Computer science project.

 

 

Case Study 1
John is having trouble with a particularly difficult computer science project. He searches the web to find examples of how other people have solved similar problems. He ends up using a few lines of someone else’s code in his project.
 Could this be considered plagiarism?
 Are John’s circumstances any different from a student working on a writing assignment who ends up using some words or ideas from the Internet in their paper?

Case Study 2
Gabi makes sure to cite all of the quotes and images in her final presentation for her Human Geography class. She must also turn in a script of the presentation. She does not cite all of the quotes and paraphrases she uses in the script, since most of the citations are already on the slides.
 Could this be considered plagiarism?
 What are the best practices for citation when giving a Power Point presentation?

Case Study 3
Emily uses images of some of Michelangelo’s sculptures and frescoes in her art history paper. The subject of the paper is Michelangelo, so she doesn’t attribute the images to the artist.
 Could this be considered plagiarism?
 What if the images Emily uses in her paper are pictures she personally took on a trip to Italy?
Case Study 4
Keith uses a sentence found on his professor’s lecture slide in his paper. He doesn’t cite the slides because they are not a published resource—his professor makes them available on D2L.
 Could this be considered plagiarism?
 Where could Keith find information about citing a lecture or lecture slides?

 

 

Avoiding Plagiarism Checklist
Now create a checklist of 5 things we should all be doing in order to avoid plagiarism





 

 

Sample Solution

itself’, causing a questionability of its authenticity. This shall be considered, although of course its authorship is not a question one can fully answer. Verse was not written solely for print publication but manuscript circulation, contrasting with a modern-day audience and our understanding of copyright and ownership. ‘Copyright’ simply did not exist. Any form of writing could have been appropriated, edited or shaped to fit the idealised viewpoint of the editor, before it is exchanged. This was the adoption of shared culture. I suggest, that because of this ‘shared culture’, it is incredible that Elizabeth could be questioning rigid, accepted gender roles. As the most read woman of her period, her participation in this ‘shared culture’ demonstrates the significance of the Queen’s role for women writers. It is also important to remember is that, for Elizabeth, ‘only three poems – all written before she became queen – were published (without Elizabeth’s permission) during her life; the rest circulated in manuscript, some during her life, others after’. This is common with many Renaissance texts, and so one cannot fully dismiss this exchange of these poems. As Herman suggests, ‘the attendant textual issues should not obscure either the degree of Elizabeth’s poetic accomplishment or the importance of her verse for understanding the dynamics of authority’ .

The dynamic of authority evidenced in this case is Elizabeth’s playful mocking of the courtier’s lack of innovation and imagination in his poetry addresses a bigger gender issue. Her assumption that Raleigh is hiding behind Petrarchan norms, (he’s ‘so sore afraid’ and ‘dismayed’) is a total reversal of gender roles, positioning the male lover’ as a weakened individual. Elizabeth is exposing Raleigh’s true motive for writing which lay behind the heavily-allegorical sonnets of the courtier. He was vulnerable male keen to preserve favouritism, and thus turned to the literary mode of flattery, with an abundance of fr

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