have been), but I remember discussing the three main ways to get information across: summarizing, paraphrasing, and direct quotations, with a lot of practice in each strategy. I found it to be very helpful.

  • @Zanarkendjp
    @Zanarkendjp ปีที่แล้ว +43

    Only once I got close to plagiarizing a paper. I wanted to get better at writing and in my English class I asked my professor to group me up with the best student in the class. She did and we did our next assignment. I read her paper and I was blown away!
    I only had trouble coming up with a thesis statement, and that was the issue I wanted to work on the most. Our assignment was on "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson. We had to write about the symbolic black box.
    This student described the scene in her opening paragraph something to the tune of, "the flowers were blossoming profusely [. . .] what a good day to kill someone". In my own paper I wrote"the flowers were blossoming profusely" and my professor held me after class and asked why I wrote that because it didn't fit with what I had written. It was basically a small detail that stood out like a sore thumb. And she went on to tell me that those words sound very familiar and that I should take a moment to think about copying from another student.
    I trashed my paper and started again. I read the book once more and made a brain storm tree and went from there. I passed the class and went on to learn a valuable lesson...College is for dumb dumbs.

    • @moistcrusader2026
      @moistcrusader2026 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Holy shit what a coincidence, I'm literally working on an assignment about "the lottery" by Shirley Jackson as I read this. I can definitely relate to you though, I've been paired up with what I can only describe as aspiring novelists, and even though I consider myself somewhat of a competent writer, it falls completely flat when compared to these people.
      It's super tempting to write in a similar fashion to what you just read, especially if that writing left an impression on you, you'll just start to copy their style unconsciously.

    • @Astrjd
      @Astrjd ปีที่แล้ว

      Glad you avoided it! Did this happen years ago?

    • @Zanarkendjp
      @Zanarkendjp ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Astrjd yup! 2007/2008 I still have the paper, I just checked my old flash drive!

    • @Zanarkendjp
      @Zanarkendjp ปีที่แล้ว

      @@moistcrusader2026 yeah I know what you mean. I enjoy writing especially when I want to describe a time/place. I start to feel like I can take 10 pages to describe a tree...sound familiar? :)

    • @moistcrusader2026
      @moistcrusader2026 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Zanarkendjp Unfortunately I don't know what you mean, sorry. I do enjoy very descriptive writing though, I find people who can describe something with minute detail while still making it engaging very impressive

  • @Ilikeminecraft57
    @Ilikeminecraft57 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Seeing a document camera really takes me back to good ol' middle school :)

  • @rubixcubesolve
    @rubixcubesolve 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    the first guy probably plagirsized everything from the first papers too and fooled you into thinking he was a good writter.

  • @BunnyWatson-k1w
    @BunnyWatson-k1w ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I had one half of a class use the same two paragraphs in an assigned essay topic. I found after a google search they had used two paragraphs of a book description found in a publisher's catalog.

  • @badeugenecops4741
    @badeugenecops4741 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I can see accidentally plagerizing a sentence or two. But when you have a paragraph that's WORD FOR WORD...no accident there.

  • @josephvelez7680
    @josephvelez7680 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Difficult to avoid I'd imagine. However, it's nice to see that the Doctor/Professor was willing to have an open door for students to inquire if they felt if they were plagiarizing indirectly. I never went to college but awesome to see.

  • @d0lvl0
    @d0lvl0 ปีที่แล้ว +47

    I never plagiarized past the 4th gade. I got C's straight through all my writing classes. I'm a successful engineer now. Don't plagiarize, just get shitty grades. You'd be shocked at how irrelevant grades are.

    • @sweeterstuff
      @sweeterstuff ปีที่แล้ว +6

      reassuring based on just how much i don't care about the english language

    • @advikdeshmukh805
      @advikdeshmukh805 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That’s because engineering is hard asf and employers know that. For competitive business internships, you need a good GPA or they won’t hire you

    • @d0lvl0
      @d0lvl0 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@advikdeshmukh805 You don't need to get an internship to get hired. I never did. I'd argue it's better to not do an internship. Spend your young 20s having fun, not working.

    • @joemogley
      @joemogley 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@d0lvl0 how did you get hired then?

    • @d0lvl0
      @d0lvl0 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@joemogley I barely got my degree and then interviewed and got hired. Most skills you are hired for are skills you don’t learn in school. Being able to collaborate effectively with others is far more important than basically any other skill

  • @evanhorn951
    @evanhorn951 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The first time I unknowingly plagiarized was when I used a previous paragraph in one paper I did, on another paper with a very similar prompt and subject. At the time, I didn’t know plagiarizing yourself was bad.

  • @theneilpowers
    @theneilpowers ปีที่แล้ว +3

    After being recommended this video in excess of a dozen times, I suppose the algorithm has defeated me…

  • @Slavik1613
    @Slavik1613 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Something about this video stuck to me, a kind of adversarial feeling I had but couldn't square with the groundedness and tough-love attitude of the teacher. I cheated a lot in college, not because it was hard but because I was lazy and bored, and I think the examples get to the heart of why: there's a considerable amount of shame heaped upon these students not for repeating the words of others, but for repeating them them in the "wrong" way. There's an examination of why they plagiarized, but not on why they felt the need. Word count is the too-easy answer, the perfunctory style of college writing is another. In any case, nothing new is being said, the stolen writing merely used to add an element of interest so one's eyes don't glaze over as quickly, but it's not like the definition ripped from the dictionary is seeding a political argument, or a student masking another's discovery as their own. Citation could be taught with a worksheet and a reference page but instead millions of human hours are spent re-writing the same descriptions of global warming or disease until one develops a muscle memory for rephrasing the obvious.
    So much more I could say that would be worthless to, fittingly. I could've been taught something in college. Instead I graduated summa cum laude. The next time you're watching some video essay on here and you're suddenly hit with realization that the presenter hasn't actually SAID anything, merely referenced and summarized, take a moment to thank college writing.

    • @algot34
      @algot34 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Well said.

  • @space_1073
    @space_1073 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Is anyone else paranoid that they'll write a sentence that is exactly what someone else wrote and get accused of plagiarism? I have no clue how I could defend myself if this ever happened.

    • @fireplace8583
      @fireplace8583 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      I feel like single sentences being the same can be passed off as reasonable chance, but there's probably a point at which it is statistically improbable for you to have written the exact same thing, word for word; hence why most of the examples were of paragraph length, with a specific enough niche that the probability of you writing the exact same thing word for word would be next to none.

    • @space_1073
      @space_1073 ปีที่แล้ว

      Oh ok that makes me feel a little better I guess lol@@fireplace8583

    • @robertcarlson8867
      @robertcarlson8867 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      If you do accidentally reproduce a passage someone already wrote but which you've never read before, and it's long enough to trigger a plagiarism accusation , make sure you go play poker right afterward, because with your luck you'll probably get a few royal flushes in a row.

  • @BunnyWatson-k1w
    @BunnyWatson-k1w ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I once detected plagiarism by typing in one suspicious sentence into google. The source popped up in two seconds.

  • @wobblyorbee279
    @wobblyorbee279 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    3:36 i can feel the regretness that he was experiencing... "If only I'd just not cheat on JUST THAT INTRODUCTION"

  • @ktm1125
    @ktm1125 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I don;t know why i was just recommened this (after 9 years) but truly informative and helpful. Thank you so much.

  • @ElectricityTaster
    @ElectricityTaster ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I once did work that was so good the teacher was absolutely sure I had plagiarized it. He then went on to take points away for bogus reasons while making snide comments. But because he didn't actually accuse me, he didn't care when I gave him undeniable proof that the work was mine.
    I then had another teacher accuse me of self-plagiarism for not citing my own photos, which I had taken specifically for that assignment and were not published anywhere else. At that point I started to actually plagiarize work out of spite. I would read source material in one language then translate it. Not because I needed to do it, but because I would rather feel caught than falsely accused by these cretins.

  • @strangerdaysss
    @strangerdaysss ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I agree with the importance of addressing plagiarism, not just in the classroom, but in real life too. It's all about respecting others' work and ideas. Growing up, my teachers always emphasized this as a crucial ethical principle. Inspired by others? Absolutely. Quoting and similarity? Sure thing. But copying? No. Dont steal.

    • @TSD4027
      @TSD4027 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Steve Jobs said good artists copy, great artists steal. A mantra that seemed to get him very far in life, even if he was an asshole.

  • @loujon191
    @loujon191 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    I hope the second student didn't get in trouble because it was clearly unintentional. After, this I would drop her class immediately

    • @ambi3nttech
      @ambi3nttech ปีที่แล้ว +44

      I don't think the professor has a choice. They are rules set by the university/college.

    • @rookievideos8865
      @rookievideos8865 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      She said it was an accident, so clearly it was. Couldn't be that she was lying to shirk responsibility. People never do that. Clearly.

    • @erinys2
      @erinys2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@rookievideos8865 Why would a sane person write text word for word on purpose knowing how easily it can be detected

    • @JunHector
      @JunHector ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@erinys2 You have more faith in people than you should. People do really dumb shit knowing full well what will happen when they do. They continue to do it time after time. Someone with tens of DUIs, multiple arrest of robbery, or etc. Common sense shouldn't be taken for granted. It doesn't help that plagiarism is by far easier than all of those. You can just control C and V it on a word document or have the source right next to you as you type. People of all academic levels and social ones all make the same dumb decisions because they always think they can get away with it. That they're smarter than the individuals that are being "fooled".

    • @rookievideos8865
      @rookievideos8865 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @notaurenotsure2732
      Plagiarism exists. I will refer you to the first example in the video for one possible reason as to why someone would do it. Also, insane people exist. What are you trying to say?

  • @plectro3332
    @plectro3332 ปีที่แล้ว +282

    I teach computer science at a university and have seen tons of plagiarised assignments. Getting caught and being forced to repeat is a nice "threat" but it's not the main reason why you should be deterred from it. All university rules aside, here's what I have noticed happens to a huge amount of students who plagiarise:
    - You're not learning. The assignments are there for you to learn the important aspects of the course. Not doing well in them is a more valuable learning experience than plagiarising them
    - You might get a few extra marks from the assignments, but in actual exams it becomes very easy to see who was plagiarising throughout the year. Those students fail exams... hard
    - If you somehow manage to make it to the next year, you're going to struggle a lot more and you will be overwhelmed with the amount of knowledge you're missing from the previous year. It's so much unnecessary stress and many students quickly realize and regret that they took the easy path previously. "This was a future me problem and now I'm future me and it sucks"
    - You learn to cut corners, what happens when you actually get your degree and start looking for a job. Let's say you have just graduated this year and are fully qualified for the industry. So what? So are the other thousands of students. How can you convince the the interviewers to give YOU the job over anyone else. How are you standing out from the crowd? Do you think they're going to give the job to someone who was faking their knowledge throughout their time or maybe someone who did well in the university AND joined competitions, joined extracurriculars, has their own projects they've been working out by applying the knowledge they learned in the university?

    • @SoupsIsEz
      @SoupsIsEz ปีที่แล้ว

      "give the job to someone who was faking their knowledge throughout their time or maybe someone who did well in the university AND joined competitions, joined extracurriculars, has their own projects they've been working out by applying the knowledge they learned in the university?" yeah and sacrifice 80 hours a week just to have the most minute edge against other students that still wont land you a job that will support the cost of living, college is a slimy disgusting scam

    • @NGabunchanumbers
      @NGabunchanumbers ปีที่แล้ว +23

      I didn't plagiarize, but your argument against it is so poor that I wish I did.

    • @bagochips1208
      @bagochips1208 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      you the kind to have mandatory attendance for your classes?

    • @hereandnow3156
      @hereandnow3156 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      I agree with the sentiment that you learn most from failures. Unfortunately, the educational system disagrees. When you are given homework, you are actively encouraged to not fail as through the entirety of our lives our homework assignments are graded on how correct they are, not on how much effort we put in to understand the concepts. This also hurts students confidence in exploring concepts.
      The fact is, students are encouraged to cheat by the system and until the system changes to encourage learning the concepts rather than correctness, cheating will always be a problem.

    • @Coder6719
      @Coder6719 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I totally plagiarized my first year CS course assignments. (I'll be more blunt. I cheated by using the coursework of a friend that had done the courses the previous year.) At the end of the year I had great grades. And I couldn't understand what I'd done and looking forward could see that wasn't going to work if I wanted my degree. I spent the entire summer before second year slogging through every assignment on my own (without the professor and TAs help.). Got it done and learned a lot more than coding and some data structures.
      "You're only cheating yourself", is exactly right.

  • @SvenErik_Lindstrom3
    @SvenErik_Lindstrom3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I wrote to my paper "I think therefore I am" and was accused of plagiarism.

    • @sinfinite7516
      @sinfinite7516 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I mean it technically is, famously said by Descarte. Though I could see just knowing the saying and thinking it was a cultural thing. 😂

    • @SvenErik_Lindstrom3
      @SvenErik_Lindstrom3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@sinfinite7516 And I also proved the existence of God. Go figure.

    • @CasabaHowitzer
      @CasabaHowitzer 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It's such a short statement that it could reasonably be expected to have been produced independently, even in the exact same wording. It's unlikely, but as I understand it, accusing someone of plagiarism requires proof.
      Multiple sentences being identical is so unlikely that it is not reasonable to consider this possibility.
      I actually think it's unlikely Descartes was the first to come up with it. And also, he obviously never wrote it in English.

  • @bordeux9126
    @bordeux9126 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    To be honest, with the amount of essay/thesis/any published work online right now, I will not be suprised if one day, a professor will mark a student fail just for plagiarism, while writing it in front of him.

  • @jektonoporkins5025
    @jektonoporkins5025 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I often wonder how many college students got away with plagiarism before the internet. My guess would be "most."

  • @nssteampunk4865
    @nssteampunk4865 4 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    I never plagiarized. Always asked for help. Cited sources. Followed simple instruction.

    • @dhanajon5528
      @dhanajon5528 3 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      I always fear of accidentally plagiarising

    • @noeditbookreviews
      @noeditbookreviews 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Same here. It's not difficult to understand.

  • @jeanpierre4370
    @jeanpierre4370 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    It's really easy, just rearrange the sentence, use a different word, and done. Shoot I copied a whole article re-arranged the paragraphs, words, etc.

  • @rahmathkakkotkallery854
    @rahmathkakkotkallery854 3 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    The one thing I learnt from the two examples is if you are going to introduce something, the easiest way is to use quotes of someone/quotation marks.
    Especially for the first one, where the first sentence sounded a bit opinionated

  • @sagatuppercut2960
    @sagatuppercut2960 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Imagine all the students that got away with plagiarism because of teacher who were too lazy or too busy to check the references.

    • @Sammysapphira
      @Sammysapphira ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I'm sure they're all working normal successful jobs because none of this crap matters in the real world.

  • @blazearmoru
    @blazearmoru ปีที่แล้ว +9

    The student could have said "According to the book BOOKNAME, 'STEAL ALL THE SHIT' which sets the context for this paper" ... and then repeat this over and over for 12+ pages, ending each quote with some minor explanation of why that quote was important.
    To save space though, it's better to just paraphrase so you can shorten entire paragraphs into 1~2 sentences followed by a short explain then move onto the next point. After a while, having an untangled paper is more important than sounding cool.

  • @J-Pow
    @J-Pow ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I had a senior design project in which two of my teammates tried to throw everyone else under the bus by submitting plagiarized code as their own. I feel the professor should've failed them, but he kept them on our team, which just made things tense and awkward.

    • @FightFantasy
      @FightFantasy ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Plagerized code? Literally every professional software contains code that was copied and pasted from stack overflow

    • @J-Pow
      @J-Pow ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@FightFantasy I'm not talking about copied lines or functions. I'm talking about an entire program consisting of more than 300 lines, and claiming they did all of it, and saying the other teammates did nothing and should be failed by the professor. It was the most egregious throwing under the bus I've experienced in academia.

    • @FroisonControl
      @FroisonControl ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@FightFantasyacademia is different from the real world.

  • @Lormenkal64
    @Lormenkal64 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The one with the notes is so common, just make sure to never write down stuff 1 to 1 in your notes unless you explicitely plan to use it as a quote

  • @RealVoidex
    @RealVoidex ปีที่แล้ว +4

    damn this is really good professor and they care about their students... plagiarism is not a joke... there's a bunch of systems out there to detect them so the risks ain't worth

  • @reallybigcircle
    @reallybigcircle 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    0:03 Another difference between quality writing and plagarism is location. In the original work that this came from, it was in the foreward. The foreward is meant the sell the reader on why they should read this. However, the student put it in the paper directly. This is important because, if you boil the plagarized piece down to its points, it really isn't saying much and just sounds nice.such a paragraph is not really productive where the student placed it, but is just fine where the original author placed it.

  • @brockjensen2473
    @brockjensen2473 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    In 9th grade I plagiarized 4 paragraphs for my essay off wikipedia then I erased them off wiki... It did not work 💀💀

    • @rings22
      @rings22 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      menace

    • @lukebytes5366
      @lukebytes5366 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oh no bro😂

    • @Frommerman
      @Frommerman 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Bro didn't know all edits to wikipedia can be instantly reverted

  • @riddledrasberry6270
    @riddledrasberry6270 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Time to tell everyone they’re plagiarizing my book that has every combination of words in the english language ever. It’s larger than the universe but it’s mine.

  • @georgeofhamilton
    @georgeofhamilton ปีที่แล้ว +2

    As they say, “Good scholars plagiarize, great scholars cite.”

  • @Tadesan
    @Tadesan ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I see students get together and share lab reports. There are three archived and the students swap paragraphs and change the words around. But they dont think to change turns of phrase. In any event they spend way more effort cheating than if they bothered to learn to write and then just wrote stream of consciousness.

  • @chrishan7178
    @chrishan7178 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    16:37 "I expected maybe a couple of Physics majors or something..." I understood that passage not because I am a Physics major, but because I am a Chemistry major... that passage is moreso/mainly related to Chemistry than physics. I understand that she is an English professor, but still... Also that level of plagiarism was off the charts. I absolutely love this professor's approach and methods to teaching and it is very clear that she is a great professor.

  • @michellehao2000
    @michellehao2000 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Hbomberguy angel version

  • @gayesthusky2177
    @gayesthusky2177 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    A friend of mine uploaded a paper to a popular place where some students went to plagiarize/ download completed papers. One of the students in class apparently used it because my friend overheard exactly the thing that he inserted into the paper: an inappropriate phrase involving the reader’s mother and her ch🐱t. Needless to say, the student didn’t bother reading the paper after downloading it and the professor wasn’t pleased.

  • @Shark-pj8in
    @Shark-pj8in หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Chatgpt got us covered now, lmao

    • @zcorpalpha2462
      @zcorpalpha2462 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Working world 😂

    • @primekrunkergamer188
      @primekrunkergamer188 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I was gonna say the same thing lmao. Glorious chatgpt they can no longer tell it apart

    • @Bromon655
      @Bromon655 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@primekrunkergamer188yes they can. If you have the vocabulary of a 10th grader and suddenly you’re writing papers that sound like someone with a PhD, professors catch onto the crap immediately.

    • @primekrunkergamer188
      @primekrunkergamer188 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Bromon655 No they dont. First of all nobody has vocabulary of a 10th grader in college. Secondly I have personal experience with using and having people with PHD's use it for their papers. Atleast 50% of people use it and nobody gets caught unless its blatant and I am talking about the biggest college in my state which I am not gonna name. That percentage is only gonna get bigger.
      Personally I find it hilarious that you use the dumbest strawman example. Nobody in real life will use it like you described. Students are not dumb

    • @Bromon655
      @Bromon655 13 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@primekrunkergamer188 I regularly share discussion board posts with people who write like literal 10th graders (or lower). You say students aren't dumb but I'm not so sure

  • @Kittnikita
    @Kittnikita ปีที่แล้ว +2

    As a teacher and a former student I can't care less about plagiarism by my students unless it is extremely obvious. Some teachers dock points for 'badly" written papers, some try to force you to buy their books, some just give you completely nonsensical tasks that won't help you in the future.
    And thank God I don't have to write any papers even though I work in a uni; I just have no time for this shit working 8:30-17:00/18:00 every day 5/2. I just can't imagine myself not plagiarizing something to meet the research quota for the year.

  • @strangerdaysss
    @strangerdaysss ปีที่แล้ว +3

    what my teachers taught me:
    Correct: A wise man once said "Be the change you wish to see in the world." That man was Mahatma Gandhi.
    Wrong: I said to him, "Be the change you want to see in the world."

  • @Leviachansimp
    @Leviachansimp 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    and then here's my maths teacher, yelling at people for asking questions. 💀

  • @hillaryclinton2415
    @hillaryclinton2415 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Lesson learned.. do a plagerism check on yourself...

    • @joshallen128
      @joshallen128 ปีที่แล้ว

      Check yourself before you submit yourself

  • @ZezimaTruth
    @ZezimaTruth ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Imagine getting caught for plagiarism in 1997.

  • @Fitingbros101
    @Fitingbros101 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    these days you cant even submit a paper until it has less than 15% on a plagiarism checker

  • @andrewcuber8968
    @andrewcuber8968 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    ive gotten this recommended to me 3 times a day for the past 10 days. i refused to click on it until now, but turns out this is actually quite a good video

  • @joechamm
    @joechamm ปีที่แล้ว +16

    A thought occured to me that a child will lie and no moral judgement would be placed against them. The child doesn't intend to lie when they break something accidentally or forget to do their chores. The lie comes instinctively because they don't know any better. Just because the child didn't mean to lie doesn't mean it's not a lie.

  • @Akyomi
    @Akyomi ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The algorithm is wild man

  • @perplexedon9834
    @perplexedon9834 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I think plagiarism in high achievers is usually a sign that the assignment isnt actually challenging the student in a way that will promote their learning.
    This is why students collaboratively producing their assessments and marking criteria with teachers generally produces more motivated learners.

  • @Mike1614YT
    @Mike1614YT ปีที่แล้ว +1

    today it's harder than ever to get away from copying other's words

  • @kirayoshikage1491
    @kirayoshikage1491 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Plagiarism punishments seem too strict. People shouldn’t cheat, but I feel like going from an A to an F is too much for someone stealing two paragraphs. College is stressful, many students feel that if their grades slip at all their lives will essentially be over, it’s desperation. They should get in trouble, but I think the economic and mental damage caused from professors failing students over plagiarism is far worse than the damage of a student copying some text. Make the punishment fit the crime.

    • @mysterythin
      @mysterythin ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I agree but, I also kinda see why this ended up this way. The whole paper doesn’t hold academic weight once you plagiarize any part of it as there could be more the prof missed, for example, so they have to throw it all out. Then, cuz this was the final, this one largely weighted F was still enough to fail him for the course. The crime doesn’t justify the level of punishment inadvertently received but it was just bad circumstances. If it was homework, easy F and learning opportunity for the kid. It’s still a learning experience for him now, but with much worse implications to his finances, GPA, scholarships, etc.

    • @Milktube
      @Milktube ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@mysterythin If anything, the paper holds **MORE** academic weight since a part of it has already been reviewed, scrutinized, judged and approved as correct and ideal. The rest of the paper is up for question and is being evaluated for the very first time - even if the remainder is 100% original that doesn't mean the arguments or assertions are correct and hold any academic weight, it could be a trash paper that needs to be thrown out and redone from the ground up.

  • @sumpurnashrestha
    @sumpurnashrestha 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I learned more about plagiarism from this video than all of my English classes in high school!

  • @Pepegalord
    @Pepegalord ปีที่แล้ว +10

    i always rewrote everything in my own words, idk whey they didnt do it

    • @germsspices
      @germsspices ปีที่แล้ว +3

      It boils down to not understanding the severity of plagiarism in the field of academic writing and not realizing the consequences, which is why stern guidance from instructors, such as the lecture above, is necessarily provided to students at a young age.

    • @kasualvfx4985
      @kasualvfx4985 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same don’t understand the need to write a literal copy of someone else, your essay becomes useless and unimportant if it’s just a copy

  • @StarandtheirGalaxy
    @StarandtheirGalaxy ปีที่แล้ว

    The things the TH-cam algorithm picks up will always confuse me.... but as a (hopefully) future educator, this is an excellent resource and example!

  • @vince7735
    @vince7735 3 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    Students need to understand that the function of academic paper writing is one of learning and discovery. It's not supposed to be easy. I would also take it another step further and say it's also an exercise in character development; namely, integrity and work ethic.

  • @pyramo3170
    @pyramo3170 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The algorithm has fed me this video. I'm a STEM major but have taken several writing courses and will probably take a few more before I'm out. I'm one of those people who can read a sentence and remember it years later if it's impactful to me. It definitely pays to be careful and I caught myself in one of those moments prior to submission.