You search Google, then add information into your paper from various different websites. You don’t need to cite the sources because everything on the internet is free.
You need an image for your PowerPoint presentation. You go online and find one. You don’t need to cite the source of your image because images on the web aren’t protected by copyright.
You generate the introduction and conclusion of your essay using ChatGPT for an ENG101 assignment. ChatGPT is not considered an author and you only used it for part of your essay, so you can submit it but with proper attribution.
You copy a few sentences directly from an article you found in a database. You forget to put quotation marks but you do cite the source so it is not plagiarism.
You copy a short passage from an article you found. You insert a few synonyms in place of the original content, you don’t need to quote it, because it’s not exactly the same wording.
You realize a paper you submitted for ENG101 back in 2nd quarter meets the criteria for an assignment you just received in ENG103. You can't clean up your old submission a bit and resubmit it.
Each of the following situations shows a different form of plagiarism, choose the correct number that describes the correct type of plagiarism depicted
1-Direct plagiarism
2-Paraphrasing plagiarism
3-Mosaic plagiarism
4-Self-plagiarism
5-Accidental plagiarism
6-Misunderstanding
7-Incorrect citation
Rewriting a researcher's findings in your own words but not crediting the researcher, using ideas from another source but with different words without citation.
Forgetting to cite a source because you didn't realize you needed to cite paraphrased material, lacking awareness or not understanding citation rules.
Copying a paragraph from a book and including it in your paper without any citation or quotation marks, copying someone else's text.
Submitting a portion of your previous term paper for a new class without permission, presenting it as new.