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The
Internet Plagiarism Problem
Internet plagiarism
is a rapidly increasing problem in our secondary and post-secondary
schools. A recent study organized by Rutgers University Management
Professor Donald McCabe, found that 38% of collegians admitted to
cut-and-paste plagiarism using the Internet in the past year.* This
is a huge increase from the 10% who admitted to the behavior in
a similar study two years before.* Institutions and professors are
increasingly aware of the problem and are asking for help.
Who
Plagiarizes and Why?
Writers may
plagiarize for a variety of reasons but those that plagiarize can
generally be put into one of three categories:
- The accidental
plagiarist is one who either does not understand plagiarism or
makes a mistake in quoting, citing, or paraphrasing.
- The casual
plagiarist is one who knows that it is wrong to plagiarize but
who does it anyway due to poor planning, disorganization, or procrastination.
- The committed
plagiarist is one who intends, with forethought, to cheat by stealing
others words and/or ideas. This is the type of plagiarist who
might purchase a paper from a paper mill.

Education and
awareness programs are important to address all three categories.

Education
alone, however, cannot fully address the problem. Detection
technology has been available for some years and is important in
catching the committed plagiarist and may deter some casual plagiarists.
A third element is needed, however, to encourage and support proper
research practices—Development.

Professor McCabe’s
study indicates that 20% of faculty use detection software like
Turnitin.com to help catch offenders.* Turnitin.com boasts a peak
daily number of papers submitted of 20,000.** Unfortunately, as
the increasing numbers of plagiarists indicate, fear of being caught
does not always work effectively as a deterrent. Since prevention
is more desirable than policing, institutions are attempting to
stem the tide through education and academic integrity awareness
programs. But what are needed are tools to help students do the
right thing in the first place. This is where the Development area
of Research Process Automation comes in.
What
is Research Process Automation?
Research Process
Automation (RPA) encompasses technologies that support one or more
of the components of the Research Process which are education, research,
writing, citation, submission, review, and publication. PowerResearcher™
is the first such tool on the market and the only one that supports
all seven of the Research Process components. The company that developed
PowerResearcher, Uniting Networks, Inc. (UNI), founded the RPA concept.
For plagiarism reduction, the basic idea is that if conducting research
and citing sources the correct way is quick and easy, the temptation
to plagiarize is removed or greatly reduced. The graphic below shows
the variety of tools that fall into the RPA domain and which Research
Process areas they support.

How
can RPA and PowerResearcher prevent or reduce plagiarism?
UNI focus groups
and interviews with educators indicate that most plagiarism is due
to lack of knowledge, poor planning, disorganization, or procrastination.
The Rutgers study supports this observation in its finding that
less than 5% of students said they turned in a paper or assignment
obtained wholly from a website or term paper mill. PowerResearcher
helps prevent accidental plagiarism by providing automatic source
tracking, logging, and organization tools. As for intentional plagiarism,
every offender weighs the risk versus reward. When the manual, time
consuming tasks involved in research, writing, and attribution are
largely automated, the risk-reward equation changes. The risk of
plagiarizing far outweighs the reward. When combined with the existing
education and awareness programs of colleges and universities, RPA
can make a huge impact in reducing plagiarism.
* from Rutgers
Media Relations. http://ur.rutgers.edu/medrel/viewArticle.html?ArticleID=3408
** from Turnitin.com. About Us. http://www.turnitin.com/static/about_us/
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