Academic Integrity: Expectations for Independent and Original Work
Any work you submit must be your own independent and original work. An essay is shaped by your ideas about the data, literary work, or body of existing research. You have your own unique perspective on your topic. Rather than rely on the arguments presented in existing literature, generated by artificial intelligence, or sold by an online essay mill, take the time to ask your own questions and to develop your own thesis.
It is also important to be cautious about collaboration with your fellow students. There is no harm in talking about your topic, but you and your friend do not want to present two papers with the same thesis. Academia is built on analytical dialogue, shared questions, and thoughtful debate, so discussing your work with your classmates can help you to better understand and apply course content. However, it is important to know when and how you can collaborate: unless it is expressly authorized, collaboration on any work for credit is cheating. Calculations must be done independently and written up in such a way that you can explain each and every step in the process. Results and conclusions from a group lab experiment must be independently developed and written by each group member.
All the work you submit for credit must reflect your own critical thinking about your topic; it must be your own individual and original work. You cannot present content (including but not limited to text, images, computer code, datasets, and more) created by generative artificial intelligence technology as your own work. You cannot buy, trade, steal, or borrow a paper that you submit as your own work. Furthermore, selling, trading, or lending your work for another student to submit is also considered to be cheating. Finally, you cannot submit the same paper, your own work, to more than one course for credit. Each course and each assignment require you to complete independent and original, new work.
What is Plagiarism?
Plagiarism is knowingly presenting the work of another person or of an AI generator in a way that represents or could be reasonably seen to represent the work as one’s own. Knowingly includes if you should reasonably have known. That standard recognizes the responsibility of students to educate themselves about plagiarism as well as the university’s responsibility to educate students. Every educational institution will have its own academic integrity policy; this definition is derived from the Trent University Undergraduate Academic Integrity Policy.
Common Examples of Plagiarism
- Failing to give a citation to an author or to an AI generator for a quotation, an idea, data, or a summary/paraphrase
- Cutting and pasting from text the Internet (including but not limited to published articles, website copy, social media posts, text generated by artificial intelligence technology, and more) without enclosing pasted words in quotation marks and providing a proper citation
- Improper paraphrase: copying a passage and only changing a few of its words or copying the sentence structure of a source, even if a proper citation is given
- Handing in an essay or lab report that was written by someone else or an essay or lab report you handed in for another course (applies to an entire work or parts)
The Keys to Avoiding Plagiarism
- Developing a clear thesis early on in the essay-writing process or having a clear research purpose/question
- Developing a brief outline for your essay or brief outlines of lab sections before you do the bulk of your research or begin writing a draft
- Taking notes properly (in point form and not cutting and pasting)
- Learning how to properly summarize/ paraphrase using your notes
- Documenting all your sources properly
- Documenting your research and writing process
In other words, using good writing techniques will ensure that you do not plagiarize.
The Proper Use of Sources
Work to avoid plagiarism with good notetaking, thoughtful writing, and complete citation of sources.
- Research and Reading: Skim a source first and decide what information you will need from it and where it will go in your outline and ultimately in your paper. Decide what ideas, examples, or data you wish to include in your paper, and take clear notes in your own words, making note of page references so you can check the original later, if necessary. Any text you wish to quote must be written exactly as you found it; be sure to include quotation marks so you aren't confused later.
- Writing and Citing: Use your point form notes to write sentences; as you write check to be sure you have summarized or paraphrased correctly and that all direct quotations are properly punctuated with quotation marks. In the body of the paper, include a citation for all summarized, paraphrased or quoted material.At the end of the paper, include a list of references or a bibliography.
Summarizing and Paraphrasing
Read more to learn how to effectively summarize or paraphrase.
Quoting
Avoiding Plagiarism When Quoting
- Be sure to consider the context of the quotation; choosing only to quote a sentence fragment may distort the meaning of the passage quoted. Be true to the author’s intent; any other approach is dishonest.
- Always indicate a quotation by using quotation marks around the borrowed passage. This indicates the words are not your own. If you are quoting a longer passage, you will generally use a block quotation format rather than quotation marks. Check the formatting guidelines for the style that you are using on our online Documentation Guide for information about longer quotations.
- Ensure that the passage that you quote corresponds exactly with the wording, spelling, and punctuation of the original; any changes that you make to the quotation must be signaled by using ellipsis dots or square brackets (see the section on altering quotations below for more on this).
- Always follow a direct quotation with a parenthetical reference, footnote, or superscript number to show its source. Most documentation styles (including APA) require that you include a page number in a reference to a direct quotation.
Making Changes to Quotations
Ellipses
You do not need to use ellipses to remove words at the beginning or end of a quotation.
Square Brackets
Use square brackets if you wish to insert a word or explanation into a direct quotation.
Documenting Sources
When to Cite and What to Cite
The Rules of Referencing Sources
- Cite the source of information you use as you write about it. Anytime that you use someone else's words, ideas, or arguments (that you have paraphrased); data that is not your own; or factual information that is not general knowledge, you must cite a source within your paper. In some referencing styles, such as APA and MLA, you will use in-text, parenthetical citations to reference your source (Capell, 2009). In other styles, such as Chicago and many science styles, you will insert numbers that correspond to a footnote or a list that contains information about the source.
- When you do use someone’s words, you need to not only cite your source but also to put the words in "quotation marks." These quotation marks are crucial as they are the reader's primary indication that you are using words that are not your own. Remember that when you use someone's words in quotation marks, you must use their exact words. There is no “in between”; you either quote exactly with quotation marks, or you paraphrase/summarize, using your own words as much as possible.
- At the end of your paper, you must have a list of all of the sources that you cited in the paper. Different referencing styles have different names for this list. MLA calls this list "Works Cited", APA, "References", and Chicago, "Bibliography."
Learn the referencing/citing/documentation style of your discipline. Most departments or professors will identify the style they prefer on their syllabus.